ALLIGATOR RECORDS RE-SIGNS GUITARIST/VOCALIST TINSLEY ELLIS!
NEW LIVE CD DUE IN EARLY SUMMER 2005
"Feral blues guitar...non-stop gigging
has sharpened his six-string to a razor's edge...his eloquence
dazzles... he achieves pyrotechnics that rival Jeff Beck and Eric
Clapton."
-- Rolling Stone
Alligator Records is pleased to announce the return of guitarist/
vocalist/ songwriter Tinsley Ellis to the label. Ellis began first
recorded for Alligator in 1988. He recorded five albums for the
label before recording for the Capricorn and Telarc labels. The
new relationship will kick off with Ellis recording two nights
of live performances (March 25 and 26, 2005) at Chord On Blues
in St. Charles, IL, a suburb of Chicago, for his new Alligator
CD. Due out in early summer, 2005, this will be Ellis' first live
album, and is one, according to Ellis, that his fans have long
been waiting for.
Both
Ellis and Alligator president Bruce Iglauer are thrilled to
be working together again. "Tinsley is one of the finest
younger generation blues rockers. He's made great albums for
us in the past, and we're excited to have him back in the Alligator
family. He's great in the studio, but even better live, so I'm
really looking forward to this recording," says Iglauer.
And
Ellis is in total agreement. "I look forward to working
with my friends at Alligator. Nobody knows the blues market
better, and the roster of acts is the strongest they've ever
had. I'm beyond proud to be back."
Born
in Atlanta in 1957, Ellis grew up in southern Florida and first
played guitar at age eight. He found the blues through the backdoor
of the British Invasion bands like The Yardbirds, The Animals,
Cream, and The Rolling Stones. He especially loved the Kings
- Freddie and B.B. - and spent hours immersing himself in their
music. His love for the blues solidified when he was 14. At
a B.B. King performance, Tinsley sat mesmerized in the front
row. When the master broke a string on Lucille, he changed it
without missing a beat, and handed the broken string to the
youngster. After the show, B.B. came out and talked with fans,
further impressing Ellis with his warmth and down-to-earth attitude.
By now Tinsley's fate was sealed; he had to become a blues guitarist.
And yes, he still has that string.
Already
an accomplished musician, Ellis left Florida and returned to
Atlanta in 1975. He soon joined the Alley Cats, a gritty blues
band that included Preston Hubbard (of Fabulous Thunderbirds
fame). In 1981, along with veteran blues singer and harpist
"Chicago" Bob Nelson, Tinsley formed The Heartfixers,
a group that would become Atlanta's top-drawing blues band.
Upon hearing the band's second release, "Live At The Moonshadow"
(Landslide), "The Washington Post" declared, "Tinsley
Ellis is a legitimate guitar hero." After cutting two more
Heartfixers albums for Landslide, "Cool On It" (featuring
Tinsley"s vocal debut) and "Tore Up" (with vocals
by blues shouter Nappy Brown) Ellis was ready to head out on
his own. Ellis sent a copy of the master tape for his solo debut
to Bruce Iglauer at Alligator Records. "I had heard 'Cool
On It,'" recalls Iglauer, "and I was amazed. I hadn't
heard Tinsley before, but he played like the guys with huge
international reputations. It wasn't just his raw power; it
was his taste and maturity that got to me. It had the power
of rock but felt like the blues. I knew I wanted to hear more
of this guy."
"Georgia
Blue," Tinsley's Alligator debut, hit an unprepared public
by surprise in 1988. Critics and fans quickly agreed that a
new and original guitar hero had emerged. "Guitar World"
called the album "a solid smoking affair from start to
finish." Before long, Alligator arranged to reissue "Cool
On It" and "Tore Up," thus exposing Tinsley's
earlier music to a growing fan base.
Tinsley's
next releases (1989's "Fanning The Flames," 1992's
"Trouble Time," 1994's "Storm Warning" and
1997's "Fire It Up") solidified his reputation as
one of the best guitar slingers and songwriters in the country.
Playing with friends Peter Buck and keyboardist Chuck Leavell
(Rolling Stones), and working with producers Eddy Offord (Yes,
Yoko Ono) and Tom Dowd (Allman Brothers, Ray Charles) brought
even more critical acclaim Ellis' way. "Dazzling musicianship
pitched somewhere between the exhilarating volatility of rock
and roll and the passion of urban blues," raved the "Los
Angeles Times."
Features
and reviews ran in "Rolling Stone," the "Chicago
Tribune," the "Washington Post," the "Los
Angeles Times," the "Boston Globe," and in many
other national and regional publications. His largest audience
by far came when NBC Sports ran a story on Atlanta's best blues
guitarist during their 1996 Summer Olympic Coverage viewed by
millions of people all over the world. Atlanta magazine called
Tinsley, "the most significant blues artist to emerge from
Atlanta since Blind Willie McTell." "It's hard to
overstate the raw power of his music," announced the "Chicago
Sun-Times."
Ellis
has played -- at least once -- in all 50 states, as well as
Canada, Europe, Australia and South America. Whether he's out
with his own band or sharing stages with Robert Cray, Koko Taylor
or The Allman Brothers, he averages over 150 performances a
year, bringing his fast-moving, high-energy, guitar-drenched
performances to fans all over the world. The new CD will capture
that ferocious power on CD for the very first time.
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