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Tag Archives: Joe Tex

Black Joe Lewis

Austin-based Dark Joe Lewis is usually a modern singer and guitarist having a bent toward vintage blues, soul, and R&B. Supported by his music group the Honeybears, Lewis pulls motivation from such famous “shouters” as Howlin’ Wolf, Wilson Pickett, and Wayne Brown, aswell as smoother crooners including Sam Cooke. Dark …

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Joe Simon

His plaintive baritone equally conversant with R&B and nation phrasing, Joe Simon married both styles with startling achievement through the late ’60s, adapting Nashville materials to the spirit audio and repeatedly approaching successful. Simon began saving in the Bay Region, but a change in saving sites (1st to Muscle mass …

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Don Covay

The career of singer Don Covay spanned virtually the entirety from the R&B spectrum, from your electrifying rock & roll of his earliest records towards the gritty, swaggering deep soul of his most enduring efforts. The range and variety of his catalog without doubt added to his failing to enjoy …

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James W. Alexander

b. Adam W. Alexander, 1925, USA. Performing in cathedral from early youth, Alexander tried various other careers before getting wholly involved with music. These alternative activities included playing semi-pro football in the then-segregated Negro Group. In 1945, Alexander became a member of the Pilgrim Travelers gospel group. Currently dynamic and …

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Baby Huey

A locally beloved amount over the Chicago spirit picture, Baby Huey hardly ever achieved quite the same renown beyond his hometown, despite a thrilling live action and an archive on Curtis Mayfield’s Curtom label. Blessed Adam Ramey in Richmond, IN, in 1944, Baby Huey was actually a massive stage existence: …

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Wilson Pickett

Of the main ’60s soul stars, Wilson Pickett was among the roughest and sweatiest, functioning up a number of the decade’s hottest dancefloor grooves on hits like “Within the Midnight Hour,” “Land of 1000 Dances,” “Mustang Sally,” and “Funky Broadway.” Although he is commonly held in relatively lower esteem than …

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The Van Dykes

The Vehicle Dykes were a Tx soul trio whose sound, harmonies, and style were carefully patterned after Curtis Mayfield as well as the Impressions. Lead vocalist Rondalis Tandy created the group in 1964, teaming with tenor vocalist Wenzon Mosley, bass vocalist Wayne Mays, and falsetto designer Eddie Nixon. But Nixon …

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The Mighty Hannibal

Simply because obscure R&B legends go, the Mighty Hannibal remains possibly the most interesting to grace the stage or airwaves from the 1950s and 1960s. An initial cousin of maligned Clinton consultant Vernon Jordan along with a flamboyant participant all his existence, Hannibal’s music was as thrilling as his existence. …

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T.S.U. Toronados

Alternately referred to as the TSU Tornadoes and, more regularly, the TSU Toronadoes, this frequently instrumental soul/funk combo was most widely known for supplying the backing in Archie Bell & the Drells’ much-imitated dance smash “SHRINK.” The group was produced at Tx Southern School (hence the very first section of …

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Howard Tate

Highly regarded simply by soul music cultists and practically unknown simply by anybody else, Howard Tate had some minor success using the Verve label in the later ’60s. The vocalist brought a whole lot of blues and gospel to his phrasing, but what produced him palatable to the present day …

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