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If blues is played
right,” says Austin, Texas native W.C. Clark, “it makes your soul
feel clean.” Indeed, master guitarist/vocalist Clark – known as “The
Godfather of Austin Blues” – has been playing the blues right and
cleansing souls from the east side of Austin to stages around the
world for over 40 years. He's been mentoring countless young blues
and soul players in the finer points of the music for almost as
long. Blues stars from Stevie Ray and Jimmie Vaughan to Angela
Strehli to Lou Ann Barton to Marcia Ball have all perfected their
craft under Clark's tutelage. Clark's mix of modern Texas blues,
searing guitar and heartfelt, Memphis-style soul vocals have made
him a favorite of blues and R&B fans alike. The HOUSTON
CHRONICLE said Clark is “one of Austin's most pervasive live
performers…he is a powerful and poignant soul man with hard-earned
blues wisdom.” The NEW YORK POST calls Clark “a legend
of the blues world.”
Before he began
releasing albums in 1986, Clark was often referred to in the local
press as Austin's Best-Kept Secret. Between the overwhelmingly
positive media attention, the popular notoriety, the bigger and
better tours, the secret was out. The AUSTIN AMERICAN
STATESMAN says its hometown hero is “one of the greatest
modern blues performers in the world…blending rock with R&B, soul
and a touch of funk.” The AUSTIN CHRONICLE describes
his music as “Good rockin’, soul-drenched Austin blues. A potent
combination of gritty Texas guitar wedded to devastating,
gospel-rich Memphis vocals.” Thanks to a series of stellar albums
(each accompanied by piles of passionate press) and a reputation as
a powerful live performer, the man know as “The Godfather of Austin
Blues,” is now among the best loved guitarists and vocalists in the
blues world.
On his album,
From Austin With Soul, Clark
not only makes his Alligator Records debut, he forcefully carries
his soul-drenched blues to heights he's previously only hinted at.
Clark wrote five of the album's 13 songs (Bitchy Men, Let It Rain,
Got To Find A Lover, I'm Gonna Disappear, I Keep Hanging On), and
included well-chosen covers from a variety of artists, including
Clarence Carter (Snatching It Back), Gatemouth Brown (Midnight Hour
Blues), Bobby Bland (Got Me Where You Want Me), Albert King (Get Out
Of My Life, Woman), and Johnny Adams (Real Live Livin' Hurtin' Man).
Clark's emotional duet with Marcia Ball, on Don't Mess Up A Good
Thing, is only one of the album's many musical highlights. Recorded
at Arlyn Studios in Austin and produced by Mark “Kaz” Kazanoff, the
album features a stellar cast of the city's best musicians,
including bassist Larry Fulcher, drummer Frosty Smith, guitarists
Derek O'Brien and Pat Boyak, keyboardist Riley Osborne, and Kazanoff
himself leading a punchy horn section. BLUES REVUE declared, “With
From Austin With Soul, Clark has painted his
masterpiece. Few artists rival Clark’s ability to sing as soulfully
as Al Green and play guitar with such tasteful precision.” BILLBOARD
celebrated the release, calling Clark “Superb. He’s a soulful
vocalist and a tasty guitarist with an enormous amount of talent.”
Clark won the 2003 W. C. Handy Award for “Blues Song of the Year”
for his composition “Let It Rain” and was nominated for the 2004 W.
C. Handy Award for “Male Soul Artist Of The Year”.
Clark’s Alligator
release, Deep In The Heart,
is another slice of stunning soul mixed with contemporary electric
blues. With wrenching, heartfelt ballads to celebratory, horn-fueled
Texas stomps, Deep In The Heart
is a blistering ride through sinewy Memphis soul and foot-stomping
Texas roadhouse blues. With friends Marcia Ball and Ruthie Foster
duetting on three songs, Deep In The
Heartis the most fully realized and soulfully intense
album of Clark’s long career.
Wesley Curley Clark
was born into a musical Austin family in 1939. His father played
guitar and his grandmother, mother, and sisters all sang gospel in
the church choir. “I had so much music in my soul,” Clark recalls,
“all I had to do was pick up an instrument and play it.” He learned
the guitar as a youngster and at age 16 played his first gig at the
Victory Grill, where he was introduced to Texas blues legend T.D.
Bell. Soon after, Clark switched to playing bass and joined Bell's
band, The Cadillacs. In the early 1960s he began a six-year stint
with Blues Boy Hubbard and The Jets at the popular Austin nightclub,
Charlie's Playhouse. There he met R&B hitmaker Joe Tex, who
recruited W.C. to fill the vacant guitar slot in his group. Clark
toured the Southern “chitlin' circuit,” learning music first-hand
from Tex and countless soul and blues stars along the way, including
Tyrone Davis and James Brown. Along the way, Clark perfected his
ability to lift an audience into a soul frenzy. When he returned to
Austin, Clark found the musical landscape changing with a whole new
crop of young white kids beginning to venture out to the blues clubs
to learn how to play. The scene was completely transformed as future
stars like the Vaughan brothers, Bill Campbell, Paul Ray, and Angela
Strehli came to Austin and discovered the rich musical legacy of
bluesmen like W.C. Clark.
In the early 1970s,
Clark formed Southern Feeling along with singer Angela Strehli and
guitarist/pianist Denny Freeman. He then met and befriended Jimmie
Vaughan's firebrand guitarist brother Stevie Ray, who occasionally
sat in with the band. After Southern Feeling dissolved, Clark took a
day job as a mechanic, but was courted relentlessly by Stevie, who
was determined to have W.C. as a member of his own band. Clark
eventually quit his job to become the bass player in the Triple
Threat Revue with Stevie, keyboardist Mike Kindred, drummer Freddie
Pharoah and singer Lou Ann Barton. While playing in this band, Clark
and keyboardist Kindred co-wrote Cold Shot, which became one of
Vaughan's biggest hits and recently earned W.C. his first platinum
record.
Clark left Vaughan in
the late 1970s and formed his own band, The W.C. Clark Blues Revue,
and self-released his first recording,
Something For Everybody, in 1986. The band became
stalwarts on the Austin scene throughout the 1980s and early 1990s,
playing regular gigs at legendary venues like Antone's and opening
for the likes of B.B. King, James Brown, Bobby “Blue” Bland and
Albert King. Clark's star – at least locally – was rising.
As his celebrity
increased, the critically acclaimed PBS television show
Austin City Limits celebrated
Clark’s 50th birthday in 1989 brought Clark together in front of a
live audience, with his disciples Stevie Ray Vaughan, Jimmie
Vaughan, Kim Wilson, Lou Ann Barton, Angela Strehli and Will Sexton
all taking part. The broadcast, one of the series' most popular,
brought Clark to the attention of a national audience for the first
time.
In 1994, Clark's
friend Kaz Kazanoff introduced him to Hammond Scott of Black Top
Records. Impressed by what he heard, Scott released
Heart Of Gold that
same year. Texas Soul
followed in 1996, exciting fans and critics alike. “Honey dripping
soul, the toughest of Lone Star Blues,” hailed THE CHICAGO
TRIBUNE. With the accolades
building and the reach of his music extending, Clark won a coveted
W.C. Handy Blues Award for “Soul Blues Album Of The Year” for Texas
Soul.
His next release, 1998's
Lover's Plea, found Clark singing and playing
stronger than ever. Lover's Plea earned him another W.C. Handy Blues
Award, this time for Artist Most Deserving of Wider Recognition.
Another televised performance, (as part of The Best Of Austin
City Limits), hit the airwaves in 1998, setting the stage for a
national tour in support of Lover's Plea. Once again, critics and
fans went wild. The Chicago Reader called Clark “a veritable
superstar.” In 2000, AUSTIN CITY LIMITS aired an extended jam
between W.C. Clark and Stevie Ray Vaughan as part of a Stevie Ray
Vaughan special.
BLUES REVUE
says “Clark conjures the vocal power of Otis Redding and Wilson
Pickett and the guitar of Steve Cropper and Albert King.” LIVING
BLUES calls him “a first-rate and funky, passionate and powerful
performer…a singularly skilled leader among modern blues artists.”
“Armed with a powerful, gospel-approved voice, Clark delivers his
songs with God-fearing intensity.” – GUITAR PLAYER
Clark has toured
relentlessly for years including performances at the Chicago Blues
Festival, European Blues Festivals, Ottawa and Toronto Blues
Festivals, various festivals in Europe, Russia and Turkey. Along the
way he has met up with old fans and friends and undoubtedly gained
new ones everywhere he plays. The rest of the world is now in on
what the city of Austin has known for decades: W.C. Clark is an
innovative and creative artist whose soulful singing and tasty
guitar playing reach out from Austin, with soul, to all corners of
the music-loving world and his fan base will never stop growing and
never stop shouting for more. |
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