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Saturday, October 6, 2012
It Hurts Me Too - Dr. G. B. Burt
Dr. G.B. Burt (b.1/30/37) was born in Birmingham AL. During WWII his family moved to west coast where his father went to work in the shipyards. In 47 his family moved back to Alabama and then on to Florida often migrating to wherever his dad could find work. He comes from a musical family. His mother played the piano and sang gospel music. His father and uncles Arthur and Herbert Burt were all blues guitarists. G.B. took up the guitar and playing the blues when he was in his teens and has kept it up ever since. When he was 14 he began to box. In 54 he fought in the Golden Gloves tournament and later he trained with Alvin Blues Lewis who went on to fight Muhammad Ali. When he was 30 he married and settled down and found work with Ford Motors in Michigan. After nearly 10 years he went out on his own, bought a wrecker truck and became an independent mechanic, a job he continues to this day. Inspired by watching the feature film on Lead Belly he bought a 12 –string guitar that he has stuck with ever since. Dr G.B relates, “The blues is my life, to tell you the truth. It is what I have lived and what I have seen. It is real life. Love, rejected love. There is happy blues, sad blues, it is just the life. It is what I am about. I put them in my songs and music. I look at things whatever is going on and sing about it. I have been playing for a long time, I laid my guitars down for five years. I started looking at my five boys and something told me that I had to show them about this music. Now I got my boys trained and they are good. They are working getting their music together. My grandbaby’s now are into the music. We are all working for the music. I believe this music is important. When folks hear my music they know it is me. I sing how I feel. I do not sing about violence. I sing about love. I do everything I can do to sing about good things. It comes out alright. I am looking forward, to get my name in the record book, and do what I can do to help my sons and my family. I want the audiences to know who I am. I want to put my stamp on this music, get my name in the book, so people remember who I am.” Bo Diddley What Can A Man Do But Sing the Blues?
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