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Bruce Iglauer

 
Artist: Bruce Iglauer
Bruce Iglauer

Worked With:

Matt Minde, Peter Amft, David Forte, Dick Shurman, Justin Niebank, Johnny B. Gayden, Fred Breitberg, David Axelbaum, Albert Collins, Koko Taylor, Son Seals, Kenny Neal, Lonnie Brooks
  • Born: July 10, 1947, Ann Arbor, MI
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Blues
  • Instrument: Producer, Liner Notes

Biography

The founder of Alligator Records, one of the largest and most successful independent labels of the modern era, producer Bruce Iglauer was among the driving forces behind the contemporary blues revival. Born in Cincinnati in 1947, he became obsessed with the blues during the mid-1960s after catching a live performance by Mississippi Fred McDowell; he soon began hosting a blues radio show at his alma mater, Wisconsin's Lawrence College, and made regular pilgrimages to Chicago to hear Muddy Waters, Magic Sam, Otis Rush and Carey Bell. After convincing the college activities committee to book a live performance by Howlin' Wolf, Iglauer became frustrated by the lack of promotional support for the concert; convinced he could do better, he agreed to guarantee the costs of Luther Allison in exchange for complete control over promotional duties. Both of the shows quickly sold out.

Iglauer's tenacious promoting style brought him to the attention of Delmark Records founder Bob Koester, and when Iglauer relocated to Chicago on a permanent basis, he joined the Delmark staff as a shipping clerk, frequently turning up at the studio to look on as label stars like Junior Wells cut new material. When Koester declined Iglauer's advice to sign his favorite band, Hound Dog Taylor & the HouseRockers, he dipped into a $2500 inheritance to record the group himself; thus Alligator was created in 1971, with Taylor's self-titled LP quickly becoming a cult favorite on progressive rock and college radio stations. The label soon became a full-time proposition, although Iglauer barely scraped by at the outset -- with each release essentially funding the production of the next record, the company was able to issue about only one album annually during its early years, among them acclaimed recordings from Big Walter Horton, Son Seals and Fenton Robinson.

Alligator's mainstream breakthrough came with the 1975 release of Koko Taylor's label debut I Got What It Takes, which earned the company the first of its many Grammy nominations. That same year Alligator hired its first paid employee, and in 1976, Hound Dog Taylor's posthumously released Beware of the Dog scored another Grammy nod. In 1978, Iglauer assembled the first in a series of Living Chicago Blues releases, collections designed to spotlight underrecognized Windy City performers; that same year, he also signed Alligator's first non-Chicago act, the internationally renowned Albert Collins. The 1982 release of Clifton Chenier's I'm Here! finally netted Alligator a Grammy award, and in 1984 the label signed Johnny Winter, whose Guitar Slinger became its first release to crack the Billboard Top 200 charts. By the 1990s, Alligator was established as the world's biggest independent contemporary blues label, with hit releases from Charlie Musselwhite, Lonnie Brooks, James Cotton and Buddy Guy. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Bruce Iglauer
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Bruce Iglauer (born July 10, 1947) is the founder and head of the independent blues record label Alligator Records in Chicago.

Iglauer was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan and grew up in Grand Rapids, Michigan and Cincinnati, Ohio. He became interested in the blues during the mid-1960s while attending Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin, and began hosting a college radio show, then moving on to promoting concerts by Howlin' Wolf and Luther Allison. He came to the attention of Bob Koester, and joined the staff of Delmark Records in Chicago as a shipping clerk. When Iglauer's advice to sign Hound Dog Taylor & The HouseRockers was declined, he recorded the group himself, and in so doing created Alligator Records in 1971.

Nine months after the release of the first album, he left Delmark and continued at Alligator, making acclaimed recordings from Big Walter Horton, Son Seals, Fenton Robinson, Koko Taylor, Albert Collins, Lonnie Brooks and many others. A breakthrough came in 1975 with Koko Taylor's "I Got What It Takes", which earned Alligator its first Grammy nomination. In 1978, he signed Albert Collins, and in 1982 Clifton Chenier's "I'm Here!" won a Grammy. In 1984, Iglauer signed Blues-rock master Lonnie Mack, who recorded three albums on the Alligator label. Mack's 1985 album, Strike Like Lightning (produced by Stevie Ray Vaughan) remains one of Alligator's biggest-selling titles.

The Alligator catalog contains over 250 CDs, ranging from electric Chicago blues and blues/rock to acoustic Piedmont blues and West Coast jump blues. By the 1990s, Alligator was established one of the top contemporary blues labels in the world.

The Chicago magazine honored Iglauer with the 2002 Chicagoan of the Year award.[1] In addition, Iglauer was a founder of the National Association of Independent Record Distributors (NAIRD, later the Association For Independent Music (AFIM). He sits on the Board of the Blues Foundation, the Blues Community Foundation and the American Association For Independent Music (A2IM), which replaced AFIM as the main organization of the U.S. independent music industry.

Iglauer is married to Jo Kolanda of Mequon, Wisconsin. They have a daughter, Rachel Beaudry of Glencoe, Illinois, and he has a stepdaughter, Rebekah Beaudry of Mequon, Wisconsin.

References

External links



 
 
Learn More
Genuine Houserocking Music (1982 Album by Hound Dog Taylor and the Houserockers)
I've Been Around (1995 Album by David "Honeyboy" Edwards)
Queen of the Blues (1975 Album by Koko Taylor)

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