HARMONICA
GIANT JAMES COTTON TO RELEASE
COTTON
MOUTH MAN ON MAY 7
GUESTS
INCLUDE GREGG ALLMAN,
JOE BONAMASSA,
RUTHIE FOSTER,
WARREN
HAYNES, DELBERT
McCLINTON AND KEB
MO
Rolling Stone says Grammy Award-winning blues harmonica legend James
"Mr. Superharp" Cotton is "among the greats of all time....He blazes on harp
with brilliant virtuosity." On May 7, 2013 Alligator Records will release
Cotton Mouth Man, a joyous celebration of Cotton's 69
years as a professional musician (beginning at age nine). Recorded in Nashville
and produced by Grammy-winning producer/ songwriter/ drummer Tom Hambridge
(Buddy Guy, Joe Louis Walker, Susan Tedeschi), the album is a trip through
sounds and scenes from Cotton's long and storied career.
Cotton co-wrote seven of the tracks with Hambridge (who co-wrote five
additional tracks). The songs were inspired by Cotton's colorful and sometimes
perilous life and his memories of the Mississippi Delta, Sonny Boy Williamson
II, Memphis, Sun Records, Chicago, and Muddy Waters. Throughout the CD Cotton's
blast-furnace harmonica sound and larger-than-life personality are front and
center.
Helping Cotton tell his stories and showcase his music are guests Gregg
Allman, Joe Bonamassa, Ruthie Foster, Warren Haynes, Delbert McClinton, and Keb
Mo. Other vocals are handled by Darrell Nulisch, who has been singing in
Cotton's band for many years. Members of Cotton's road band -- Jerry Porter,
Noel Neal, and Tom Holland -- are also on board for some songs. Forming the core
of the backing band on the CD are Hambridge (drums), Rob McNelley (guitar),
Chuck Leavell (keyboards), and Glenn Worf (bass). Tommy MacDonald and Colin
Linden each add guitar to one track. Cotton, who after a bout with throat cancer
turned the vocal duties over to others, was inspired by the sessions to return
to the microphone, singing his own Bonnie Blue (the name of the
plantation where he was born), and making Cotton Mouth
Man the most personal, celebratory and just plain fun recording of
his seven-decade career.
According to Cotton, "I feel so happy about the music in this album. The
blues is all about feeling -- if I don't feel it, I can't play it. My hope is
that everyone who listens feels it. I know I sure did!" Cotton has recently been
signed by the prestigious Rosebud Agency and will be touring the world in
support of the album.
Cotton's history is now the stuff of legend. Born on a cotton plantation in
Tunica, Mississippi on July 1, 1935, he learned harmonica directly from Sonny
Boy Williamson II (Rice Miller) as a small child. He toured with Howlin' Wolf,
recorded for Sun Records, and spent 12 years with Muddy Waters before stepping
out on his own. Leading his own band, he rose to the very top of the blues and
rock scenes, touring non-stop and earning his reputation as one of the most
powerful live blues performers in the world, a man who could literally suck the
reeds out of the harmonica from the pure force of his playing.
He first recorded under his own name for the Chicago/The Blues/Today!
series on Vanguard, and along with Otis Spann, cut The Blues Never
Die! for Prestige. He made his first solo albums -- three for Verve and one
for Vanguard -- in the late 1960s, with bands featuring outstanding musicians,
including famed guitarist Luther Tucker. With his gale-force sound and fearless
boogie band (later featuring Matt "Guitar" Murphy), it wasn't long before he was
adopted by the burgeoning hippie audience as one of their own. Cotton shared
stages with Janis Joplin, The Grateful Dead, Led Zeppelin, B.B. King, Santana,
Steve Miller, Freddie King and many others.
Cotton was universally renowned as one of the hardest-touring and most
popular blues artists of the 1960s and 1970s. His acrobatic showmanship (he
often did somersaults on stage) and full-throttle energy kept him in demand at
concert halls all over the country. He played the Fillmore East in New York, the
Fillmore West in San Francisco and every major rock and blues venue in between.
During the 1970s, he cut three albums for Buddah and one for Capitol. He
rejoined his old boss Muddy Waters for the series of Muddy albums produced by
Johnny Winter, starting with Hard Again in 1977. Cotton also guested on
recordings by Koko Taylor and many others. He was joined on his own albums by
stars like Todd Rundgren, Steve Miller and Johnny Winter.
Cotton signed with Alligator Records in 1984, releasing
High Compression and Live
From Chicago: Mr. Superharp Himself!!! (which earned him the first
of his four Grammy nominations). In 1990 he joined fellow Chicago harp masters
for the all-star release Harp Attack!. He won a Grammy
Award in 1996 for his Verve album, Deep In The Blues, was inducted into
the Blues Hall Of Fame in 2006, and was honored by the Smithsonian Institution,
which added one of his harmonicas to their permanent collection. During the
2000s Cotton has continued recording and touring relentlessly, playing clubs,
concert halls and festivals all over the world, electrifying audiences wherever
he performs. Cotton's 2009 return-to-Alligator release,
Giant, was
Grammy-nominated. USA Today said, "Since 1966 James Cotton has been
carrying the Chicago sound to the world. On Giant, he
pours 75 years of living into that harmonica and out comes devastating and
powerful blasts of notes."
In June 2010, Cotton was honored at New York's Lincoln Center, where his
friends Hubert Sumlin, Pinetop Perkins, Taj Mahal, Shemekia Copeland and others
paid tribute to him in an all-star concert. There James Cotton played to yet
another sold-out venue, with fans cheering the man known worldwide as "Mr.
Superharp," an undisputed giant of the blues. He is currently touring as part of
Blues At The Crossroads II, a tribute to Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf, and he
continues to tour nationally and internationally with his own band. In March
2013, he played three nights in Tokyo, Japan.
The New York Daily News calls Cotton "the greatest living blues
harmonica player." The New York Times adds, "Cotton helped define
modern blues harmonica with his moaning, wrenching phrases and his train-whistle
wails."
Cotton Mouth Man proves James Cotton's
high-compression blues harmonica playing is a true force of nature, while his
songs and stories are a living history of the blues. As The San Francisco
Examiner says, "James Cotton is an inimitable blues legend. His wailing
harmonica blows them away. His improvisations on the blues are full of fun and
good humor. The blues don't get much better." |
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