Happy Birthday, Kenny G! Born Kenneth Bruce Gorelick on June 5, 1956, in Seattle, Washington, the man with the instantly recognizable curls and even more recognizable saxophone tone has spent decades proving that instrumental music can be just as popular as any pop hit. Long before he became the face of smooth jazz, though, he was just a kid with a saxophone and a lot of determination.

Kenny’s musical journey began in junior high school, where he first picked up the saxophone. Like many young musicians, he wasn’t an overnight sensation. In fact, he didn’t make his high school jazz band the first time he auditioned. Instead of giving up, he practiced harder, auditioned again the following year, and made it in. That early lesson in persistence would become a theme throughout his career.

By the time he was a teenager, his talent was already turning heads. While still in high school, he landed a gig playing with Barry White’s Love Unlimited Orchestra. Not a bad first job for a young musician. Most teenagers were worrying about homework and prom dates—Kenny was touring with a legendary soul artist.

In the early 1980s, he signed with Arista Records and released his self-titled debut album in 1982. It was a respectable start, but his real breakthrough came in 1986 with the album Duotones. The single “Songbird” became a massive hit, and suddenly Kenny G’s smooth, melodic saxophone sound was everywhere. Radio stations played it, shopping malls played it, and yes, elevators probably played it too. Whether you loved it or rolled your eyes at it, you knew exactly who it was the moment you heard that saxophone.

From there, his career took off at full speed. He released a string of successful albums, but none were bigger than Breathless in 1992. The album became the best-selling instrumental record of all time in the United States, moving over 12 million copies. At a time when most charts were dominated by vocalists and bands, Kenny G proved that a saxophone could carry a record all by itself.

Over the years, he has sold more than 75 million records worldwide, making him one of the best-selling instrumentalists in history. He has won a Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition for “Forever in Love,” and his music has become synonymous with the smooth jazz genre.

And then there’s the lung power. In 1997, Kenny G set a Guinness World Record by holding a single saxophone note for 45 minutes and 47 seconds using circular breathing. That’s nearly the length of a sitcom episode—without commercials. Most people get winded climbing a flight of stairs, and here he was holding one note longer than some people can hold a conversation.

Of course, not every project has been universally loved. His 1999 album Classics in the Key of G received mixed reviews, with some critics saying he played it too safe. And his unexpected cameo on Weezer’s “I’m Your Daddy” raised a few eyebrows. But if you’ve built a career on smooth jazz, showing up in a quirky rock track now and then probably keeps things interesting.

Offstage, Kenny G is known for his disciplined lifestyle and business sense. He’s an avid golfer, a licensed pilot, and an investor with a strong interest in finance. He approaches both music and money with the same calm, focused mindset—no wild drama, just steady, consistent results.

Kenny G’s journey from a Seattle school band to global superstardom is a story of persistence, talent, and a sound that refused to go unnoticed. He took an instrument often pushed to the background and turned it into a headline act.