Pat Boyack
Pat Boyack | |
---|---|
Born |
Price, Utah, United States | June 26, 1967
Genres | Electric blues[1] |
Occupation(s) | Guitarist, songwriter |
Instruments | Guitar |
Years active | 1990s–present |
Labels | Bullseye Blues, Doc Blues |
Website | Official website |
Pat Boyack (born June 26, 1967, Price, Utah, United States)[2] is an American electric blues guitarist and songwriter. Boyack performs modern electric blues and blues rock. He has released four albums since 1994, for both the Bullseye Blues and Doc Blues record labels.[1]
Biography
Boyack was born in Price, but grew up in Helper, Utah.[2] At the age of fifteen he had his first guitar, and listened to a college friend's Stevie Ray Vaughan album.[1] Inspired by contemporary Texas blues, Boyack moved to Dallas, Texas, in 1991, and played in a number of bar bands, including Rocket 88s. In 1993, Boyack formed the Prowlers with John Garza (bass) and Doug Swancy (drums). The Prowlers added Jimmy Morello (singer/harmonica) and secured a recording contract with Bullseye Blues Records (part of Rounder Records).[1][2]
Pat Boyack & the Prowlers debut album Breakin' In (1994), was followed by On the Prowl (1996). By the time the third album, Super Blue & Funky, was released in 1997, a new backing band had been assembled, which took far less prominent billing.[1] Boyack left the music industry for two years to support his wife and first child, then in 2000 Boyack's former label mate, Marcia Ball, recruited him to her backing band.[2]
Following a change in record label, Boyack's fourth album, Voices from the Street was released in May 2004.[1]
Discography
Albums
Album title | Record label | Year of release |
---|---|---|
Breakin' In | Bullseye Blues Records | 1994 |
On the Prowl | Bullseye Blues Records | 1996 |
Super Blue & Funky | Bullseye Blues Records | 1997 |
Voices from the Street | Doc Blues Records | 2004 |
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Jason Ankeny (1967-06-26). "Pat Boyack | Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 2014-01-28.
- 1 2 3 4 "Pat Boyack". Patboyack.com. Retrieved October 19, 2010.
- ↑ "Pat Boyack | Discography". AllMusic. 1967-06-26. Retrieved 2014-01-28.
External links
|