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Kim Wilson

 
Artist: Kim Wilson
Kim Wilson

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Worked With:

Stuart Sullivan, George Rains, Greg Piccolo, Derek O'Brien, Mark "Kaz" Kazanoff, Doug James, Preston Hubbard, Keith Ferguson, Fran Christina, Al Copley, Duke Robillard, Ronnie Earl

Formal Connection With:

  • Born: January 06, 1951, Detroit, MI
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Blues
  • Instrument: Harmonica, Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Lookin' for Trouble," "That's Life," "Kim Wilson"
  • Representative Songs: "Baby Please Don't Lie to Me," "If I Should Lose You," "Lowdown"

Biography

Harmonica player, songwriter and singer Kim Wilson is as much a student and historian of classic blues as he is one of the U.S.'s top harmonica players. Simply put, Wilson has taste; when he enters the recording studio, he has a clear vision of what he wants his next record to sound like. Aside from all this, he's also an extremely hard worker and a major road hog, spending upwards of 200 nights a year on the road, playing festivals and clubs throughout the U.S., Canada and Europe with his own Kim Wilson band and leading the Fabulous Thunderbirds.

Although he's long been known as the charismatic frontman for the Fabulous Thunderbirds, Wilson's solo albums -- which feature bands of his own choosing for different tracks -- is where the genius in his work shows through most clearly. Born January 6, 1951 in Detroit, Wilson grew up in California. His parents were singers who would sing popular standards on the radio, and while Wilson took trombone and guitar lessons, he didn't discover blues until he was a senior in high school. Wilson's father later worked for General Motors and raised his family in Goleta, California, he recalled in a 1994 interview in his adopted hometown of Austin.

"We weren't rich, but we were alright," he recalled. Wilson dropped out of college and began playing blues full time in 1970. Wilson had a rented room and lived the hippie existence, getting his harmonica chops together by playing with traveling blues musicians like Eddie Taylor. Even though Wilson had only switched to harmonica in his senior year in high school, his progress on the instrument was rapid and every bit as all-consuming as his blues record-buying habit. Charlie Musselwhite, John Lee Hooker and Sonny Rhodes were among the other Bay Area musicians Wilson befriended and worked with in clubs. But Wilson didn't meet his biggest mentor until after he moved to Austin in the mid-'70s.

"Muddy Waters was my biggest mentor. He really made my reputation for me, and that was a fantastic time of my life, being associated with that man," he recalled of his early days with the Fabulous Thunderbirds in Austin. There, at the Antone's blues nightclub, Wilson and his Thunderbirds would back up whoever came into town, and it didn't take long for the band to realize they had Waters' blessing.

As a songwriter, Wilson takes his cue from the long-forgotten names like Tampa Red, Roosevelt Sykes and Lonnie Johnson. His 1993 solo album, Tigerman, for the Austin-based Antone's label, features just three of his own tunes. Being the student of the blues that he is, Wilson was understandably hesitant to record too many of his own tunes when he'd already had a vision in his head of how he was going to rework classics like Joe Hill Louis's "Tiger Man," the album's title track. He followed up his debut with the equally brilliant That's Life (1994), also for Antone's, and again this recording contains just three self-penned songs.

Wilson's career took a boost in the '90s with a major-label deal with Private Music/BMG for the Fabulous Thunderbirds and frequent concert appearances with Bonnie Raitt. Wilson's solo albums are solid productions, highly recommended for harmonica students and fans of classic Texas blues and rhythm & blues. ~ Richard Skelly, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Kim Wilson
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Wilson performing in 1996

Kim Wilson (born 6 January 1951) is a U.S. blues singer and harmonica player. He is best known as the lead vocalist and frontman for the The Fabulous Thunderbirds on two hit songs of the 1980s; "Tuff Enuff" and "Wrap It Up".

Contents

Career

Wilson was born in Detroit, Michigan in 1951,[1] but he grew up in Goleta, California. He started with the blues in the late 1960s and was tutored by people like George "Harmonica" Smith, Luther Tucker and Pee Wee Crayton, and was influenced by swamp blues harmonica players like Slim Harpo and Lazy Lester. Before he moved to Austin, Texas in 1974, he was the leader of a band in Minneapolis, Minnesota. In Austin he formed The Fabulous Thunderbirds with guitarist Jimmie Vaughan.

Wilson continues to perform up to 300 dates per year at blues festivals and clubs in America, Canada, and Europe, both as leader of The Fabulous Thunderbirds and with the Kim Wilson Blues Revue.

His powerful style of blues harp playing has been described as "loaded with the textures of a full-blown horn section."[2]

Discography

Solo

  • Tigerman (1993)
  • That's Life (1994)
  • My Blues (1997)
  • Smokin' Joint (2001)
  • Looking for Trouble (2003)
  • My Blues Sessions: Kim's Mix, Volume I (2006)

Guest

  • Kid Ramos - Kid Ramos
  • James Cotton - & Friends
  • Bonnie Raitt - Road Tested - 1995
  • JW-Jones - Bogart's Bounce (guest) 2002 / My Kind of Evil (producer/guest) 2004
  • Barrelhouse Chuck - Got My Eyes On You - 2007
  • Omar Kent Dykes & Jimmy Vaughan - Jimmy Reed Highway - 2007

References

External links



 
 
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Ron Levy's Wild Kingdom (1985 Album by Ron Levy's Wild Kingdom)
Blues Cruise (1986 Album by Denny Freeman)
Ludella (1990 Album by Jimmy Rogers)

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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