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Solomon King
Back
in the day of the old American Dream, Solomon lived in Detroit City and
worked at the big automobile dream factory. But the promise of
fulfilling that big dream quickly faded into the assembly line Blues.
Mind-numbing monotonous hours, and a daily grind of soul-destroying
work, eased only by lots of booze, broads, and the never-ending Friday
night cocaine Blues. Reflecting on those times, he says, "There was a
lot of hurting going on. It's too hazy to remember. But one thing was
constant. I always had the Blues. Well, truth is the Blues always had
me. We were joined at the hip."
Then the layoffs hit. The great auto dream factories began closing
down. Out of work, Solomon tossed his trusty acoustic guitar into the
trunk of a Ford Maverick and headed west. He managed to dodge some
occasional scrapes with the law along the way and when he ran out of
road found himself in L.A. Different town, different dream, same
factory—The Hollywood Creedo of "Hurry up and wait". The
endless
hours of unemployment and nothing to do drove Solomon to playing his
guitar and "writing songs about what I knew best—the Blues."
Solomon continued honing his craft jamming with Blues musicians and
hanging out in their circles. Then one day an electric guitar uttered a
sweet whisper promising to take his music to new heights. The plea was
so urgent that he abandoned his acoustic guitar for a '57 Goldtop. Then
he took one more step—maybe more of a leap of faith than a
step.
To honor the royal lineage of the great electric Blues guitarists like
B. B. King, Freddie King and Albert King, another King was added to the
list, Solomon King: New American Bluesman.
With his non-compromising approach to his music, Solomon King became
more interested in advancing the blues rather than just preserving it's
sanctity. "Jack Me Up"
(currently sizzling on YouTube) and "Frankie & Johnny,"
both from his soon-to-be-released CD, was featured on two episodes of
HBO's Golden Globe winning True Blood series. Solomon raises the blues
bar by going back to the highest point in music and, with his own
unique style and passion, takes it uphill.
Just out of the studio recording his first full length CD, Solomon King
gathered together some of the musical legends of hometown Motown
including: Ray Parker,
Jr. (Ghostbusters), Ollie
"Olliewood" Brown (Rolling Stones, Stevie Wonder), and Reggie McBride (on
the road with Keb'Mo). The new recordings are produced by 100 Gold
Record Producer, and Detroit native Sylvester
Rivers.
Solomon King continues to perform live in venues at some of the hottest
clubs in LA, including the Whiskey-A-Go-Go, Stone, Hard Rock
Café and the historical South Central club, Babe &
Ricky's.
He has also taken his performances to the East Coast and Australia.
To hear Solomon King is to carry on the tradition of the American
Dream. It's like a piece of broken concrete was uprooted from the
wreckage of the old Motor City dream factory and transplanted into the
soul of the New American Dream factory: Hollywood, CA. So wake up and
begin the dream again. Welcome to the New American Blues of Solomon
King.
Quotes
“King is blessed with a soulful and bluesy voice …
you are
surprised when an artist takes these songs and brings new life to them
by changing them to deliver a personal musical vision that respects the
song’s roots without resorting to mere mimicry.”
“…Solomon King has an original take on the blues.
With a
sound that is both refreshingly new and comfortingly familiar. King is
“an artist with serious potential.” -Mick Rainsford, Blues in Britain
"Under The Sun is a very strong, well-crafted
release for Solomon King with well-chosen covers and some first-rate
original tunes." -Graham
Clarke (Blues Bytes)
“Guitarist Solomon King is on a
mission… a mission from the Motor City to you.
He’s out to
capture your hearts and minds with his own unique spin on the
blues.” -Bob
Andelman, Mr. Media Exclusive Interview
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Solomon
King - Under The Sun
Style:
Blues
Solomon
King’s musical style travels across time and space from the
mellow, acoustic world of Modern Classic Blues to the electrifying
universe of Urban Blues. The West Coast blues born in the
1940s erupted in Southern Cali known for jazzy guitar solos
and honey-toned vocals then crisscrossed America returning in the 60s
with Blue-eyed Blues Rock, White Soul and Outlaw
Country Blues. Now enter Solomon King, heating up the Blues flame with
his soul stirring hometown Motown rhythms and tell-it-like-it-is
lyrics. Welcome to the New American Blues.
Catalog
#4514 (Released February 16, 2010) |
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