Bobby Bland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Bobby "Blue" Bland | |
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Bobby Bland at the Long Beach Blues Festival, 1997
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| Background information | |
| Birth name | Robert Calvin Bland |
| Also known as | "The Lion of the Blues" |
| Born | January 27, 1930 Rosemark, Tennessee, USA |
| Genre(s) | Blues, soul, country |
| Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter, arranger, bandleader |
| Instrument(s) | Vocalist |
| Label(s) | Chess, Modern, Malaco, Duke |
| Associated acts | The Bobby Bland Band |
| Website | bobbybluebland.com |
Robert Calvin Bland (born January 27, 1930) better known as Bobby “Blue” Bland, is an American singer of blues and soul. He is an original member of The Beale Streeters.[1] and is sometimes referred to as the "Lion of the Blues". Along with such artists as Sam Cooke, Ray Charles, and Junior Parker, Bland developed a sound that mixed gospel with the blues and R&B.[1]
In 1992, Bobby Bland was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and in 1997 he received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.[2]
Contents |
[edit] Career
Bobby "Blue" Bland was born in the small town of Rosemark, Tennessee, USA. Later moving to Memphis with his mother, Bland started singing with local gospel groups there, including amongst others the Miniatures. Eager to expand his interests, he began frequenting the city's famous Beale Street where he became associated with an ad hoc circle of aspiring musicians named, not unnaturally, the Beale Streeters.[1]
Bland's recordings from the early 1950s show him striving for individuality, but any progress was halted by a spell in the U.S. Army. When the singer returned to Memphis in 1954 he found several of his former associates, including Johnny Ace, enjoying considerable success, while Bland's recording label, Duke, had been sold to Houston entrepreneur Don Robey. In 1956 Bland began touring with Little Junior Parker. Initially he doubled as valet and driver, a role he reportedly fulfilled for B. B. King and Rosco Gordon.[3] Simultaneously, Bland began asserting his characteristic vocal style. Melodic big-band blues singles, including "Farther Up The Road" (1957) and "Little Boy Blue" (1958) reached the US R&B Top 10, but Bobby's craft was most clearly heard on a series of early 1960s releases including "Cry Cry Cry," "I Pity The Fool" and the sparkling "Turn On Your Love Light," which became a much-covered standard. Despite credits to the contrary, many such classic works were written by Joe Scott, the artist's bandleader and arranger.[1]
Bland continued to enjoy a consistent run of R&B chart entries throughout the mid-'60s but his recorded work was nonetheless eclipsed by a younger generation of performers. Bland's highest charting song on the pop chart, "Ain't Nothing You Can Do" only peaked at #20 during the same week The Beatles held down the Top 5 spots. Financial pressures forced the singer to cut his touring band and in 1968 the group broke up altogether. His relationship with Scott, who died in 1979, was irrevocably severed. Nonetheless, depressed and increasingly dependent on alcohol, Bland weathered this unhappy period. He stopped drinking in 1971; his record company, Duke, was sold to the larger ABC Records group, resulting in several contemporary blues/soul albums including California and Dreamer. The leadoff track from Dreamer, "Ain't No Love In the Heart of the City," was a minor hit, but it would eventually become Bland's best-known song, thanks to a cover by the hard rock band Whitesnake and, much later, a sample on Jay-Z's 2001 album The Blueprint.
Subsequent attempts at pushing the artist towards the disco market were unsuccessful but a 1983 release, "Here We Go Again", provided a commercial life-line. Two years later Bland was signed by Malaco Records, specialists in traditional Southern black music, who provided an empathetic environment. One of the finest singers in post-war blues, Bobby Bland has sadly failed to reach the popular acclaim his influence and craft perhaps deserves.
Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison has often had Bland as a guest singer at his concerts and also included a previously unreleased version of a March 2000 duet of Morrison and Bland singing "Tupelo Honey" on his 2007 compilation album, The Best of Van Morrison Volume 3.
[edit] Discography
[edit] Selected singles
- "Booted" / "I Love You Til The Day I Die" - 1951 *with Bobby "Blue" Bland Chess Records
- "Crying All Night Long" / "Dry Up Baby" - 1952 (Chess Records)
- "Good Lovin'" / "Drifting From Town To Town" - 1952 (Chess Records)
- "Crying" / "A Letter From A Trench In Korea" - 1952 (Chess Records)
- "Lovin' Blues" / "I.O.U. Blues" - 1952 Duke Records
- "Army Blues" / "No Blow, No Show" - 1953 (Duke Records)
- "Time Out" / "It's My Life Baby" - 1955 (Duke Records)
- "You Or None" / "Woke Up Screaming" - 1955 (Duke Records)
- "I Can't Put You Down" / "You've Got Bad Intentions" - 1956 (Duke Records)
- "I Learned My Lesson" / "Lead Us On" - 1956 (Duke Records)
- "I Learned My Lesson" / "I Don't Believe" - 1956 (Duke Records)
- "Don't Want No Woman" / "I Smell Trouble" - 1957 (Duke Records)
- "Farther Up The Road" / "Sometime Tomorrow" - 1957 (Duke Records)
- "Teach Me" (How To Love You) / "Bobby's Blues" - 1957 (Duke Records)
- "You Got Me Where You Want Me" / "Loan A Helping Hand" – 1958 (Duke Records)
- "Little Boy Blue" / "Last Night" – 1958 (Duke Records)
- "You Did Me Wrong" / "I Lost Sight Of The World" - 1959 (Duke Records)
- "Wishing Well" / "I'm Not Ashamed" - 1959 (Duke Records)
- "Is It Real" / "Someday" - 1959 (Duke Records)
- "I'll Take Care Of You" / "That's Why" - 1959 (Duke Records)
- "Lead Me On" / "Hold Me Tenderly" (Duke Records)
- "Cry, Cry, Cry" / "I've Been Wrong So Long" - 1960 (Duke Records)
- "I Pity The Fool" / "Close To You" - 1961 (Duke Records)
- "Don't Cry No More" / "How Does A Cheating Woman Feel" - 1961 (Duke Records)
- "Ain't That Loving You" / "Jelly, Jelly, Jelly" - 1961 (Duke Records)
- "Don't Cry No More" / "Saint James Infirmary" - 1961 (Duke Records)
- "Turn On Your Love Light" / "You're The One" (That I Need) - 1961 (Duke Records)
- "Who Will The Next Fool Be" / "Blue Moon" - 1962 (Duke Records)
- "Love You Baby" / "Drifting" - 1962 (Kent)
- "Yield Not To Temptation" / "How Does A Cheating Woman Feel" - 1962 (Duke Records)
- "Stormy Monday Blues" / "Your Friends" - 1962 (Duke Records)
- "That's The Way Love Is" / "Call On Me" - 1962 (Duke Records)
- "Sometimes You Gotta Cry A Little" / "You're Worth It All" - 1963 (Duke Records)
- "Shoes" / "A Touch Of The Blues" - 1967 (Duke Records)
- "Ain't No Love In The Heart Of The City" / "Twenty-Four Hour Blues" - 1974 (ABC Dunhill Records)
[edit] Selected albums
- Sweet Vibrations" - 1980 (MCA 27076) Tribute to Joe Scott
- Blues Consolidated - 1958 (Duke Records) (with Junior Walker)
- Like Er Red Hot - 1960 (Duke Records)
- Two Steps from the Blues (Duke 1961/Duke/MCA 2002)
- Here's the Man! - 1962 (Duke Records)
- Call On Me - 1963 (MCA)
- Ain't Nothing You Can Do - 1964 (MCA)
- The Soul of The Man" - 1966 (MCA)
- Touch of The Blues - 1967 (Duke Records)
- The Best Of - 1967 (Duke Records)
- The Best Of Volume 2 - 1968 (Duke Records)
- Spotlighting The Man - 1969 (Duke Records)
- His California Album - 1973 (Dunhill Records)
- Together for the First Time (with B. B. King) - 1974 (Dunhill Records)
- Bobby Bland and B. B. King Together Again...Live - 1976 (MCA)
- Years of Tears - 1993 (Malaco)
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d Bobby 'Blue' Bland. Livinblues. Retrieved on 2007-08-09.
- ^ Biography Bobby “Blue” Bland - Blues Singer. All About Jazz. Retrieved on 2007-08-09.
- ^ Bobby Blue Bland. Pbase, soulful impressions. Retrieved on 2007-08-09.

