From Blind Pig Records - Thanks to Debra Regur - RIP Magic Slim
Slim's slash and burn guitar
technique and booming vocals made for a commanding stage presence. His
intense style was the blueprint that spawned much of the music played by
modern blues artists and rockers. After catching one of Slim's
electrifying live shows at a local nightclub Eddie Vetter invited Slim
to open Pearl Jam's concert in Chicago. Magic Slim also had an
encyclopedic repertoire of hundreds of blues songs in his head, giving
his live shows a charming impromptu quality.
Growing up in Grenada,
Mississippi, Slim took an early interest in music, singing in the church
choir, and fashioning a guitar for himself with baling wire from a
broom, which he nailed to the wall. "Mama whooped me for that," recalled
Slim. His first love was the piano, but having lost the little finger
on his right hand in a cotton gin accident, he found it difficult to
play properly. Undaunted, he simply switched to guitar, working in the
cotton fields during the week and playing the blues at house parties on
weekends. In 2011 the state of Mississippi erected a Blues Trail Marker
in Slim's honor in front of a building in Grenada where his mother
operated a restaurant.
In 1955, like many musicians
from the Deep South, Slim migrated to Chicago, where he was mentored by
his friend Magic Sam, who gave the lanky Morris his lifelong stage
moniker. Initially discouraged by the highly competitive local music
scene, Slim went back to Mississippi and spent the next five years
woodshedding and perfecting his craft. He confidently returned to
Chicago and became a formidable player on the scene, eventually putting
together the Teardrops, who would become one of the busiest and
best-loved blues bands around, and one of the most sought-after
headliners for festivals in Europe, Japan, and South America. Slim and
his group won the coveted Blues Music Award in 2003 as "Blues Band of
the Year," one of six times Slim won a BMA, considered the highest honor
in the blues. Living Blues magazine called Slim and the Teardrops "a national treasure."
Slim's recording career began
with a series of singles in 1966, and he recorded his first album for a
French label in 1977. With the release of Gravel Road in 1990,
he began a twenty-two year association with Blind Pig Records, who
issued ten albums and a live DVD over that span. His last release,
2012's Bay Boy, proved that Slim could still deliver the goods. As No Depression
said, "Magic Slim doesn't just play the blues, he body slams his
audiences with a vicious guitar attack that pins them to the floor. His
blues are the in-your-face variety." AllMusicGuide added,
"Magic Slim turned 75 in 2012, but his growling vocals have the fire and
brimstone of a Young Lion and his guitar playing is still as
razor-sharp as it was when he turned pro in the '50s."
Blind Pig Records owner Jerry Del Giudice said, "Magic Slim embodied the heart and soul of this label. It was Magic Slim, and the guys like him, and their music, that inspired us to start the label in the first place."
Blind Pig Records owner Jerry Del Giudice said, "Magic Slim embodied the heart and soul of this label. It was Magic Slim, and the guys like him, and their music, that inspired us to start the label in the first place."
Blues Revue once
remarked, "Whoever the house band in blues heaven may be, even money
says they're wearing out Magic Slim albums trying to get that Teardrops
sound down cold." Now Slim can assume his rightful place as the leader
of that band.
For a complete biography, please click HERE. For publicity photos, please click HERE. To see a video of Slim recording "Goin' To Mississippi" in the Blind Pig Chicago warehouse in April of 2002, please click HERE.

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