Hello John, I got to see Albert Collins once way back when. I didn't know much about him then. He was kind of an obscure player but man, could he light it up. It's only after his passing did he get the recognition he deserved. Read on. Showdown is a done deal for 2023. The Black Hole, a band that has been tearing it up around town lately, will represent PBS, and you, The Valley in Memphis in January. The level of talent we have in The Valley never fails to amaze me. Any one of the finalists would make a fine representative. Got a good show brewing in Tonopah this weekend. Check the poster for the lineup. Blues Blast is coming along splendidly. Save the date, November 4 at ye olde Rhythm Room. Big fun in store. By the way, Bob Corritore won a Blues Blast Music Award this year for Historical Blues album featuring Women in Blues. Congrats amigo. As always, get Out & About and support live music. And give someone a hug, you'll both feel good. Have a week!
Jim Crawford, Phoenix Blues Society www.phoenixblues.com |
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Razor Blade
By Ed Decker Albert Collins was born on a Texas farm and moved to Houston when he was 9. Although he is known as one of the most ferocious guitarists in contemporary blues, Collins started out on piano and actually wanted to become a professional organist. It wasn’t until high school, after his keyboard was stolen, that he started to play guitar. But by age 16 he had formed a trio and began working the local scene. From 1949 to 1951 he fronted the Rhythm Rockers, an eight-piece unit fashioned after those of his idols. “I was listenin’ to the big bands: Jimmie Lunceford, Tommy Dorsey, Jimmy Dorsey,” he told Larry Birnbaum in down beat. “I used to love the big band sound. And I had some jazz musicians playin’ with me. I was playin’ blues, but they taught me my timin’.” Collins went on to tour the south with Piney Brown in the mid-1950s and played weekend gigs with another infamous Texas guitarist, Gatemouth Brown. He returned to Houston to work outside of the music world while continuing to play on weekends through the mid-1960s. In 1958 he jumped on the instrumental wave, brought on by Booker T., Duane Eddy, and Link Wray, and released “The Freeze”/“Collins Shuffle” on the Kangaroo label. “Sold about 150,000 copies in three weeks’ time,” he recalled to Dan Forte in Guitar Player. “That’s what started getting my name halfway out there. But when my name really started to spread was when I cut ‘Frosty.’ I didn’t follow it up until then because I had a good day job. I was playing at night and driving a truck in the daytime. And I mixed paint for automobiles for six years.” “Frosty” became a million seller for Collins and the Hall label in 1962. It also established Collins’s trademark, the “cool sound.” He explained to Ellen Griffith in Guitar Player, “One night a friend of mine and I were driving through a town called Corpus Christi, Texas, and it started raining and the windshield fogged up. My friend said, ’Why don’t you turn on the defroster?’ I didn’t think too much about it at the time, and then the next day I thought to myself, ’I ought to put me out a tune called” Defrost. “’ I looked at my dashboard and it said ’freeze,’ too, so I put out the tunes ’Defrost’ and The Freeze,’ and then went on to do ’Frosty.’ After that my producer said he was going to keep me in the icebox, and we recorded more tunes with names like that.” The motif continued through a long line of tunes with names like “Sno-Cone,” “Deep Freeze,” “Don’t Lose Your Cool,” “Hot ‘n’ Cold,” “Shiver and Shake,” and “Thaw Out.” Each contained the ice pick sound of Collins’s Fender Telecaster guitar blasting out a storm of high-powered licks. The impossible-to-duplicate tone can be attributed to many factors. The main ingredient being Collins’s unique tunings of either E minor (E B E G B E) or D minor (D A D F A D) For The Record… Born October 3, 1932, in Leona, Texas; married 1968; wife’s name, Gwendolyn. Education: Attended a local high school in Houston, Texas. Formed and led his first band c. 1948-51, the Rhythm Rockers; first toured in the mid-1950s with Piney Brown; 1958, released first single, “The Freeze’”/“Collins Shuffle”; extensive club and festival appearances, mid-1960s—. Addresses: Record company —Alligator Records, P.O. Box 60234, Chicago, IL 60660. taught to him by his cousin, Willow Young. He also straps a capo (a moveable bar that attaches to the fretwork of the guitar) halfway up the neck in order to change the pitch. “I met up with Gatemouth Brown, and that’s where I got the capo from: that gives me that special tone that I have, ’cause I don’t play with no pick,” he told Gene Santoro in Guitar World. “I always wanted my own thing, didn’t want to play like anybody else.” Collins snaps the strings off the neck (as opposed to picking them) of his Telecaster which is strapped over his right shoulder “like the old gunslingers wore their pistols: low at the hip, ready to fire,” as Guitar Player’s Jas Obrecht described it. The guitar is connected to a 100-foot cord, which enables Collins to stalk his crowd freely, and then into a 300-watt Fender Quad Reverb amp cranked up to 10. In a small club setting this setup produces a sound which is similar to having a jet land on your temple. Collins is able to coax a barrage of special effects out of this simple arrangement. For example, the cut “Snowed In” (from the Frostbite LP) contains simulated car horns, an engine turning over, footsteps in the snow, and the obligatory flurry of notes. Using just his bare thumb and fingers, Collins relies on unpredictable shifts in volume and attack to separate his sound from that of his colleagues. His influences include guitarists Lightnin’ Hopkins, TBone Walker, Gatemouth Brown, and B.B. King, but horn players and organ sounds are vital elements also. “You know, Jimmy McGriff has been my idol since 1965—that’s when I first met him, in Kansas City, Missouri,” Collins said in Guitar World. “I sat in with him and Wes Montgomery—that was some fun, man. See, I always wanted to be an organ player: when I started out, I started on piano. I wanted to be like Jimmy McGriff or Jimmy Smith.” After establishing his cool sound, Collins recorded a string of regional hits for a variety of small labels from 1958 to 1971 (Kangaroo, Great Scott, Hall, Fox, Imperial, and Tumbleweed). He even replaced Jimi Hendrix for a brief spell after the rock innovator quit Little Richard’s band. After 20th Century-Fox released a compilation album, The Cool Sound of Albert Collins, he quit his paint job and moved to Kansas City in 1966 where me met and married his wife, Gwendolyn. A year later Bob Hite of the group Canned Heat saw Collins performing and persuaded Imperial Records of Los Angeles to sign the guitarist. Hite brought him to California to record an album which led to constant touring of psychedelic ballrooms in the latter part of the decade. Collins continued recording a few albums, mainly instrumentais, while playing the better part of the 1970s up and down the west coast with various pickup bands. “I learned a lot playing with those young kids: power, for instance, I like power when I play, man,” he told Guitar World. “I’ve heard so many blues players just playing, stop to take a drink play a little again—that ain’t my type of blues, man. I go to sleep like that.” It would take six years, however, after his last Tumbleweed LP in 1972 before Collins would find another interested label. In 1978 he released Ice Pickin’ on a small, young Chicago label run by Bruce Igualer called Alligator. It was one of the hottest blues records in recent memory and launched a career on Alligator that has seen six more albums since, including Showdown!, a collaboration with two other guitarists, Johnny Copeland and Robert Cray. “Their compatibility can be attributed to Collins’ influence on both… and it is Collins who dominates the session, setting the tone with his stinging guitar work and nearly managing to hold his own as a singer,” wrote Larry Birnbaum in down beat. The album went on to win a Grammy award. Collins cut back on his ten-month yearly touring schedule during the late 1980s and is now in semi-retirement. He stole the show at Live-Aid with George Thorogood; appeared in the movie Adventures in Babysitting; played in a Seagram’s Wine Cooler commercial with actor Bruce Willis; and was the focus of a PBS television documentary, Ain’t Nothin’ But The Blues. “One thing about the blues, you’ve got to keep moving,” he told Guitar Player. “I’ve been touring as long as I’ve been playing, but I enjoy traveling… I play the blues because I’ve lived it… I don’t want to play any of this other stuff; it may sound good, but it’s just not my style.
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ARIZONA BLUES SHOWDOWN 2023 CONGRATULATIONS to The Black Hole Band and the J Morton, Lek Thixton Solo/Duo! These amazing artists will represent The Phoenix Blues Society at the International Blues Challenge in Memphis, TN, in January 2024. |
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OUT & ABOUT
Tuesday, Sept 26 Hooter & Gypsy’s Blues JAM, 6 p.m., Pho Cao, Scottsdale Johnny’s JAM,6:30p.m., Jimbo’s Sports Bar & Grill, Glendale Carvin Jones, 6:00 p.m., Heroes Pub & Grub, Glendale Samantha Fish, 7:30 p.m., Celebrity Theater, Phoenix (With special guest Eric Johnson) Wednesday, Sept 27 Tool Shed JAM, 7 p.m., The Blooze, Phoenix Carvin Jones, 6 p.m., Azool Grill, Phoenix Thursday, Sept 28 Johnny’s JAM, 7 p.m.,Starlight Lounge, Glendale Carvin Jones, 6:30 p.m., Good Time Charli’s, Chandler The Black Hole, 8:30 p.m., Bourbon Jacks, Chandler Laurie Morvin Band, 7 p.m, The Rhythm Room, Phoenix Friday, Sept 29 The Sugar Thieves, 7:30 p.m., Westside Blues and Jazz, Glendale Carvin Jones, 7:00 p.m., Red Mountain Bar & Grill, Mesa The Black Hole, 8:30 p.m., Murphy’s Law Irish Pub, Chandler The Hallelujah Blues Band. 6:30 p.m., Paulie’s Little Bit of Italy, Sun City The Jokerz, 9 p.m., Gypsy’s Roadhouse, Phoenix Bob Corritore’s Birthday Bash 8 p.m., The Rhythm Room, Phoenix Saturday, Sept 30 Carvin Jones, 7 p.m., VFW Post 1433 Sandy Coor, Glendale Tommy Grills Band, 5 p.m., Mountain View Pub, Cave Creek The Black Hole, 2 p.m., The Roadhouse, Cave Creek The Black Hole, 8 p.m., El Dorado Bar & Grill, Scottsdale Rev. Peyton’s Big Damn Band, 8 p.m., The Rhythm Room, Phoenix Bumpin’ Bud, 7 p.m., Stacy’s at Dunlap, Phoenix Hassayampa Music Festival, Tonopah, AZ. Blues Artists performing on Saturday: 5:30 p.m.: Eric Ramsey 7:00 p.m.: Bluesman Mike &The Blues Review Band Sunday, October 1 Carvin Jones, 2 p.m., Chileens on I-17, Black Canyon City Hassayampa Music Festival, Tonopah, AZ. Blues artists performing on Sunday: 11:15 a.m.: The Black Hole 12:30 p.m.: Poppy Harpman & The Storm 2:00 p.m.: True Flavor Blues 5:00 p.m.: The Sugar Thieves Rocket 88’s JAM, 1 p.m.,Chopper John’s Monday, October 2
Check Out: AZ Blues Scene for great Blues in Northern Arizona. And stay in touch with the Northern Arizona Blues Alliance.
In the Tucson Area: The Southern Arizona Blues Heritage Foundation has all the Tucson area Blues info you can use! Music Makers
Big Pete Pearson bigpeteblues Facebook Cold Shott and The Hurricane Horns www.coldshott.com Facebook The Sugar Thieves www.sugarthieves.com Facebook Gary Zak & The Outbacks Facebook Hans Olson www.hansolson.net Facebook Rocket 88s www.rocket88s.net Facebook JC& The Rockers www.thejukerockers.com Facebook Carvin Jones www.carvinjones.com Facebook Hoodoo Casters www.hoodoocasters.com Facebook Nina Curri www.ninacurri.com Facebook Mother Road Trio www.motherroadtrio.com Facebook Blues Review Band Reverbnationbluesmanmike Mike Eldred www.mikeeldredtrio.com Facebook Big Daddy D & The Dynamites bigdaddyd.com Facebook Eric Ramsey ericramsey.net Facebook Leon J Facebook Cadillac Assembly Line Facebook Innocent Joe and the Hostile Witnesses Facebook Chuck Hall Facebook
Dry Heat Band Facebook
Genevieve (Gypsy) Castorena Facebook Hooter's Blues Facebook Pop Top Facebook Tommy Grills Band Facebook Sweet Baby Ray SweetBabyRaysBlues.com Facebook Billy G & The Kids billgarvin.com Facebook Aaron McCall Band Facebook True Flavor Blues Facebook Michael Coleman Grodin Facebook The Black Hole Facebook theblackholeblues.com Hallelujah Blues Band Facebook Dennis Hererra Dennisherrera.com Facebook The Jokerz Facebook
The Scott O'Neal Band Facebook thescottonealband@gmail.com
Glenville Slim Facebook
West of The Blues Website Facebook
Until The Sun Facebook website
Detroit Rocco and the Accomplices facebook group: facebook/group/913968186228214
Chicago Bob & The Blues Squad Facebook Website
Venues
The Rhythm Room Facebook Westside Blues & Jazz Facebook Janey's Cave Creek Facebook Chars Live Facebook
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