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Wikipedia

John Mayall

John Mayall, OBE (born 29 November 1933)[1] is an English blues singer, musician and songwriter, whose musical career spans over sixty years. In the 1960s, he was the founder of John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers, a band that has counted among its members some of the most famous blues and blues rock musicians.

John Mayall
Mayall performing in 2004
Background information
Born (1933-11-29) 29 November 1933 (age 89)
Macclesfield, England
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • songwriter
  • producer
Instrument(s)
  • Vocals
  • guitar
  • keyboards
  • harmonica
Years active1956–present
Labels
Websitejohnmayall.com

Personal life

 
John Mayall (right) with Greg Rzab and Jay Davenport in 2017

Born in Macclesfield, Cheshire, in 1933,[2] Mayall grew up in Cheadle Hulme. He was the son of Murray Mayall, a guitarist and jazz enthusiast. From an early age he was drawn to the sounds of American blues players such as Lead Belly, Albert Ammons, Pinetop Smith and Eddie Lang, and taught himself to play the piano, guitars, and harmonica.[3]

Mayall was sent to Korea as part of his national service,[4] and during a period of leave bought his first electric guitar in Japan. Back in England, he enrolled at Manchester College of Art and started playing with a semi-professional band, the Powerhouse Four.[4] After graduation, he obtained a job as an art designer, but continued to play with local musicians. In 1963, he opted for a full-time musical career and moved to London.[4] His previous craft would be put to good use in the designing of covers for many of his coming albums.[4]

Mayall began living in the US part time in the late 1960s, living there full time by the early 1970s. A brush fire destroyed his house in Laurel Canyon in 1979, seriously damaging his musical collections and archives.

Mayall has been married twice, and has six children and six grandchildren. His second wife, Maggie Mayall, is an American blues performer, and since the early 1980s she has taken part in the management of her husband's career. They married in 1982,[5] and divorced in 2011.[6][7]

In 2005, Mayall was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the Honours List.[8][9][10]

Career

In 1956, with college fellow Peter Ward, Mayall had founded the Powerhouse Four, which consisted of the two men and other local musicians with whom they played at local dances.[4] In 1962 Mayall became a member of the Blues Syndicate.[4] The band was formed by trumpeter John Rowlands and alto saxophonist Jack Massarik, who had seen the Alexis Korner band at a Manchester club and wanted to try a similar blend of jazz and blues. It also included rhythm guitarist Ray Cummings and drummer Hughie Flint, whom Mayall already knew. In 1962 John and his band were frequent and popular artists at all-night R&B sessions at the Twisted Wheel cellar club in central Manchester. Alexis Korner persuaded Mayall to opt for a full-time musical career and move to London, where Korner introduced him to many other musicians and helped them to find gigs. In late 1963, with his band, which was now called the Bluesbreakers, Mayall started playing at the Marquee Club.[4] The lineup was Mayall, Ward, John McVie on bass and guitarist Bernie Watson, formerly of Cyril Davies and the R&B All-Stars. The next spring Mayall obtained his first recording date with producer Ian Samwell. The band, with Martin Hart at the drums, recorded two tracks: "Crawling Up a Hill" and "Mr. James".[11] Shortly after, Hughie Flint replaced Hart and Roger Dean took the guitar from Bernie Watson. This lineup backed John Lee Hooker on his British tour in 1964.

Mayall was offered a recording contract by Decca and, on 7 December 1964, a live performance of the band was recorded at the Klooks Kleek. A later studio-recorded single, "Crocodile Walk", was released along with the album, but both failed to achieve any success and the contract was terminated.

In April 1965 former Yardbirds guitarist Eric Clapton replaced Roger Dean and John Mayall's career entered a decisive phase.[12]

Mid-1960s through 1971

 
Mayall in 1970

Eric Clapton as guitarist, 1965–66

In 1965, with Eric Clapton as their new guitar player, the Bluesbreakers began attracting considerable attention. That summer the band cut a couple of tracks for a single, "I'm Your Witchdoctor" b/w "Telephone Blues" (released in October).[13] In August, however, Clapton left for a jaunt to Greece with a bunch of relative musical amateurs calling themselves the 'Glands'. John Weider, John Slaughter, and Geoff Krivit attempted to fill in as Bluesbreaker guitarist but, finally, Peter Green took charge. John McVie was dismissed, and during the next few months Jack Bruce, from the Graham Bond Organisation, played bass.

In November 1965 Clapton returned, and Green departed as Mayall had guaranteed Clapton his spot back in the Bluesbreakers whenever he tired of the Glands.[14] McVie was allowed back, and Bruce left to join Manfred Mann, but not before a live date by the Mayall-Clapton-Bruce-Flint line-up was recorded on Mayall's two-track tape recorder at London's Flamingo Club in November. The rough recording provided tracks that later appeared on the 1969 compilation Looking Back and the 1977 Primal Solos.[15][16] The same line-up also entered the studio to record a planned single, "On Top of the World", which was not released at that time.[17] Mayall and Clapton cut a couple of tracks without the others (although some sources give this as occurring back in the summer): "Lonely Years" b/w "Bernard Jenkins" was released as a single the next August on producer Mike Vernon's Purdah Records label (both tracks appeared again two decades later in Clapton's Crossroads box set). In a November 1965 session, blues pianist-singer Champion Jack Dupree (originally from New Orleans but in the 1960s living in Europe) got Mayall and Clapton to play on a few tracks.[16]

In April 1966, the Bluesbreakers returned to Decca Studios to record a second LP with producer Vernon. The sessions, with horn arrangements for some tracks (John Almond on baritone sax, Alan Skidmore on tenor sax, and Dennis Healey on trumpet), lasted just three days. Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton was released in the UK on 22 July 1966.[4] Several of the 12 tracks were covers of pure Chicago blues (side 1 kicking off strongly with Otis Rush's "All Your Love" and Freddy King's hit instrumental "Hide Away" [here spelled without a space as "Hideaway"]); Mayall wrote or arranged five (such as "Double Crossing Time", a slow blues with a scorching solo by co-writer Clapton); and Clapton debuted as lead vocalist, and began his practice of paying tribute to Robert Johnson, with "Ramblin' on My Mind". The album was Mayall's commercial breakthrough, rising to No. 6 on the UK Albums Chart, and has since gained classic status, largely for the audacious aggressiveness and molten fluidity of Clapton's guitar playing.[4] "It's Eric Clapton who steals the limelight," reported music mag Beat Instrumental, adding with unintended understatement, "and no doubt several copies of the album will be sold on the strength of his name."[18]

In the meantime, on 11 June the formation of Cream—Clapton, bassist Jack Bruce, and drummer Ginger Baker—had been revealed in the music press, much to the embarrassment of Clapton, who had not said anything about this to Mayall. (After a May Bluesbreakers gig at which Baker had sat in, he and Clapton had first discussed forming their own band, and surreptitious rehearsal jams with Bruce soon commenced.) Clapton's last scheduled gig with the Bluesbreakers was 17 July in Bexley, south-east of London;[19] Cream made a warmup club debut 29 July in Manchester and its "official" live debut two days later at the Sixth National Jazz and Blues Festival, Windsor.

Peter Green as guitarist, 1966–67

Mayall had to replace Clapton, and he succeeded in persuading Peter Green to come back. During the following year, with Green on guitar and various other sidemen, some 40 tracks were recorded. The album A Hard Road was released in February 1967.[4] Today its expanded versions include most of this material, and the album itself also stands as a classic. In early 1967, Mayall released an EP recorded with American blues harpist Paul Butterfield.

But Peter Green gave notice and soon started his own project, Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac, which eventually was to include all three of Mayall's Bluesbreakers at this time: Green, McVie, and drummer Mick Fleetwood who was a Bluesbreaker for only a few weeks. Two live albums, Live in 1967 Volumes I and II, featuring this lineup were released on Forty Below Records in 2015 and 2016.

Mick Taylor as guitarist, 1967–69

Mayall's first choice to replace Green was 18-year-old David O'List, guitarist from the Attack. O'List declined, however, and went on to form the Nice with organist Keith Emerson. Through both a "musicians wanted" ad in Melody Maker on 10 June and his own search, Mayall found three other potential guitarists for his Bluesbreakers, a black musician named Terry Edmonds, John Moorshead, and 18-year-old Mick Taylor. The last made the band quickly, but Mayall also decided to hire Edmonds as a rhythm guitarist for a few days.[20]

In the meantime, on a single day in May 1967, Mayall had assembled a studio album to showcase his own abilities. Former Artwoods drummer Keef Hartley appeared on only half of the tracks, and everything else was played by Mayall. The album was released in November titled The Blues Alone.[4]

A six-piece line-up—consisting of Mayall, Mick Taylor as lead guitarist, John McVie still on bass, Hughie Flint or Hartley on drums, and Rip Kant and Chris Mercer on saxophones—recorded the album Crusade on 11 and 12 July 1967.[4] These Bluesbreakers spent most of the year touring abroad, and Mayall taped the shows on a portable recorder. At the end of the tour, he had over sixty hours of tapes, which he edited into an album in two volumes: Diary of a Band, Vols. 1 & 2, released in February 1968.[4] Meanwhile, a few line-up changes had occurred: McVie had departed and was replaced by Paul Williams, who himself soon quit to join Alan Price and was replaced by Keith Tillman; Dick Heckstall-Smith had taken the sax spot.

Following a US tour, there were more line-up changes, starting with the troublesome bass position. First Mayall replaced bassist Tillman with 15-year-old Andy Fraser. Within six weeks, though, Fraser left to join Free and was replaced by Tony Reeves, previously a member of the New Jazz Orchestra. Hartley was required to leave, and he was replaced by New Jazz Orchestra drummer Jon Hiseman (who had also played with the Graham Bond Organisation). Henry Lowther, who played violin and cornet, joined in February 1968. Two months later the Bluesbreakers recorded Bare Wires, co-produced by Mayall and Mike Vernon, which came up to UK No. 6.[4]

Hiseman, Reeves, and Heckstall-Smith then moved on to form Colosseum. The Mayall line-up retained Mick Taylor and added drummer Colin Allen (formerly of Zoot Money's Big Roll Band / Dantalian's Chariot, and Georgie Fame) and a young bassist named Stephen Thompson. In August 1968 the new quartet recorded Blues from Laurel Canyon.[4]

On 13 June 1969, after nearly two years with Mayall, Taylor left and joined the Rolling Stones.[4]

Mark-Almond period, 1969–70

 
John Mayall 1970, Niedersachsenhalle, Hannover

Chas Crane filled in briefly on guitar.[citation needed] Drummer Allen departed to join Stone the Crows. This left as the only holdover bassist Thompson who would also eventually join Stone the Crows.

Mayall tried a new format with lower volume, acoustic instruments, and no drummer. He recruited acoustic fingerstyle guitarist Jon Mark and flautist-saxophonist John Almond. Mark was best known as Marianne Faithfull's accompanist for three years and for having been a member of the band Sweet Thursday (which included pianist Nicky Hopkins and future Cat Stevens collaborator Alun Davies, also a guitarist). Almond had played with Zoot Money and Alan Price and was no stranger to Mayall's music—he had played baritone sax on four cuts of Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton and some of A Hard Road. This new band was markedly different from previous Mayall projects, and its making is well documented both on the 1999 double CD The Masters and on the 2004 DVD The Godfather of British Blues/The Turning Point.

Along with the big change in sound, Mayall decided on a big change in scenery: a move to Los Angeles. The new band made its US debut at the Newport Jazz Festival on 5 July,[20] whilst the performance of 12 July at the Fillmore East provided the tracks for the live album The Turning Point.[4] A studio album, Empty Rooms, was recorded with the same personnel, with Mayall's next bassist, former Canned Heat member Larry Taylor, playing bass in a duet with Thompson on "To a Princess".[4]

Harvey Mandel as guitarist, 1970–71

Mayall continued the experiment of formations without drummers on two more albums, although he took on a new electric blues-rock-R&B band in guitarist Harvey Mandel and bassist Larry Taylor, both plucked from Canned Heat, and wailing violinist Don "Sugarcane" Harris, lately of the Johnny Otis Show and formerly with The Mothers of Invention.[4] On USA Union (recorded in Los Angeles, 27–28 July 1970), though, Mandel was compelled to make do without his remarkable sustain and usage of feedback as musical, even melodic, technique; and on Memories the band was stripped down to a trio with Taylor and Ventures guitarist Gerry McGee.[4]

In November 1970, Mayall launched a recording project involving many of the most notable musicians with whom he had played during the previous several years. The double album Back to the Roots features Clapton, Mick Taylor, Gerry McGee and Harvey Mandel on guitar; Sugarcane Harris on violin; Almond on woodwinds; Thompson and Larry Taylor on bass; and Hartley on drums.[4] Paul Lagos was with Sugarcane and ended up drumming on five. Mayall wrote all the songs and sang all the vocals, as usual by now, plus played harmonica, guitar, keyboards, drums, and percussion. The London sessions took place in January 1971 and as such represent some of Clapton's last work before Derek and the Dominos' attempted Layla follow-up sessions and band disintegration that spring.

Back to the Roots did not promote new names, and USA Union and Memories had been recorded with American musicians.[4] Mayall had exhausted his catalytic role on the British blues-rock scene and was living in Los Angeles. Yet, the list of musicians who benefited from association with him, starting with ruling the London blues scene, remains impressive.[21]

1970s

 
Mayall reunited for a brief tour in the early 1980s

By the start of the 1970s Mayall had relocated to the United States where he spent most of the next 15 years, recording with local musicians for various labels. In August 1971, Mayall produced a jazz-oriented session for bluesman Albert King[22] and a few months later took on tour the musicians present in the studio.

A live album Jazz Blues Fusion was released in the following year, with Mayall on harmonica, guitar and piano, Blue Mitchell on trumpet, Clifford Solomon and Ernie Watts on saxophones, Larry Taylor on bass, Ron Selico on drums and Freddy Robinson on guitar. A few personnel changes are noted at the release of a similar album in 1973, the live Moving On.

In 1974, Mayall recorded The Latest Edition,[23] produced by Tom Wilson for the Polydor label. The group featured jazz saxophonist Red Holloway, drummer Soko Richardson, bassist Larry Taylor, and two guitarists, Randy Resnick and Hightide Harris. The band toured Europe and Asia that year. During the next decade Mayall continued shifting musicians and switching labels and released a score of albums. Tom Wilson, Don Nix and Allen Toussaint occasionally served as producers. At this stage of his career most of Mayall's music was rather different from electric blues played by rock musicians, incorporating jazz, funk or pop elements and even adding female vocals. A notable exception is The Last of the British Blues (1978), a live album excused apparently by its title for the brief return to this type of music.[24]

Return of the Bluesbreakers

 
Mick Taylor during his return to the Bluesbreakers on tour in Cleveland, Ohio in the early 1980s

In 1982, Mayall was reunited with Mick Taylor, John McVie and Colin Allen, three musicians of his 1960s line-ups, for a two-year world tour from which a live album would emerge a decade later.

In 1984, Mayall restored the name Bluesbreakers for a line-up comprising the two lead guitars of Walter Trout and Coco Montoya, bassist Bobby Haynes and drummer Joe Yuele.[4] In the early 1990s, most of the excitement was already spent and Buddy Whittington became the sole lead guitarist in a formation which included then organist Tom Canning.

 
Mayall's "Pistoia Blues", Pistoia, Italy

2000s

On the occasion of the 40th year of his career, Mayall invited fellow musicians for the recording of a celebratory album. Along for the Ride appeared in 2001, credited to John Mayall and Friends with twenty names listed on the cover, including some Bluesbreakers, old and new, and also Gary Moore, Jonny Lang, Steve Cropper, Steve Miller, Otis Rush, Billy Gibbons, Greg Rzab, Chris Rea, Jeff Healey and Shannon Curfman.

To celebrate his 70th birthday, Mayall reunited with special guests Eric Clapton, Mick Taylor and Chris Barber during a fundraiser show. This "Unite for Unicef" concert took place on 19 July 2003 at the Liverpool Arena, and was captured on film for a DVD release.

In 2005, Mayall was appointed an OBE in the Honours List.

In November 2008, Mayall announced on his website he was disbanding the Bluesbreakers, to cut back on his heavy workload and give himself freedom to work with other musicians. Three months later a solo world tour was announced, with: Rocky Athas on guitar, Greg Rzab on bass, and Jay Davenport on drums. Tom Canning, on organ, joined the band for the tour which started in March 2009. An album was released in September 2009. Since then, Mayall has continued to tour with the same backing band, minus Canning, who left due to other priorities.[25]

In 2015, Dinu Logos published John Mayall: The Blues Crusader,[26] the first biography of Mayall to include exhaustive details of every band he put together and every recording he made. In 2018, Mayall made a new addition to his band; his first female lead guitarist, Carolyn Wonderland.[27]

Forty Below Records period

 
Mayall performing in Seattle, 2019

In 2013, Mayall signed with producer Eric Corne's label, Forty Below Records. The two have produced four studio albums together, A Special Life featuring accordionist C.J. Chenier, Find a Way to Care, Talk About That featuring Joe Walsh and Nobody Told Me. Corne also re-mastered some live recordings from 1967 featuring Peter Green, John McVie and Mick Fleetwood released as Live in 1967 Volumes I and II. In 2016, Mayall was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame.

Mayall's autobiography, Blues From Laurel Canyon: My Life As A Bluesman, co-written with author Joel McIver, was published by Omnibus Press in August 2019.[28]

Band members

Current members

as of 2020.[29]

Discography

Studio albums

See also

References

  1. ^ "UPI Almanac for Friday, Nov. 29, 2019". United Press International. 29 November 2019. from the original on 24 December 2019. Retrieved 11 January 2020. British blues musician John Mayall in 1933 (age 86)
  2. ^ "Pride of Manchester's guide to John Mayall". Retrieved 15 June 2013.
  3. ^ "Biography" at the Official John Mayall site. 26 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine. As of 2009 there is no privileged source for biographical data on John Mayall. The book John Mayall: Blues Breaker by Richard Newman, Sanctuary Publishing (1996) ISBN 978-1-86074-129-6 is an 'unauthorised' biography disavowed by Mayall himself. Many of his songs have lyrics directly referring to events in his life.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Colin Larkin, ed. (1995). The Guinness Who's Who of Blues (Second ed.). Guinness Publishing. p. 256/7. ISBN 0-85112-673-1.
  5. ^ Ancestry.com. England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1916-2005 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc, 2010.
  6. ^ "Maggie Mayall: No Limit Blues", interview by Michael Limnios, Blues.Gr, 19 May 2012
  7. ^ The Divorce Diaries by Maggie Mayall, 7 December 2011
  8. ^ Goldsmith, Margie (12 February 2013). "Bluesmaster John Mayall Rocks NYC". Huffington Post. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  9. ^ "British royal honor pleases John Mayall". UPI. June 29, 2005.
  10. ^ Brandle, Lars. "Queen’s List Honors For Ure, May, Page". Billboard. June 13, 2005.
  11. ^ Tobler, John (1992). NME Rock 'N' Roll Years (1st ed.). London: Reed International Books Ltd. p. 134. CN 5585.
  12. ^ A chronicle of the main events in Mayall's early career is to be found in Blues-rock Explosion, eds. McStravick, S. and Roos, J. (2001) Old Goat, ISBN 0-9701332-7-8
  13. ^ During Clapton's stay with the Bluesbreakers, the (in)famous graffito "Clapton is God" appeared on a wall in the London Underground.
  14. ^ Marc Roberty, The Eric Clapton Scrapbook, 1994, New York: Citadel Press, p. 14
  15. ^ Roberty, pp. 12–14
  16. ^ a b Hjort, Christopher (2007). Strange Brew: Eric Clapton & the British Blues Boom, 1965–1970. London, UK: Jawbone Press. pp. g. 29. ISBN 978-1-906002-00-8.
  17. ^ Hjort, Christopher (2007). Strange Brew: Eric Clapton & the British Blues Boom, 1965–1970. London, UK: Jawbone Press. pp. g. 30. ISBN 978-1-906002-00-8.
  18. ^ Beat Instrumental, September 1966
  19. ^ Hjort, Christopher (2007). Strange Brew: Eric Clapton & the British Blues Boom, 1965–1970. London, UK: Jawbone Press. pp. g. 57. ISBN 978-1-906002-00-8.
  20. ^ a b Hjort, Christopher (2007). Strange Brew : Eric Clapton and The British Blues Boom 1965–1970. London: Jawbone. p. 352. ISBN 978-1-906002-00-8.
  21. ^ Pete Frame, The Complete Rock Family Trees, Omnibus Press 1993. ISBN 978-0-7119-0465-1
  22. ^ The result was shelved, but ultimately it was released in 1986 as The Lost Session. Mayall had played in 1968 at the Winterland and The Fillmore in San Francisco, sharing triple bills with Albert King and Jimi Hendrix (concert available from Wolfgang's Vault).
  23. ^ "The latest Edition". Discogs.
  24. ^ A recording of the show at The Bottom Line in New York, 10 July 1977 is available from Wolfgang's Vault
  25. ^ . John Mayall. Archived from the original on 26 December 2011. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  26. ^ Logos, Dinu (2015). John Mayall: The Blues Crusader. Edition Olms. p. 120. ISBN 978-3283012281. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  27. ^ "John Welcomes Carolyn Wonderland to the Band". Johnmayall.com. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  28. ^ Mayall, John; McIver, Joel (31 October 2019). Blues from Laurel Canyon: John Mayall: My Life as a Bluesman. ISBN 978-1785581786.
  29. ^ "The Band". John Mayall. 2018. Retrieved 26 July 2020.

External links

  • John Mayall's website
  • Mayall: sessions,concerts
  • Concerts in Wolfgang's Vault: Fillmore West '68;[1] Bottom Line '77[2]
  • John Mayall Interview 2007 – by Brian D. Holland
  • John Mayall Interview with Jarrod Dicker (2009)
  • John Mayall at IMDb
  • Works by or about John Mayall in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
  • (in French) John Mayall Interview (2010) published in the French magazine Guitar Part
  • John Mayall Interview for the NAMM (National Association of Music Merchants) Oral History Program July 3, 2015
  1. ^ "John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers Fillmore Auditorium San Francisco, CA Feb 9, 1968". Wolfgangsvault.com. Retrieved 6 September 2015.
  2. ^ [1] 6 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine

john, mayall, 19th, century, english, photographer, john, jabez, edwin, mayall, confused, with, john, mayer, born, november, 1933, english, blues, singer, musician, songwriter, whose, musical, career, spans, over, sixty, years, 1960s, founder, bluesbreakers, b. For the 19th century English photographer see John Jabez Edwin Mayall Not to be confused with John Mayer John Mayall OBE born 29 November 1933 1 is an English blues singer musician and songwriter whose musical career spans over sixty years In the 1960s he was the founder of John Mayall amp the Bluesbreakers a band that has counted among its members some of the most famous blues and blues rock musicians John MayallMayall performing in 2004Background informationBorn 1933 11 29 29 November 1933 age 89 Macclesfield EnglandGenresBritish blues blues rockOccupation s Musician songwriter producerInstrument s Vocals guitar keyboards harmonicaYears active1956 presentLabelsDecca London DJM ABC Eagle Snapper One Way Records Polydor Silvertone GNP CrescendoWebsitejohnmayall com Contents 1 Personal life 2 Career 2 1 Mid 1960s through 1971 2 1 1 Eric Clapton as guitarist 1965 66 2 1 2 Peter Green as guitarist 1966 67 2 1 3 Mick Taylor as guitarist 1967 69 2 1 4 Mark Almond period 1969 70 2 1 5 Harvey Mandel as guitarist 1970 71 2 2 1970s 2 3 Return of the Bluesbreakers 2 4 2000s 2 5 Forty Below Records period 3 Band members 4 Discography 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksPersonal life Edit John Mayall right with Greg Rzab and Jay Davenport in 2017 Born in Macclesfield Cheshire in 1933 2 Mayall grew up in Cheadle Hulme He was the son of Murray Mayall a guitarist and jazz enthusiast From an early age he was drawn to the sounds of American blues players such as Lead Belly Albert Ammons Pinetop Smith and Eddie Lang and taught himself to play the piano guitars and harmonica 3 Mayall was sent to Korea as part of his national service 4 and during a period of leave bought his first electric guitar in Japan Back in England he enrolled at Manchester College of Art and started playing with a semi professional band the Powerhouse Four 4 After graduation he obtained a job as an art designer but continued to play with local musicians In 1963 he opted for a full time musical career and moved to London 4 His previous craft would be put to good use in the designing of covers for many of his coming albums 4 Mayall began living in the US part time in the late 1960s living there full time by the early 1970s A brush fire destroyed his house in Laurel Canyon in 1979 seriously damaging his musical collections and archives Mayall has been married twice and has six children and six grandchildren His second wife Maggie Mayall is an American blues performer and since the early 1980s she has taken part in the management of her husband s career They married in 1982 5 and divorced in 2011 6 7 In 2005 Mayall was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire OBE in the Honours List 8 9 10 Career EditIn 1956 with college fellow Peter Ward Mayall had founded the Powerhouse Four which consisted of the two men and other local musicians with whom they played at local dances 4 In 1962 Mayall became a member of the Blues Syndicate 4 The band was formed by trumpeter John Rowlands and alto saxophonist Jack Massarik who had seen the Alexis Korner band at a Manchester club and wanted to try a similar blend of jazz and blues It also included rhythm guitarist Ray Cummings and drummer Hughie Flint whom Mayall already knew In 1962 John and his band were frequent and popular artists at all night R amp B sessions at the Twisted Wheel cellar club in central Manchester Alexis Korner persuaded Mayall to opt for a full time musical career and move to London where Korner introduced him to many other musicians and helped them to find gigs In late 1963 with his band which was now called the Bluesbreakers Mayall started playing at the Marquee Club 4 The lineup was Mayall Ward John McVie on bass and guitarist Bernie Watson formerly of Cyril Davies and the R amp B All Stars The next spring Mayall obtained his first recording date with producer Ian Samwell The band with Martin Hart at the drums recorded two tracks Crawling Up a Hill and Mr James 11 Shortly after Hughie Flint replaced Hart and Roger Dean took the guitar from Bernie Watson This lineup backed John Lee Hooker on his British tour in 1964 Mayall was offered a recording contract by Decca and on 7 December 1964 a live performance of the band was recorded at the Klooks Kleek A later studio recorded single Crocodile Walk was released along with the album but both failed to achieve any success and the contract was terminated In April 1965 former Yardbirds guitarist Eric Clapton replaced Roger Dean and John Mayall s career entered a decisive phase 12 Mid 1960s through 1971 Edit Mayall in 1970 Eric Clapton as guitarist 1965 66 Edit In 1965 with Eric Clapton as their new guitar player the Bluesbreakers began attracting considerable attention That summer the band cut a couple of tracks for a single I m Your Witchdoctor b w Telephone Blues released in October 13 In August however Clapton left for a jaunt to Greece with a bunch of relative musical amateurs calling themselves the Glands John Weider John Slaughter and Geoff Krivit attempted to fill in as Bluesbreaker guitarist but finally Peter Green took charge John McVie was dismissed and during the next few months Jack Bruce from the Graham Bond Organisation played bass In November 1965 Clapton returned and Green departed as Mayall had guaranteed Clapton his spot back in the Bluesbreakers whenever he tired of the Glands 14 McVie was allowed back and Bruce left to join Manfred Mann but not before a live date by the Mayall Clapton Bruce Flint line up was recorded on Mayall s two track tape recorder at London s Flamingo Club in November The rough recording provided tracks that later appeared on the 1969 compilation Looking Back and the 1977 Primal Solos 15 16 The same line up also entered the studio to record a planned single On Top of the World which was not released at that time 17 Mayall and Clapton cut a couple of tracks without the others although some sources give this as occurring back in the summer Lonely Years b w Bernard Jenkins was released as a single the next August on producer Mike Vernon s Purdah Records label both tracks appeared again two decades later in Clapton s Crossroads box set In a November 1965 session blues pianist singer Champion Jack Dupree originally from New Orleans but in the 1960s living in Europe got Mayall and Clapton to play on a few tracks 16 In April 1966 the Bluesbreakers returned to Decca Studios to record a second LP with producer Vernon The sessions with horn arrangements for some tracks John Almond on baritone sax Alan Skidmore on tenor sax and Dennis Healey on trumpet lasted just three days Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton was released in the UK on 22 July 1966 4 Several of the 12 tracks were covers of pure Chicago blues side 1 kicking off strongly with Otis Rush s All Your Love and Freddy King s hit instrumental Hide Away here spelled without a space as Hideaway Mayall wrote or arranged five such as Double Crossing Time a slow blues with a scorching solo by co writer Clapton and Clapton debuted as lead vocalist and began his practice of paying tribute to Robert Johnson with Ramblin on My Mind The album was Mayall s commercial breakthrough rising to No 6 on the UK Albums Chart and has since gained classic status largely for the audacious aggressiveness and molten fluidity of Clapton s guitar playing 4 It s Eric Clapton who steals the limelight reported music mag Beat Instrumental adding with unintended understatement and no doubt several copies of the album will be sold on the strength of his name 18 In the meantime on 11 June the formation of Cream Clapton bassist Jack Bruce and drummer Ginger Baker had been revealed in the music press much to the embarrassment of Clapton who had not said anything about this to Mayall After a May Bluesbreakers gig at which Baker had sat in he and Clapton had first discussed forming their own band and surreptitious rehearsal jams with Bruce soon commenced Clapton s last scheduled gig with the Bluesbreakers was 17 July in Bexley south east of London 19 Cream made a warmup club debut 29 July in Manchester and its official live debut two days later at the Sixth National Jazz and Blues Festival Windsor Peter Green as guitarist 1966 67 Edit Mayall had to replace Clapton and he succeeded in persuading Peter Green to come back During the following year with Green on guitar and various other sidemen some 40 tracks were recorded The album A Hard Road was released in February 1967 4 Today its expanded versions include most of this material and the album itself also stands as a classic In early 1967 Mayall released an EP recorded with American blues harpist Paul Butterfield But Peter Green gave notice and soon started his own project Peter Green s Fleetwood Mac which eventually was to include all three of Mayall s Bluesbreakers at this time Green McVie and drummer Mick Fleetwood who was a Bluesbreaker for only a few weeks Two live albums Live in 1967 Volumes I and II featuring this lineup were released on Forty Below Records in 2015 and 2016 Mick Taylor as guitarist 1967 69 Edit Mayall s first choice to replace Green was 18 year old David O List guitarist from the Attack O List declined however and went on to form the Nice with organist Keith Emerson Through both a musicians wanted ad in Melody Maker on 10 June and his own search Mayall found three other potential guitarists for his Bluesbreakers a black musician named Terry Edmonds John Moorshead and 18 year old Mick Taylor The last made the band quickly but Mayall also decided to hire Edmonds as a rhythm guitarist for a few days 20 In the meantime on a single day in May 1967 Mayall had assembled a studio album to showcase his own abilities Former Artwoods drummer Keef Hartley appeared on only half of the tracks and everything else was played by Mayall The album was released in November titled The Blues Alone 4 A six piece line up consisting of Mayall Mick Taylor as lead guitarist John McVie still on bass Hughie Flint or Hartley on drums and Rip Kant and Chris Mercer on saxophones recorded the album Crusade on 11 and 12 July 1967 4 These Bluesbreakers spent most of the year touring abroad and Mayall taped the shows on a portable recorder At the end of the tour he had over sixty hours of tapes which he edited into an album in two volumes Diary of a Band Vols 1 amp 2 released in February 1968 4 Meanwhile a few line up changes had occurred McVie had departed and was replaced by Paul Williams who himself soon quit to join Alan Price and was replaced by Keith Tillman Dick Heckstall Smith had taken the sax spot Following a US tour there were more line up changes starting with the troublesome bass position First Mayall replaced bassist Tillman with 15 year old Andy Fraser Within six weeks though Fraser left to join Free and was replaced by Tony Reeves previously a member of the New Jazz Orchestra Hartley was required to leave and he was replaced by New Jazz Orchestra drummer Jon Hiseman who had also played with the Graham Bond Organisation Henry Lowther who played violin and cornet joined in February 1968 Two months later the Bluesbreakers recorded Bare Wires co produced by Mayall and Mike Vernon which came up to UK No 6 4 Hiseman Reeves and Heckstall Smith then moved on to form Colosseum The Mayall line up retained Mick Taylor and added drummer Colin Allen formerly of Zoot Money s Big Roll Band Dantalian s Chariot and Georgie Fame and a young bassist named Stephen Thompson In August 1968 the new quartet recorded Blues from Laurel Canyon 4 On 13 June 1969 after nearly two years with Mayall Taylor left and joined the Rolling Stones 4 Mark Almond period 1969 70 Edit John Mayall 1970 Niedersachsenhalle Hannover Chas Crane filled in briefly on guitar citation needed Drummer Allen departed to join Stone the Crows This left as the only holdover bassist Thompson who would also eventually join Stone the Crows Mayall tried a new format with lower volume acoustic instruments and no drummer He recruited acoustic fingerstyle guitarist Jon Mark and flautist saxophonist John Almond Mark was best known as Marianne Faithfull s accompanist for three years and for having been a member of the band Sweet Thursday which included pianist Nicky Hopkins and future Cat Stevens collaborator Alun Davies also a guitarist Almond had played with Zoot Money and Alan Price and was no stranger to Mayall s music he had played baritone sax on four cuts of Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton and some of A Hard Road This new band was markedly different from previous Mayall projects and its making is well documented both on the 1999 double CD The Masters and on the 2004 DVD The Godfather of British Blues The Turning Point Along with the big change in sound Mayall decided on a big change in scenery a move to Los Angeles The new band made its US debut at the Newport Jazz Festival on 5 July 20 whilst the performance of 12 July at the Fillmore East provided the tracks for the live album The Turning Point 4 A studio album Empty Rooms was recorded with the same personnel with Mayall s next bassist former Canned Heat member Larry Taylor playing bass in a duet with Thompson on To a Princess 4 Harvey Mandel as guitarist 1970 71 Edit Mayall continued the experiment of formations without drummers on two more albums although he took on a new electric blues rock R amp B band in guitarist Harvey Mandel and bassist Larry Taylor both plucked from Canned Heat and wailing violinist Don Sugarcane Harris lately of the Johnny Otis Show and formerly with The Mothers of Invention 4 On USA Union recorded in Los Angeles 27 28 July 1970 though Mandel was compelled to make do without his remarkable sustain and usage of feedback as musical even melodic technique and on Memories the band was stripped down to a trio with Taylor and Ventures guitarist Gerry McGee 4 In November 1970 Mayall launched a recording project involving many of the most notable musicians with whom he had played during the previous several years The double album Back to the Roots features Clapton Mick Taylor Gerry McGee and Harvey Mandel on guitar Sugarcane Harris on violin Almond on woodwinds Thompson and Larry Taylor on bass and Hartley on drums 4 Paul Lagos was with Sugarcane and ended up drumming on five Mayall wrote all the songs and sang all the vocals as usual by now plus played harmonica guitar keyboards drums and percussion The London sessions took place in January 1971 and as such represent some of Clapton s last work before Derek and the Dominos attempted Layla follow up sessions and band disintegration that spring Back to the Roots did not promote new names and USA Union and Memories had been recorded with American musicians 4 Mayall had exhausted his catalytic role on the British blues rock scene and was living in Los Angeles Yet the list of musicians who benefited from association with him starting with ruling the London blues scene remains impressive 21 1970s Edit Mayall reunited for a brief tour in the early 1980s By the start of the 1970s Mayall had relocated to the United States where he spent most of the next 15 years recording with local musicians for various labels In August 1971 Mayall produced a jazz oriented session for bluesman Albert King 22 and a few months later took on tour the musicians present in the studio A live album Jazz Blues Fusion was released in the following year with Mayall on harmonica guitar and piano Blue Mitchell on trumpet Clifford Solomon and Ernie Watts on saxophones Larry Taylor on bass Ron Selico on drums and Freddy Robinson on guitar A few personnel changes are noted at the release of a similar album in 1973 the live Moving On In 1974 Mayall recorded The Latest Edition 23 produced by Tom Wilson for the Polydor label The group featured jazz saxophonist Red Holloway drummer Soko Richardson bassist Larry Taylor and two guitarists Randy Resnick and Hightide Harris The band toured Europe and Asia that year During the next decade Mayall continued shifting musicians and switching labels and released a score of albums Tom Wilson Don Nix and Allen Toussaint occasionally served as producers At this stage of his career most of Mayall s music was rather different from electric blues played by rock musicians incorporating jazz funk or pop elements and even adding female vocals A notable exception is The Last of the British Blues 1978 a live album excused apparently by its title for the brief return to this type of music 24 Return of the Bluesbreakers Edit Mick Taylor during his return to the Bluesbreakers on tour in Cleveland Ohio in the early 1980s In 1982 Mayall was reunited with Mick Taylor John McVie and Colin Allen three musicians of his 1960s line ups for a two year world tour from which a live album would emerge a decade later In 1984 Mayall restored the name Bluesbreakers for a line up comprising the two lead guitars of Walter Trout and Coco Montoya bassist Bobby Haynes and drummer Joe Yuele 4 In the early 1990s most of the excitement was already spent and Buddy Whittington became the sole lead guitarist in a formation which included then organist Tom Canning Mayall s Pistoia Blues Pistoia Italy 2000s Edit On the occasion of the 40th year of his career Mayall invited fellow musicians for the recording of a celebratory album Along for the Ride appeared in 2001 credited to John Mayall and Friends with twenty names listed on the cover including some Bluesbreakers old and new and also Gary Moore Jonny Lang Steve Cropper Steve Miller Otis Rush Billy Gibbons Greg Rzab Chris Rea Jeff Healey and Shannon Curfman To celebrate his 70th birthday Mayall reunited with special guests Eric Clapton Mick Taylor and Chris Barber during a fundraiser show This Unite for Unicef concert took place on 19 July 2003 at the Liverpool Arena and was captured on film for a DVD release In 2005 Mayall was appointed an OBE in the Honours List In November 2008 Mayall announced on his website he was disbanding the Bluesbreakers to cut back on his heavy workload and give himself freedom to work with other musicians Three months later a solo world tour was announced with Rocky Athas on guitar Greg Rzab on bass and Jay Davenport on drums Tom Canning on organ joined the band for the tour which started in March 2009 An album was released in September 2009 Since then Mayall has continued to tour with the same backing band minus Canning who left due to other priorities 25 In 2015 Dinu Logos published John Mayall The Blues Crusader 26 the first biography of Mayall to include exhaustive details of every band he put together and every recording he made In 2018 Mayall made a new addition to his band his first female lead guitarist Carolyn Wonderland 27 Forty Below Records period Edit Mayall performing in Seattle 2019 In 2013 Mayall signed with producer Eric Corne s label Forty Below Records The two have produced four studio albums together A Special Life featuring accordionist C J Chenier Find a Way to Care Talk About That featuring Joe Walsh and Nobody Told Me Corne also re mastered some live recordings from 1967 featuring Peter Green John McVie and Mick Fleetwood released as Live in 1967 Volumes I and II In 2016 Mayall was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame Mayall s autobiography Blues From Laurel Canyon My Life As A Bluesman co written with author Joel McIver was published by Omnibus Press in August 2019 28 Band members EditMain article List of John Mayall band members Current members John Mayall vocals keyboards harmonica rhythm guitar 1963 present Greg Rzab bass occasional percussion 1999 2000 2009 present Jay Davenport drums percussion 2009 present Carolyn Wonderland lead guitar backing vocals 2018 present as of 2020 29 Discography EditMain article John Mayall discography Studio albums Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton 1966 A Hard Road 1967 Crusade 1967 The Blues Alone 1967 Bare Wires 1968 Blues from Laurel Canyon 1968 Empty Rooms 1970 USA Union 1970 Back to the Roots 1971 Memories 1971 Ten Years Are Gone 1973 The Latest Edition 1974 New Year New Band New Company 1975 Notice to Appear 1975 A Banquet in Blues 1976 A Hard Core Package 1977 Bottom Line 1979 No More Interviews 1980 Road Show Blues 1981 Return of the Bluesbreakers 1985 Chicago Line 1988 A Sense of Place 1990 Cross Country Blues 1992 Wake Up Call 1993 Spinning Coin 1995 Blues for the Lost Days 1997 Padlock on the Blues 1999 Along for the Ride 2001 Stories 2002 Road Dogs 2005 In the Palace of the King 2007 Tough 2009 A Special Life 2014 Find a Way to Care 2015 Talk About That 2016 Nobody Told Me 2019 The Sun Is Shining Down 2022 See also EditJohn Mayall amp the Bluesbreakers British blues Eric Clapton Peter Green Mick TaylorReferences Edit UPI Almanac for Friday Nov 29 2019 United Press International 29 November 2019 Archived from the original on 24 December 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2020 British blues musician John Mayall in 1933 age 86 Pride of Manchester s guide to John Mayall Retrieved 15 June 2013 Biography at the Official John Mayall site Archived 26 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine As of 2009 there is no privileged source for biographical data on John Mayall The book John Mayall Blues Breaker by Richard Newman Sanctuary Publishing 1996 ISBN 978 1 86074 129 6 is an unauthorised biography disavowed by Mayall himself Many of his songs have lyrics directly referring to events in his life a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Colin Larkin ed 1995 The Guinness Who s Who of Blues Second ed Guinness Publishing p 256 7 ISBN 0 85112 673 1 Ancestry com England amp Wales Civil Registration Marriage Index 1916 2005 database on line Provo UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2010 Maggie Mayall No Limit Blues interview by Michael Limnios Blues Gr 19 May 2012 The Divorce Diaries by Maggie Mayall 7 December 2011 Goldsmith Margie 12 February 2013 Bluesmaster John Mayall Rocks NYC Huffington Post Retrieved 22 February 2019 British royal honor pleases John Mayall UPI June 29 2005 Brandle Lars Queen s List Honors For Ure May Page Billboard June 13 2005 Tobler John 1992 NME Rock N Roll Years 1st ed London Reed International Books Ltd p 134 CN 5585 A chronicle of the main events in Mayall s early career is to be found in Blues rock Explosion eds McStravick S and Roos J 2001 Old Goat ISBN 0 9701332 7 8 During Clapton s stay with the Bluesbreakers the in famous graffito Clapton is God appeared on a wall in the London Underground Marc Roberty The Eric Clapton Scrapbook 1994 New York Citadel Press p 14 Roberty pp 12 14 a b Hjort Christopher 2007 Strange Brew Eric Clapton amp the British Blues Boom 1965 1970 London UK Jawbone Press pp g 29 ISBN 978 1 906002 00 8 Hjort Christopher 2007 Strange Brew Eric Clapton amp the British Blues Boom 1965 1970 London UK Jawbone Press pp g 30 ISBN 978 1 906002 00 8 Beat Instrumental September 1966 Hjort Christopher 2007 Strange Brew Eric Clapton amp the British Blues Boom 1965 1970 London UK Jawbone Press pp g 57 ISBN 978 1 906002 00 8 a b Hjort Christopher 2007 Strange Brew Eric Clapton and The British Blues Boom 1965 1970 London Jawbone p 352 ISBN 978 1 906002 00 8 Pete Frame The Complete Rock Family Trees Omnibus Press 1993 ISBN 978 0 7119 0465 1 The result was shelved but ultimately it was released in 1986 as The Lost Session Mayall had played in 1968 at the Winterland and The Fillmore in San Francisco sharing triple bills with Albert King and Jimi Hendrix concert available from Wolfgang s Vault The latest Edition Discogs A recording of the show at The Bottom Line in New York 10 July 1977 is available from Wolfgang s Vault Biography John Mayall Archived from the original on 26 December 2011 Retrieved 30 December 2011 Logos Dinu 2015 John Mayall The Blues Crusader Edition Olms p 120 ISBN 978 3283012281 Retrieved 1 August 2015 John Welcomes Carolyn Wonderland to the Band Johnmayall com Retrieved 16 August 2018 Mayall John McIver Joel 31 October 2019 Blues from Laurel Canyon John Mayall My Life as a Bluesman ISBN 978 1785581786 The Band John Mayall 2018 Retrieved 26 July 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Mayall John Mayall s website Mayall sessions concerts Concerts in Wolfgang s Vault Fillmore West 68 1 Bottom Line 77 2 ABC Records Press Release John Mayall Interview 2007 by Brian D Holland John Mayall Interview with Jarrod Dicker 2009 John Mayall at IMDb Works by or about John Mayall in libraries WorldCat catalog in French John Mayall Interview 2010 published in the French magazine Guitar Part John Mayall Interview for the NAMM National Association of Music Merchants Oral History Program July 3 2015 John Mayall amp the Bluesbreakers Fillmore Auditorium San Francisco CA Feb 9 1968 Wolfgangsvault com Retrieved 6 September 2015 1 Archived 6 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Mayall amp oldid 1142185138, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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