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Pinetop Perkins

Appearances

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Very Best of Buddy Guy
#5178874
Buddy Guy
Label: Rhino
Number of Discs: 1

The Very Best of Buddy Guy is a credible attempt to digitally summarize Buddy Guy's entire pre-Silvertone career on a single 18-song disc. It encompasses the guitarist's 1957 [more]

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Can't Quit the Blues
#8007445
Buddy Guy
Label: Silvertone/Legacy
Number of Discs: 4

Legend status came late to Buddy Guy, so it shouldn't be surprising that this is the first box set devoted to the blues giant's work. Yet it is still a bit of a shock, because Guy, [more]

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Muddy "Mississippi" Waters Live
#5172503
Muddy Waters
Label: Sbme Special MKTS.
Number of Discs: 1

Accompanied by Johnny Winter and his band, Muddy Waters turns in an enthusiastic performance on Muddy "Mississippi" Waters Live. The set list contains most of his [more]

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Woodstock Album
#20073058
Muddy Waters
Label: Chess
Number of Discs: 1

Of all the post-Fathers & Sons attempts at updating Muddy's sound in collaboration with younger white musicians, this album worked best because they let Muddy be himself, producing [more]

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Live Recordings 1965-1973
#21511180
Muddy Waters
Number of Discs: 1

These are ten tracks of Waters pretty much on top of his game, with the bulk of them coming from 1965-68 and featuring Pinetop Perkins, Carey Bell, and Sammy Lawhorn in [more]

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Chicago Blues Session, Vol. 12
#21511206
John Brim & Pinetop Perkins
Number of Discs: 1
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Best of the M.C. Records Years 1999-2005
#21508961
Odetta
Label: Acadia
Number of Discs: 1
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Last of the Great Mississippi Delta Bluesmen: Live in Dallas
#21655221
Various Artists
Number of Discs: 1
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6 Blues Giants Live, Vol. 2 [6 Discs]
#21525031
Various Artists
Label: Last Call
Number of Discs: 6
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Roots N' Blues: Scorchin' Blues
#21852964
Johnny Winter
Number of Discs: 1
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13 Results Sort by Title or Popularity

Biography

  • Born Jul 7th 1913 in Belzoni, MS

He admittedly wasn't the originator of the seminal piano piece "Pinetop's Boogie Woogie," but it's a safe bet that more people associate it nowadays with Pinetop Perkins than with the man who devised it in the first place, Clarence "Pinetop" Smith. Although it seems as though he's been around Chicago forever, the Mississippi native actually got a relatively late start on his path to Windy City immortality. It was only when Muddy Waters took him on to replace Otis Spann in 1969 that Perkins's rolling mastery of the ivories began to assume outsized proportions.

Perkins began his blues existence primarily as a guitarist, but a mid-'40s encounter with an outraged chorus girl toting a knife at a Helena, AR, nightspot left him with severed tendons in his left arm. That dashed his guitar aspirations, but Joe Willie Perkins came back strong from the injury, concentrating solely on piano from that point on. Perkins had traveled to Helena with Robert Nighthawk in 1943, playing with the elegant slide guitarist on Nighthawk's KFFA radio program. Perkins soon switched over to rival Sonny Boy Williamson's beloved {#King Biscuit Time} radio show in Helena, where he remained for an extended period. Perkins accompanied Nighthawk on a 1950 session for the Chess brothers that produced "Jackson Town Gal," but Chicago couldn't hold him at the time.

Nighthawk disciple Earl Hooker recruited Perkins during the early '50s. They hit the road, pausing at Sam Phillips's studios in Memphis long enough for Perkins to wax his first version of "Pinetop's Boogie Woogie" in 1953. He settled in downstate Illinois for a spell, then relocated to Chicago. Music gradually was relegated to the back burner until Hooker coaxed him into working on an LP for Arhoolie in 1968. When Spann split from Muddy Waters, the stage was set for Pinetop Perkins's reemergence.

After more than a decade with the Man, Perkins and his bandmates left en masse to form the Legendary Blues Band. Their early Rounder albums (Life of Ease, Red Hot 'n' Blue) prominently spotlighted Perkins's rippling 88s and rich vocals. He had previously waxed an album for the French Black & Blue logo in 1976 and four fine cuts for Alligator's Living Chicago Blues anthologies in 1978. Finally, in 1988, he cut his first domestic album for Blind Pig, After Hours.Ever since then, Pinetop Perkins has made up for precious lost time in the studio. Discs for Antone's, Omega (Portrait of a Delta Bluesman, a solo outing that includes fascinating interview segments), Deluge, Earwig, and several other firms ensure that his boogie legacy won't be forgotten in the decades to come. ~ Bill Dahl, All Music Guide