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M.C. Records To Release Robert Jr. Lockwood's First CD Since 2000
 

Soundclips: Feel Like Blowin' My Horn                     Exactly Like You


M.C. Records is proud to announce that on March 9, 2004 it will release Robert Jr. Lockwood's first domestic recording since 2000. The intimate performance was recorded earlier in 2003 at The Rhythm Room in Phoenix
Arizona and marks over six decades of releases from Robert Jr.   The Legend Live (MC-0051) features the 89 year old Robert Jr. Lockwood performing solo on his famous twelve string guitar. The blues on The Legend Live (MC-0051) can only come from a man who learned guitar from Robert Johnson,  was a top session guitarist for Chess Records in the 1950's and influenced a generation of musicians with his appearances on the King Biscuit Time in the 1940's on KFFA.  Many of the songs on the CD have never been recorded by
Robert or have never been recorded solo. The sessions were produced by Bob Corritore. Robert Jr. Lockwood is a twice Grammy nominated artist and a W.C. Handy winner. Look for Robert Jr. to be on the road playing the blues like he's done for over 70 years!
 
Robert Lockwood, Jr. Bio
One of the last surviving roots bluesman of the twentieth century. Robert Lockwood Jr. was born March 27, 1915 in Turkey Scratch, Arkansas, a farming hamlet about 25 miles west of Helena. 1915 was remarkable because several other monumental blues artists were born within a 100-mile radius that year; notably Muddy Waters, Willie Dixon, Little Walter Jacobs, Memphis Slim, Johnny Shines, and Honeyboy Edwards. They would all meet up in the future. His first musical lessons were on the family pump organ. He learned the guitar, at age eleven, from Robert Johnson, the mysterious delta bluesman, who was living with his mother. From Johnson, Lockwood learned chords, timing, and stage presence. By the age of fifteen, Robert was playing professionally, often with Johnson; sometimes with Johnny Shines or Rice Miller, who would soon be calling himself Sonny Boy Williamson II. They would play fish fries, juke joints, and street corners. Once Johnson played one side of the Sunflower River, while Lockwood manned the other bank. The people of Clarksville, Mississippi were milling around the bridge; they couldnıt tell which guitarist was Robert Johnson. Young Lockwood had learned Johnsonıs techniques very well. Johnsonıs fast lifestyle caught up with him, passing away in 1937. Lockwood was 22 but prepared for the future.
Lockwoodıs first recordings came in 1941, with Doc Clayton, on his famous Bluebird Sessions in Aurora, Illinois. During these sessions, he cut four singles under his own name. These were the first incarnations of "Take A Little Walk with Me", and "Little Boy Blue," Lockwood staples sixty years later. Later in 1941, Lockwood was back in Arkansas where he re-united with Sonny Boy II to host a live radio program broadcast at noon from KFFA in Helena, sponsored by the King Biscuit Flour Company. James ³Peck² Curtis and Dudlow Taylor provided the rhythm. This show became a cultural phenomenon; everybody would listen during his or her lunch hour. Several generations of southern bluesman can trace their musical roots to the show.
Lockwood moved around, the usual route was Memphis, St. Louis, to Chicago. By the early 1950ıs, he had surfaced in the Windy City, where he became the top session man for Chess Records, the epitome of blues labels. Sonny Boy Williamson II, Little Walter, Roosevelt Sykes, Sunnyland Slim, and Eddie Boyd, whom he toured with for six years, you can hear his smooth chords on their recordings. Lockwood in the early 1950's also cut sides for Mercury and the JOB record labels.  Blues was giving way to Rock and Roll, even in Chicago, so Lockwood moved to Cleveland, Ohio at the urging of his old pal, Sonny Boy. Settling down and raising a family took priorities but blues was still in his soul, just on the back burner.
In the late 1960s Lockwood would gig all around Cleveland, playing whenever he got the chance. Long-forgotten clubs like Pirates Cove and Brothers Lounge were places where Lockwood taught his blues to generations of localmusicians and fans. Lockwoodıs solo recording career, exclusive of the 1941 Bluebird Sessions, began in 1970 with Delmarkıs Steady Rollinı Man, backed by old friends Louis Myers, his brother Dave Myers, and Fred Below, collectively known as The Aces. In 1972, Lockwood hooked up with famed musicologist, Pete Lowry to record Contrasts, the first of two for Trix Records. Does 12 followed in 1975. They have been remastered and repackaged by Fuel 2000 Records. In the early 1980s Lockwood teamed up with another longtime friend, Johnny Shines, to record three albums for Rounder, which has been comprised into 1999ıs Just the Blues. Plays Robert and Robert, a Black and Blue recording from 1982, was reissued on Evidence in 1993. From the early 1980s to 1996, there were no domestic Lockwood releases. In 1998, Iıve Got to Find Myself a Woman was released by Verve, gaining a Grammy nomination. This was followed by Telarcıs Delta Crossroads, also a Grammy contender in 2000. In 2001, Whatıs the Score was reissued on Lockwood Records which has the rights to his Japanese live recordings, previously only available on Peavine. They will be a future project.
In the last twenty years, the Blues world has recognized Lockwoodıs contributions to the genre. Recently, Lockwood has amassed so many that it is not possible to list all of them. The most notable are:
1980  Lockwood receives the very first W.C. Handy Award for ³best
traditional blues album²
1989  Inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame
1995  Received National Heritage Fellowship Award, presented by Hilary Clinton
1996  Cleveland Mayor, Michael White, proclaims February 3, as "Robert Lockwood Day"
1997  Has street named "Robert Lockwood, Jr. Way" in Clevelandıs Flat District
1998  Inducted into Delta Blues Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Mississippi
2001  Received Honorary Doctorate in Humane Letters from Case Western Reserve in Cleveland
2001  Received W.C. Handy for ³best traditional blues album,"Delta Crossroads"
2001  City of Pittsburgh named 8/18 "Robert Lockwood, Jr. Day"
2002  Received honorary Degree of "Doctor of Music" from Cleveland State University  on 5/12

Not content to rest on his laurels, Lockwood is touring more than ever at age 89. Lockwood leads an eight-piece band every Wednesday at Fat Fish Blue in Cleveland, roams the world playing his jazz-tinted Delta Blues. Lockwood is in better mental and physical shape than many men years younger. His guitar playing is as crisp as ever. Like a fine French cognac, he is only getting better with age; no dust, rust or must here.