Sonny Rhodes
Sonny Rhodes | |
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![]() Rhodes performing in 2000 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Clarence Edward Smith |
Born | November 3, 1940 |
Origin | Smithville, Texas, United States |
Genres | Blues, Delta blues |
Occupation(s) | Singer, guitarist, songwriter |
Instruments | Lap steel guitar |
Years active | 1958–present |
Labels | Evidence, Galaxy, Ichiban, Kingsnake, Rhodes-Way, Stony Plain |
Sonny Rhodes (born Clarence Edward Smith, November 3, 1940) is an American blues singer and lap steel guitar player.[1] He has recorded over two hundred songs. "I'm what you call a self-proclaimed Disciple of the Blues!" said Rhodes about his years playing and singing for fans of blues around the world.[2] He has been nominated 15 times for Blues Music Awards and won in the category Instrumentalist–Other in 2011.[3]
Biography
Born in Smithville, Texas, Rhodes was the sixth and last child of sharecroppers Le Roy and Julia Smith.[1] He received his first guitar at the age of eight as a Christmas present and became serious about playing the blues at age 12. He credits his uncle as his source of inspiration. Rhodes began performing around Smithville and nearby Austin in the late 1950s, while still in his teens. He listened a lot to T-Bone Walker when he was young. He acknowledges as influences the guitarists L. C. Robinson, Pee Wee Crayton and B. B. King and the singer Percy Mayfield.[4] With his first band, Clarence Smith and the Daylighters, he played blues clubs in the Austin area until he joined the Navy after high school graduation.[1]
In the Navy, he was stationed in California, where he worked for a while as a radio man and closed-circuit Navy ship disc jockey, telling off-color jokes in between the country and blues records he would spin for the entertainment of the sailors. Rhodes recorded a single, "I'll Never Let You Go When Something Is Wrong", for Domino Records in Austin in 1958. He also learned to play the bass guitar. He played bass accompanying the guitarists Freddie King and Albert Collins. After his stint in the Navy, in his mid-20s, Rhodes returned to California and lived in Fresno for a few years before signing a recording contract with Galaxy Records in Oakland. He recorded a single, "I Don't Love You No More", in 1966 and another single for Galaxy in 1967. Frustrated with the San Francisco Bay area record companies, he recorded "Cigarette Blues" on his own label, Rhodes-Way Records, in 1978.[1]
Rhodes toured Europe in 1976 and released numerous recordings on European labels, including I Don't Want My Blues Colored Bright and the live album In Europe. In 1985, he released Just Blues on Rhodes-Way. In the late 1980s, he recorded Disciple of the Blues, released by Ichiban Records in 1991, and Living Too Close to the Edge, released by Kingsnake Records in 1992.
Other work
Television
Rhodes recorded "The Ballad of Serenity", the theme music for the television series Firefly, which was written by Joss Whedon, the creator of the series.[5]
Festivals
Rhodes has played at the San Francisco Blues Festival six times. He also played at the Musicamdo Jazz and Blues Festival in Italy in 2005 and the Fresno Blues Festival in 2007.
Selected discography
Year | Title | Genre | Label |
---|---|---|---|
1995 | Just Blues | Contemporary blues | Evidence |
1996 | Won't Rain in California | Contemporary blues | EPM Musique |
1996 | Out of Control | Delta blues | Kingsnake |
1997 | Born to Be Blue | Delta blues | Kingsnake |
1999 | Blue Diamond | Traditional blues | Stony Plain Music |
2001 | A Good Day to Play the Blues | Traditional blues | Stony Plain Music |
2008 | I'm Back Again | Delta blues | EPM Musique |
References
- 1 2 3 4 Skelly, Richard. "Sonny Rhodes". Allmusic. Retrieved May 27, 2009.
- ↑ "Entertainment Columns & Blogs | FresnoBee.com & Fresno Bee". Fresno Famous. Retrieved 2015-10-06.
- ↑ "Awards Search > Sonny Rhodes". Blues.org. Retrieved 2015-10-06.
- ↑ Rhodes, Sonny (2009). "Sonny Rhodes MySpace". MySpace website. Retrieved 2009-06-20.
- ↑ Sonny Rhodes at the Internet Movie Database
External links
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