Blues Music
Award-Winner Johnny Rawls Is Like a Tiger In a Cage on New Catfood
Records CD Coming February 19
EL PASO, TX – Catfood Records
announces a February 19 release date for Tiger In a Cage, the new
CD from Blues Music Award-winning singer/guitarist Johnny Rawls. Produced by
multi-Grammy-winning producer Jim Gaines, Tiger In a Cage was
recorded at the Sonic Ranch in Tornillo, Texas. It features backing by The
Rays: Johnny McGhee – guitar; Bob Trenchard – bass; Richy Puga – drums; Dan
Ferguson – keyboards and accordion; Andy Roman – alto/tenor sax; Mike Middleton
– trumpet; Robert Claiborne – trombone; Nick Flood – baritone sax; Jon Olazabal – percussion; with vocal backing by The Iveys. Joining
as special guest is Eden Brent, who duets with Rawls on the sexy, soulful tune,
“Southern Honey.”
Johnny Rawls was recently nominated once again by the Blues
Foundation in the “Soul Blues Male Artist” category for the upcoming Blues
Music Awards to be held in Memphis in May.
The even-dozen tracks on Tiger In a Cage include
nine original songs, plus Johnny’s scintillating takes on Sam Cooke’s “Having a
Party,” Jackie Wilson’s “Your Love Is Lifting Me (Higher and Higher),” and The
Rolling Stones’ “Beast of Burden.” Rawls also does a funky re-working of “Red
Cadillac,” a Rawls composition that first appeared as the title track on the
album of the same name released in 2009 and has since become a fan-favorite at
Johnny’s live shows. While known for his irresistible “old school” soul party
tunes, which are well-represented on his new CD, the album’s title song is a serious track about a 19 year-old
black man being sent to prison; a life thrown away, being over before it has
begun. (Note: there are three times as many people in prison in the U.S. today
as there were when the failed “War on Drugs” was begun.)
Johnny Rawls’ last album for Catfood Records, Soul
Brothers, released in 2014, teamed him up with Blues Hall of Fame
singer Otis Clay for what became one of the musical highlights of the year and
generated both critical acclaim and strong radio airplay. Soul Brothers was also one of the two highest-rated
blues albums on the Downbeat magazine “Best of the Year” list. His
2013 release, Remembering O.V., showcased Rawls in a moving
tribute to his late friend and mentor, O.V. Wright, which also featured singer
Otis Clay as a special guest on three tracks of the album, and included nine
songs associated with Wright and an original cut, “Blaze of Glory,” that closed
the album in rousing fashion.
Johnny’s 2012 CD, Soul
Survivor, garnered him two more Blues Music Award nominations and
followed Memphis Still Got Soul (2011), which received three.
He’s been nominated numerous times in both the Soul Blues Male Artist and Soul
Blues Album categories by The Blues Foundation, and his Ace of Spades CD
won the BMA in 2010 as “Soul Blues Album of the Year. In 2014, he was voted Living Blues magazine’s
“Male Blues Artist of the Year” and three of his albums have won the Living
Blues “Critics' Choice Southern Soul Album of the Year.”
Born in the southern Mississippi town of Columbia, and
raised in Purvis and Gulfport, Johnny Rawls - while still in high school - was
already backing such stars as Z.Z. Hill, Little Johnny Taylor, Joe Tex and The
Sweet Inspirations when they toured in his area. In his early 20s, Rawls was
hired by the legendary deep soul singer, O.V. Wright, as his band director.
After Wright died in 1979, Rawls kept the band together and toured for several
years with Little Johnny Taylor and others.
By 1985, Johnny Rawls was touring as a solo artist and had
made his first solo recording. In 1994, he recorded the widely acclaimed album,
Down to Earth, with L.C. Luckett on the Rooster Blues label.
After a second Rooster Blues album with Luckett, Rawls recorded a number of
albums for JSP before starting his own label. Rawls first met Catfood Records
president Bob Trenchard in 1997 and the two have worked on a number of projects
together since then, culminating when he released his first album for the
label, No Boundaries, in 2005
He’s also garnered previous nominations for his albums Heart
and Soul in 2007; and Red Cadillac in 2009. Both Red
Cadillac and Ace of Spades were nominated for Album of
the Year by Living Blues and his last five albums have all charted top ten on blues charts
with Red Cadillac reaching #1 on the Living Blues
Radio Play Chart. Ace of Spades hit the #4 spot, remaining in the
top 20 for three months. Rawls continues to tour consistently, performing 150
dates a year, both in the U.S. and overseas.
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