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Wizz Jones

 
Artist: Wizz Jones
  • Active: '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "Right Now," "The Legendary Me," "When I Leave Berlin"
  • Representative Songs: "First Girl I Loved" "American Land"

Biography

The English folk scene with its many leaves and branches is traceable to a few gnarly yet enduring taproots. Along with the Watersons and Davy Graham, guitarist Wizz Jones is one of them. While virtually unknown in America in this sorry age, Jones was paramount in influencing virtually every acoustic guitarist and folk scenester who came after him in the U.K.

Jones began to play guitar seriously in the mid- to late '50s after being inspired by the literature of the Beat Generation, and American blues and folk recordings such as those of Son House, Blind Blake, Woody Guthrie, Cisco Houston, Robert Johnson, Lonnie Johnson, Tampa Red, Big Bill Broonzy, and others. Jones bore a strange figure in British coffeehouses with his uncharacteristically long hair and hobo-ish demeanor, including a guitar that was literally held together with leather straps. He knew his stuff, however, and his playing was rooted deep in the Mississippi Delta and in early Chicago blues styles and he established a reputation early among younger players who soaked up both his image and the licks he fired off from a rapid right-handed picking style that was clearly his own. Jones was interviewed early on by the BBC who was trying to figure out what the ruckus was on the new British folk music scene, and came off as a bearded shaggy-haired smart ass. To the BBC's credit, they left his segment in and Jones became a folk hero to the second generation of Brit folk musicians, many of whom were about to make their own mark. Among those who saw the broadcast and claim to have been directly influenced by it are John Martyn, Ralph McTell, Bert Jansch, John Renbourn, and Richard Thompson.

Embracing the beat life, he and Clive Palmer took to busking in the streets of France for a while -- even encountering a young British bluesman in Paris named Rod Stewart. Back in England, Jones met banjo king Pete Stanley in 1962 and formed a bluegrass duo that released a now legendary -- and highly collectible -- Columbia recording called Music for Moonshiners in early 1963. The duo issued one more recording for the label called 10 Tons of Bluegrass before disbanding in 1966.

Beginning in 1968, Jones began recording a series of albums upon which his obscure, yet legendary, modern reputation was founded. Hanging with a bunch of locals and a loose-knit band he formed called Lazy Farmer, Jones issued nine albums between 1969 and 1977 for labels United Artists, Village Thing, and Plant Life, in addition to Columbia as well as a small host of German independent records. These discs include Wizz Jones, The Legendary Me, Right Now (w/ John Renbourn), Winter Songs, When I Leave Berlin (with Lazy Farmer and Bert Jansch), Lazy Farmer (as Lazy Farmer), Happiness Was Free, Magical Flight, Folk and Western Songs, and Solo Flight.

From the end of the '70s and through most of the '80s, Jones played the festival and small club circuit in the British Isles and in Europe and almost ceased to record on his own, though he was a regular performer on other artists' recordings, including those by Ralph McTell, Derroll Adams, and Chas MacDevitt. Only two records appeared during the '80s, Roll on River with Werner Lammerhirt and The Grapes of Life, in 1981 and 1987 respectively.

The '90s saw the beginning of Jones' resurgence as a solo performer, teacher, and recording artist. First there was the Live in Dublin recording for LPR Publications, and then the issue of The Village Thing tapes which were compiled of '70s material, showed there was a renewed interest in Jones' work. Perhaps due to the excellent BBC series, Acoustic Routes, presenting the U.K.'s folk heritage, Jones' talents were in demand on the festival circuit, at home, and throughout Europe for much of the '90s. Other recordings of note from the '90s include Late Nights & Long Days, and a single of "Easy Rider."

1995 saw the issue of Jones' first U.S.-released recording, Dazzling Stanger, a newly recorded compilation of his earlier music on the Scenes Of label. In 1998, Jones was paid tribute to by being included in the Masters of British Guitar series. Jones played no less than 15 songs for his segment.

Jones' Through the Fingers album on Far Flung is an issue of his highly regarded and much sought-after Milton Keynes performance from 1998. He also released Lucky the Man in 2001, another Scenes Of disc released simultaneously on both CD and limited edition. Guests include Renbourn and Jaqui McShee from Pentangle, old busking mate Clive Palmer, Gerry Conway, Simeon Jones, Martin Weatley, and others. Jones' career in the early part of the new century included touring and recording balanced with reissues of his entire catalog by various labels in the U.K. and U.S., all of them with bonus tracks, creating a new wealth of material for collectors. The compilation Legendary Me arrived in 2006. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Wizz Jones
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Wizz Jones
Birth name Raymond Ronald Jones
Born April 25, 1939 (1939-04-25) (age 70)
Origin Croydon, Surrey, England
Genres Folk music
Years active late 1950s - present
Website www.wizzjones.com

Raymond Ronald Jones (23 April 1939, Croydon, Surrey) better-known as Wizz Jones is an English acoustic guitarist, singer and songwriter. He has been performing since the late 1950s and recording from 1965 to the present. He has worked with many of the notable guitarists of the English folk music revival, such as John Renbourn and Bert Jansch.

Contents

Early days

Jones became infatuated with the bohemian image of Woody Guthrie and Jack Kerouac and grew his hair long. His mother had started calling him Wizzy after the Beano comic strip character "Wizzy the Wuz" because at the age of nine Raymond was a budding magician. The nickname stuck throughout his school years and when he formed his first band "The Wranglers" in 1957 the name became permanent. Bert Jansch later said "I think he's the most underrated guitarist ever". In the early 1960s he went busking in Paris, France, and there mixed in an artistic circle that included Rod Stewart, Alex Campbell, Clive Palmer (Incredible String Band) and Ralph McTell. After a couple of years in Paris he married and returned to England to raise a family. In 1965 his only single was released: Bob Dylan's "Ballad of Hollis Brown". By this time the skiffle boom was over but one of the stars of that movement, Chas McDevitt, used Jones' guitar-playing on five albums in 1965 and 1966. Another musician on those sessions was the bluegrass banjo-player, Pete Stanley. In 1966 Jones and Stanley released an album Sixteen Tons of Bluegrass, but this partnership broke down in 1967, as Jones then turned solo.

The folk period

Jones started to became a singer-songwriter. His first solo album was Wizz Jones in 1969. Up to 1988, ten solo albums followed and he played on Ralph McTell’s single "Take It Easy" in 1974. Most of his recordings from this period are long out of print. A brief excursion as a member of the traditional folk band Lazy Farmer in 1975 produced an album that was reissued in 2006. The early 1990s were a quiet period. He almost disappeared from public view. When in the mid-nineties he appeared on the Bert Jansch television documentary Acoustic Routes, there was renewed interest in his work. In 2001 he led John Renbourn and other members of Pentangle on the album Lucky The Man. In 2007 The Legendary Me and When I Leave Berlin were reissued on CD by the Sunbeam record label.

Wizz Jones is currently represented by the Perrotts Folly Agency

Discography

Solo albums

(*) with John Renbourn and others. (**) with Bert Jansch. (***) includes recordings from 1970-74. (****) with Simeon Jones.

Collaborations and compilations

Pete Stanley and Wizz Jones

Lazy Farmer (including Wizz Jones)

Wizz Jones and Werner Lämmerhirt

Anthology - Alex Campbell, Andy Irvine, Wizz Jones, Finbar Furey, Dolores Keane et al.

  • Folk Friends (1979)
  • Folk Friends 2 (1981)

Compilations

  • The Village Thing Tapes (1992)

Single

  • The Ballad of Hollis Brown / Riff Minor (1965)

Video and DVD

  • Masters of the British Guitar (VHS) (1998)
  • Wizz Jones - Maestros of the Guitar No 1 (2006)

Session recordings

  • Ralph McTell: "Easy" (1974)
  • Derroll Adams "Songs of the Banjoman" (1984)
  • Clive Palmer "Clive Palmer's Banjoland" (recorded 1967, released 2007)

External links


 
 

 

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