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Even after 40 years away from his
Louisiana home, Lonnie Brooks' music is still instilled with the funky,
swampy bayou rhythms of Opelousas and Lafayette, and his lyrics often
speak of black cat bones and "Mojo Hands". But along the road from
Louisiana to Chicago, he's combined the swing of Texas, the soul of
Memphis and the pure power of Chicago blues into a musical gumbo that is
all his own.
Lee Baker, Jr. was just a young laborer in Port Arthur when Clifton
Chenier spotted him playing guitar on his porch and drafted him into the
Red Hot Louisiana Band. Soon after, under the name "Guitar Junior", he
burst onto the scene as a rock 'n' roll star, cutting a string of Gulf
Coast hits like "Family Rules" , "The Crawl", and "Roll, Roll, Roll" for
the famed Goldband label.
In 1959 he befriended the Legendary Sam Cooke on a caravan tour of the
south, wrote a couple of tunes together, then hitched a ride with him
back to Chicago to live with Samıs mom and brother. This is where he
began soaking up the raw sounds of the big city with the likes of Muddy
Waters, Howling Wolf, Little Walter, Otis Rush and Magic Sam. Soon after
that he then landed a job as a side man with Jimmy Reed and recorded the
Blues Classic "Big Boss Man" as well as taking on a new name Lonnie
Brooks.
Lonnie played throughout the '60s in the tough joints of the West Side,
and even recorded an album for Capitol under his old name of Guitar
Junior named "Broke and Hungry". But it wasn't until 1978 that Lonnie
cut "Two Headed Man" for Alligator's Living Chicago Blues series and
debuted the "Voodoo Blues" sound that became his trademark. The release
of the "Grand Prix Award" winning Album "Bayou Lightning" on Alligator
Records in 1979 exploded Lonnie into the Blues scene. The Grammy
nominated "Bayou Lightning Strikes: Live from Chicago" catapulted Lonnie
into Legendary status winning wider recognition worldwide.
Since then, he's played everywhere from the San Francisco Blues Fest to
Montreux Jazz Festival from the "Hee Haw" TV show to David Lettermanıs
Late Show. He teamed up with Dan Aykrod, John Goodman, and Director John
Landis in the "Blues Brother 2000" movie as himself. He's been Eric
Clapton's onstage guest at Buddy Guy's Legends club and he's put 150,000
people on their feet as headliner of the 1996 Chicago Blues Festival.
He's not a true Voodoo Daddy (that's just a name of his song), but
definitely a "Blues Daddy" often leading sons Ronnie Baker Brooks (a
writer of some new voodoo blues classics) and son Wayne in a
three-guitar onslaught. With an unbeatable live show featuring his
nonstop infectious grooves, Lonnie Brooks' voodoo blues are essential
listening for blues fans all over the world.
Lonnie's current endeavors include co-authoring the book "Blues for
Dummies" with Son Wayne Baker Brooks, and Cub Koda. |