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Doug Sahm

 
Artist: Doug Sahm
See Doug Sahm Lyrics
  • Born: November 06, 1941, San Antonio, TX
  • Died: November 18, 1999, Taos, NM
  • Active: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Violin, Guitar, Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Doug Sahm and Band," "Juke Box Music," "Texas Tornado"
  • Representative Songs: "Crazy Daisy," "(Is Anybody Going To) San Ant," "Mendocino"

Biography

Guitarist, composer, arranger, and songwriter Doug Sahm was a knowledgeable music historian and veteran performer equally comfortable in a range of styles, including Texas blues, country, rock & roll, Western swing, and Cajun. Born November 6, 1941 in San Antonio, Texas, he began his performing career at age nine when he was featured on a San Antonio area radio station, playing steel guitar. Sahm began recording for a procession of small labels (Harlem, Warrior, Renner and Personality), in 1955 with "A Real American Joe" under the name Little Doug Sahm. Three years later he was leading a group called the Pharoahs. Sahm recorded a series of singles for Texas-based record companies including "Crazy Daisy" (1959), "Sapphire" (1961), and "If You Ever Need Me" (1964). After being prompted in 1965 to assemble a group by producer Huey Meaux, Sahm asked his friends Augie Meyers (keyboards), Frank Morin (saxophone), Harvey Kagan (bass) and Johnny Perez (drums), if they would join him. Meaux gave the group the name the Sir Douglas Quintet. The group had some success on the radio with "The Rains Came," but Sahm later moved to California after the group broke up, where he formed the Honkey Blues Band. He reformed his Quintet in California and recorded a now-classic single, "Mendocino." The resulting album was a ground-breaking record in the then-emerging country-rock scene. The Sir Douglas Quintet followed Mendocino with Together After Five, another album that led them to a larger fan base.

But it was Atlantic Records producer Jerry Wexler who realized that country rock sounds were coming into vogue (and there was no place in Nashville for people like Sahm), so he signed both Sahm and Willie Nelson. One of his greatest albums, Doug Sahm and Band, (1973, Atlantic) was recorded in New York City with Bob Dylan, Dr. John, and accordionist Flaco Jimenez, and a resulting single, "Is Anybody Going To San Antone?" had some radio success. The Sir Douglas Quintet got back together again to record two more albums, Wanted Very Much Alive and Back To The 'Dillo.

Among Sahm's most essential blues records are Hell of a Spell (1980, reissued in 1999), a blues album dedicated to Guitar Slim, and his Grammy-nominated studio album for Antone's, The Last Real Texas Blues Band. For his other material, there are several good compilations, including The Best of Doug Sahm (Rhino). SDQ '98 followed. Sahm died November 18, 1999; the posthumous The Return of Wayne Douglas appeared the following summer. ~ Richard Skelly, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Doug Sahm
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Doug Sahm
Born November 6, 1941(1941-11-06)
San Antonio, Texas
Died November 18, 1999 (aged 58)
Taos, New Mexico

Douglas Wayne Sahm (November 6, 1941November 18, 1999), was a musician from Texas. Born in San Antonio, Texas, he was a child prodigy in country music, but became a significant figure in blues, rock and other genres. Today Sahm is considered one of the most important figures in what is identified as Tex-Mex. He was the founder and leader of the 1960s rock and roll band The Sir Douglas Quintet, and later with Augie Meyers, Freddy Fender and Flaco Jimenez - The Texas Tornados.

Sahm was proficient on dozens of musical instruments and was a lifelong baseball fan.

Contents

Country prodigy: 1940s and 1950s

Sahm began his musical career singing and playing steel guitar, mandolin and violin as "Little" Doug Sahm, making his radio debut at the age five and releasing his first record "A Real American Joe" at age eleven. In December of 1952 he played on stage with Hank Williams.

He is said to have been offered a permanent spot on the Grand Ole Opry, but his mother wanted him to finish junior high.

One of Sahm's earliest recordings was rejected by Mercury Records in 1953. Also in the mid-1950s, he started sneaking into San Antonio R&B clubs such as the Tiffany Lounge and the Ebony Lounge, and he was soon performing at the same venues.

Sahm formed his first band, the Knights, in 1957. Later in the decade, Sahm joined up with Spot Barnett's band playing mostly black San Antonio blues clubs. In 1960, Sahm travelled across the country promoting a record.[1]

He met Freddy Fender around 1958 and Roy Head of Roy Head and The Traits from San Marcos, TX in 1959 when they shared the stage at a sock hop in San Antonio's Municipal Auditorium.

Sir Douglas Quintet: 1960s

In 1965, prompted by record producer Huey Meaux, he formed the Sir Douglas Quintet with childhood friend Augie Meyers. The group's name was chosen in an effort to make the band seem British to benefit from the British invasion. This image had its problems, particularly Sahm's Texas accent and that two fifths of the band were of Mexican origin. Some early publicity photos of the band showed them only in silhouette to hide this fact.

The band had a top 20 US hit with the 12-bar blues "She's About a Mover" and a lesser hit with "The Rains Came," the former also reaching the Top Twenty in the UK.

The band broke up after a bust for marijuana possession in Corpus Christi, Texas. Doug moved to San Francisco, forming the Honkey Blues Band before reforming the Sir Douglas Quintet with a new lineup. Eventually Augie Meyers rejoined the quintet and they released the successful single and album "Mendocino". The record contained the song "At the Crossroad" with the legendary Sahm line "You just can't live in Texas if you don't have a lot of soul".

Bob Dylan stated, "Look, for me right now there are three groups: Butterfield, The Byrds and the Sir Douglas Quintet." [2]

Atlantic years: 1970s

In 1973, Jerry Wexler of Atlantic Records bought Sahm's contract and produced his solo debut Doug Sahm and Band, an album featuring Bob Dylan, Dr. John, David Bromberg and Flaco Jiménez.

"Then in October 1972, Dylan was in the studio with Doug Sahm..........Dylan having been friendly with Sahm since the mid-sixties and having expressed enthusiasm for the Sir Douglas Quintet on more than one occasion"[3]

Sahm continued recording both as a solo artist and with the Sir Douglas Quintet. During this period, Sahm also had a couple of minor motion picture roles. In 1972, he and the Quintet appeared with Kris Kristofferson in Cisco Pike and in 1979 he was featured in More American Graffiti.

Sahm was also a sought-after session musician, appearing on releases of other artists including, The Grateful Dead. He sang backing vocals on Willie Nelson's 1977 gospel album, The Troublemaker.

About a Mover: 1980s

In 1983, Sahm and Meyers signed with the Swedish Sonet label, and made several extensive European tours that revitalized their careers. The single "Meet Me In Stockholm" from their Midnight Sun LP went platinum and was one of the biggest selling records ever in Scandinavia. After an accident in 1985 Doug moved to Canada and then returned to Texas in 1988.

A Texas Tornado: 1990s

In 1990 Sahm formed Tex-Mex supergroup the Texas Tornados with Freddy Fender, Augie Meyers and Flaco Jimenez. The group recorded four albums and received a Grammy.

Sahm also appears on the Uncle Tupelo album Anodyne on the song "Give Back the Key to my Heart". Anodyne was released in 1993.

Sahm recorded a Grammy-winning solo album, The Last Real Texas Blues Band and recorded with yet another new formation of the Sir Douglas Quintet for SDQ '98.

Sahm died of a heart attack in his sleep in a motel room in Taos, New Mexico on November 18, 1999.

A posthumous album, The Return of Wayne Douglas, was released in 2000. Sahm's son, Shawn Sahm, continues in his father's footsteps as the leader of his band, Shawn Sahm & The Tex Mex Experience. Father and son appeared together on the cover of the Rolling Stone in 1968.[4]. Doug Sahm's other son, Shandon, played drums for The Meat Puppets between 1999 and 2002.

Selected discography

Solo albums

  • 2000 - The Return of Wayne Douglas (Tornado)
  • 1998 - SDQ '98 (Watermelon)
  • 1994 - The Last Real Texas Blues Band (Discovery)
  • 1989 - Juke Box Music (Antone's)
  • 1988 - Live (Bear Tracks)
  • 1988 - Back to the 'Dillo (Edsel)
  • 1987 - The Return of the Formerly Brothers (Rykodisc) with Amos Garrett and Gene Taylor
  • 1980 - Hell of a Spell (Takoma)
  • 1976 - Texas Rock for Country Rollers (Edsel)
  • 1974 - Groover's Paradise (Collectors' Choice)
  • 1973 - Texas Tornado (Atlantic)
  • 1973 - Doug Sahm and Band (Atlantic)


Solo compilations

  • 2004 - He's About a Groover: An Essential Collection (Fuel 2000)
  • 2004 - Complete Atlantic Recordings (Rhino)
  • 2003 - The Genuine Texas Groover (Rhino Handmade)
  • 2001 - Son of San Antonio: The Roots of Sir Douglas (Music Club)
  • 2000 - San Antonio Rock: The Harlem Recordings 1957-1961 (Norton)
  • 2000 - In the Beginning (Aim)
  • 1995 - His Early Years (Collectables)
  • 1995 - Get on Up (Collectables)
  • 1992 - The Best of Doug Sahm's Atlantic Sessions (Rhino)
  • 1986 - Texas (Road Runner)
  • 1981 - Sir Douglas: His First Recordings (Charly)
  • 1979 - Sir Doug: Way Back When He Was Just Doug Sahm (Harlem Hitparade)


Recordings by other artists

  • 2009 - Keep Your Soul: A Tribute To Doug Sahm -Various Artists (Vanguard Records)

See also

References

  1. ^ Brown, Andrew. liner notes from Doug Sahm: San Antonio Rock: the Harlem Recordings 1957-1961. Norton Records CED-274, 2000.
  2. ^ 1960s......And Who WasMr Jones?' in All Across the Telegraph: A Bob Dylan Handbook, Ed. Michael Gray and John Bauldie
  3. ^ 1960s......And Who WasMr Jones?' in All Across the Telegraph: A Bob Dylan Handbook, Ed. Michael Gray and John Bauldie
  4. ^ 1968 Rolling Stone Covers : Photos : Rolling Stone

External links

Awards
First
None recognized before
AMA Presidents Award
2002
Succeeded by
Gram Parsons

 
 
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