
Long before Lonnie
Brooks was headlining major blues festivals and sharing stages
with the likes of Eric Clapton, he was forging his bayou-swamp-music-meets-Chicago-blues-via-Texas
style. Born Lee Baker, Jr. in Dubuisson, Louisiana on December
18, 1933, he began his career playing everything from rock 'n'
roll to country & western and R&B. Originally desiring
to play banjo (his grandfather was an accomplished banjo player),
Lonnie instead mastered the guitar. His first professional job
came when zydeco legend Clifton Chenier saw him playing guitar
on his front porch and drafted him into the famous Red Hot Louisiana
Band. In the mid-1950s, Brooks, now known as Guitar Junior, cut
a series of Gulf Coast proto-rock 'n' roll hits for the Goldband
label, now considered swamp rock classics. He hitched a ride with
Sam Cooke's touring caravan and got off in Chicago in 1960. Because
Chicago already had a Guitar Junior, he changed his name to Lonnie
Brooks, and jumped headlong into Chicago blues. He joined Jimmy
Reed's touring band, and also recorded singles for Mercury, Chess
and other labels in the 1960s, before Capitol released Brooks'
first album, Broke And Hungry (under the name Guitar Junior) in
1969.
During the 1960s and 1970s, Brooks performed
regularly in some of Chicago's toughest clubs, playing blues,
rock, and R&B. Although he was forced to perform other artist's
hits, he was never without a gig. His big break came in 1978,
when Brooks introduced four songs on Alligator Records' Living
Chicago Blues anthology. By now he had forged his own sound --
a vibrant mix of rock 'n' roll, R&B, funky Cajun boogie, country
twang, and hard Chicago blues, a style his band dubbed "voodoo
blues." The success of these recordings led him to a full
recording contract with the label and a series of stellar albums,
each loaded with Brooks' signature guitar playing and rich, expressive
vocals. And, as anyone who has seen him in concert can attest,
his live shows are legendary for kick-starting parties and spreading
good times like wildfire. "Sheer energy and excitement,"
raved the Village Voice, "Brooks brings an original brilliance
to the blues."
Tickets
are available in-person-only at the State Theatre Box Office,
or through TicketMaster by phone at 1-800-745-3000 and online
at ticketmaster.com.
|
|