Bob Jones
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DANA MORET
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DANNY SANDOVALInducted 2024 Bio
Danny Sandoval grew up in San Pablo, California and started playing saxophone at the age of eight. When he was in high school, he discovered the East Bay Center for the Performing Arts in Richmond, California, where he was able to explore his passion and dreams of becoming a professional jazz saxophonist. He started playing semi-professionally when he was sixteen, playing in the Central Valley and Bay area, and continues to perform there. By the age of 17, Danny was playing up to five nights a week in San Francisco, paying his way through college. Over the course of his training, Danny has had the honor of studying with Tony Archimedes, Frank Sumares and Mel Martin, all esteemed musicians. In playing the saxophone, Danny expresses all emotions and inner passions that are discernible in the audience responses. He continues to rise professionally in having played with such notables as the Sista Monica Band, Mick Martin’s Big Blues Band, the Terrie Odabi band, many local bands, and his own Danny Sandoval and the Amigos. He is actively involved in touring, recording and playing live jazz, blues, soul, funk and salsa. His repertoire is outstanding! |
Kyle Rowland
Inducted 2024 Bio
Kyle Rowland is the youngest member of the SBS Hall of Fame, having played on stage with Mick Martin when he was merely 11 years old. It seemed natural, since his parents had placed a harmonica next to him in his crib when he was first born. In adolescence, Kyle quickly and naturally developed his own sound. With help from a few of his heroes through the years, such as James Cotton, Lazy Lester, Hubert Sumlin, Matt “Guitar” Murphy, Billy “Boy” Arnold, Henry Gray and many others, he learned specific techniques of stage presence, the music business, and several highly revered harmonica secrets. In August 2022, Kyle signed an endorsement deal with Hohner Harmonicas, the brand he has proudly played since the beginning. In January 2024, he was chosen to represent the Sacramento Blues Society to compete as a solo artist at the International Blues Challenge in Memphis, Tennessee, where he placed in the semi-finals. |
Tim Barnes
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Frank Dupree
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Beth Reid-GrigsbyInducted 2023 Bio
Born and raised in Santa Barbara, and influenced by her family’s love of the blues, Beth Reid-Grigsby had her first singing appearance on stage at the Bluebird Café in Santa Barbara in 1977. She and husband RW Grigsby, bass player and HOF inductee 2018, moved to Sacramento in 1992, where Beth photographed several local artists, including The Hucklebucks and Screaming Dave Wright and Serious Trouble, creating album covers for both in the mid to late 90’s. She photographed every one of Mark Hummel’s Blues Harmonica Blowouts from 2007 forward as well as two Blues Cruises and many road shows. Beth started singing locally in 2002, mostly sitting in with such bands as The Hucklebucks and Johnny Guitar Knox, including performing with Johnny at the Sacramento Jazz Jubilee and various others. She sang in, booked, and managed the Keri Carr band for three years, singing backup and performing in the Sacramento region. Beth started her band Red’s Blues in 2012 with the idea of featuring a special guest artist at each show. Their first show featured Aki Kumar at the legendary Torch Club in Sacramento. Red’s Blues has performed at the Sacramento Music Festival, the Cajun & Blues Festival, and continues to perform at the Torch Club and the Blues & Bourbon series at the Starlet in Sacramento, along with many others in the region as one of the most popular local bands. Red’s Blues has been nominated twice for the Sammies Awards, an awards program in Sacramento that recognizes local talent, and they have produced three successful CDs. As a teacher and performer, Beth has given her talents to the SBS Blues In The Schools (BITS) program in 2022-2023 and has become a regular. According to the program director “the kids love her”. As songwriter, lead singer, front woman, manager and booking agent for Red’s Blues, Beth contributes significantly to our local Blues community. |
Angel Reyes
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Jeff Hughson
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Pinkie Rideau
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Leigh Lunetta
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Chris Fraire
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Chris MartinezInducted 2022 Bio
Chris Martinez has had a long career based in the Blues, pulling together his own style of acoustic to ragtime, to bottleneck, and continuing into electric players, starting with The Three Kings (Albert, B.B. and Freddie). His father’s Texas influence prevailed, drawing Chris to players like Lightnin’ Hopkins, Billy Gibbons, Anson Funderburgh, and of course Jimmie and Stevie Ray Vaughan. This led to Chris’ long-running Blues trio “Hollywood Texas,” which was started in the early 90s. It was upon various day trips for gigs in San Francisco at the Saloon and the Grant and Green, that Chris met Johnny Nitro, a well-respected musician in the Bay Area, whom Chris quotes to this day “Keep it greasy, don’t get too polished and continue to play with other artists often.” He’s played with bass players Andrew Browne (Beer Dawgs) & Jay Peterson (Little Charlie & the Nightcats); was often an opening act for Commander Cody, Jimmy Rogers, and many others; played Sam’s Hof Brau in Sacramento, jamming with Johnny Heartsman, Johnny “Guitar” Knox, Steve Samuels, Omar Sharriff (all HOF members) and other local greats. All of this led to backing Arbess Williams for two years, Guitar Mac another two after that; opening for Bobby “Blue” Bland, John Hammond, Albert Collins, Little Milton, and other internationally known Blues artists. On NYE in 2008, guitarist James Papastathis asked Chris to join him, bassist Steve Schofer (Mick Martin), drummer Steve Price (Pablo Cruise) and vocalist Dana Moret (Lydia Pense) and form the band “Mr. December”, which became a popular favorite in Northern California. In 2010, Chris put together a new band called “Hollywood Texas Blues” with Sacramento drummer Pete Phillis, legendary organ player Kevin Burton (Joe Louis Walker), NYC jazz bassist Zach Westfall, and toured the lower United States for two years. Chris joined the Katie Knipp band in 2019 and continues to tour with them. |
Saxophone ZotInducted 2022 Bio
Saxophone Zot got his first sax in 1954 while in the eighth grade and was reading charts in concert bands until 1962. He bought a Martin tenor sax, left college and joined Doug Brown and the Omens, a Pontiac, Michigan band that played from 9 pm to 2 am, six nights a week in a local club. During that period, Zot saw a sax player in Toledo, Ohio, who, when asked to play a tune, walked through the crowd and climbed up on the bar while people put money in his horn. That was a big inspiration for Zot, and he’s been a bar walker ever since. (Although, now at 81, he doesn't do that so much anymore.) He remembers playing at the club for just over two years, where the owner let Bob Seger and his underage band sit up front to watch. Bob was looking for a record deal and asked Zot to add sax to some demos making him Seger’s first sax player. The Omens passed up a guaranteed record deal, so Zot left and moved to California in 1966. He did not play for 15 years. In 1978, Johnny "Guitar" Knox, left his partners Ray "Catfish" Copeland and Jimmy Morello (all HOF members) in charge of the Blue Flames. Three years later, Zot dropped into the Shanghai Saloon in Auburn one night to sit in with his sax and dazzled everyone there with his showmanship and his playing. He was made a full-time band member shortly afterward. A couple months later, tenor saxman Marty Deradoorian joined the band. In 1983, Copeland, Morello, Deradoorian, Zot and bassist Steve Schofer were joined by Tim Barnes, formerly of Stoneground. Copeland left to form Catfish & the Crawdaddies and the band changed its name to the Fabulous Flames, releasing a well-received album entitled "Rock 'n Roll with a Whole Lotta Soul." Marty and Zot have been a horn section together for over 40 years, still teaming up as guests with blues bands in Northern California to add their distinctive touch of class. |
John Noxon
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Paris ClaytonInducted 2021 Bio
Singer, Musician, Producer, Paris Clayton was born in 1946 and started playing professionally in 1962. Since then he’s played over 5000 gigs and made hundreds of recordings. His early childhood was spent in Tyler, Texas and his family eventually moved north up Rt 66 to St. Louis and Chicago. As a child he studied piano and drums, followed by guitar and bass, learning from his Dad’s large record collection of Blues and Jazz. In 1962 he had a chance meeting with a member of The Vibrations, a working blues band, and his knowledge of Chicago blues got him a place in the band. He worked three or four nights a week all through high school and college. In St. Louis he led his own group, as well as playing bass for local legends Albert King, Henry Townsend, and Chuck Berry. In 1968 he signed with manager Irving Azoff and toured for the next 10 years. headlining on the college and concert circuit and opening for bands like The Who and The Eagles. In 1978 Paris moved to Los Angeles and worked there for the next 20 years as a session singer and musician, honing his skills as a recording engineer by working in various studios. In the 80’s, after playing in the Los Angeles Blues scene for a while, he was asked to put together a band to back up Willie Dixon, John “Juke” Logan, William Clarke, and other artists for a series of fund raising concerts., This led to a friendship with Willie Dixon, who got him involved with the Blues in the Schools program in L.A. . In 1999 Paris moved to Sacramento and immediately got involved with the Sacramento Blues Society, where his solo CD “Hip Trash - Blues, Soul, and Rock and Roll” was released. Over the next 20 years he played with his own band and many local groups, and became a founding member of the Sacramento Blues Revue. Working as a Producer, Paris has recorded many CD’s for local artists and won Sacramento Blues Society’s Best Self-Produced CD for “There’s a Party Goin’ On”. Paris has worked extensively with the SBS’ local Blues in the Schools projects, giving lectures at High Schools in Sacramento and Yolo counties and after school band programs. He produced the CD “Life”, which used lyrics written by the students who had been encouraged to write Blues songs. The sales were used to raise funds for BITS. Paris’ contributions to the Blues genre have been greatly instrumental in the success of the BITS program. |
Mindy GilesInducted 2021 Bio
Mindy Giles has 40+ years in the music business in artist management, record labels, publicity, marketing and being an event promoter in three cities-- Chicago, New Orleans, and Sacramento. She is a 39-year voting member of The Recording Academy. Her part-time jobs from age 16 through college were in record shops, including Discount Records in Bloomington, Indiana which led her to become an assistant manager at a new store in Chicago. A week later, her first free ticket was the 1974 PBS taping, “Muddy Waters & Friends: Blues Summit In Chicago” featuring Muddy, Willie Dixon, Junior Wells, Pinetop Perkins, Koko Taylor, Johnny Winter, Dr. John, Mike Bloomfield, Nick Gravenites, Bob Margolin, and Jerry Portnoy. Beginning in 1977, she was with Polygram (Midwest Marketing Director); Alligator Records (Vice President-North American booking, Marketing, Publicity); Rounder Records (Marketing Director) and Black Top Records (Marketing/Publicity Director). Mindy co-executive produced albums with Lonnie Mack and Stevie Ray Vaughan, produced an album with Maria Muldaur, has written bios, liner notes, provided photographs, and is the author of the book, REALLY THE BLUES (1996, Woodford Publishing). She has written for Pulse! Magazine, Blues Revue, Blues Access, Big City Blues and Sacramento News & Review. Mindy has managed/project-managed the careers of great blues and roots music artists including Albert Collins, Lonnie Mack, Koko Taylor, Son Seals, Lonnie Brooks, Johnny Winter, Big Shoulders, James Harman, Robert Ward, Earl King, Maria Muldaur, Markus James, Terry Hanck, and HowellDevine. In 1997 Tower Records brought her to Sacramento to be Marketing Director for Bayside Entertainment Distribution, overseeing marketing for 200+ labels. In 2001 she oversaw the unknown artist Jackie Greene, guiding his national breakthrough by handling publicity, retail marketing and radio airplay. She booked him to open for Susan Tedeschi, Los Lobos and BB King, and then signed Greene to Monterey International Booking Agency. In 2004, Mindy and Steve Nikkel co-founded Swell Productions, and have brought national talent to Sacramento like Trombone Shorty, JD McPherson, Eric Bibb, The Carolina Chocolate Drops, Nick Gravenites, and others. In 2013-2014, she booked main stage headliners for the annual Sacramento Music Festival and produced the annual Isleton Cajun & Blues Festival. In 2016, she began working with the Sacramento Blues Society BLUES IN THE SCHOOLS Program, including co-producing the "Out of the Box" Community Festival and in 2018 became the SBS publicist/Events Chair. Since 2017, Mindy has been producing a popular weekly live concert series “Blues & Bourbon Wednesdays" at the Starlet Room, featuring national, regional, and local blues/roots music artists. |
Sally KatenInducted 2021 Bio
Sally Katen is a woman who gets things done! In 1999, Sally was diagnosed with breast cancer and along with Marina Texeira, owner of the Torch Club, decided to produce a Blues show at the Torch Club to generate funds for the Susan G. Komen Foundation, which helps newly diagnosed women with breast cancer. Sally and Marina brought together local Blues bands and a headliner from the Bay area. All the participating acts volunteered their time and talent for a day of live blues music for this worthy cause. This fund raiser became an annual event for seven years under Sally and Marina’s direction. There were CD’s made from the live shows entitled “Blues for the Cure.” Sally has served on the SBS Board of Directors and as Board Secretary from 2006 to 2010, at which time she asked then President, Willie Brown, if she could take over the Hall of Fame. Eleven years later under her direction and leadership, the Hall of Fame has formed a special committee and become a gala event, eagerly anticipated and recurring annually. Sally rejoined the Board of Directors in 2015, and beginning in 2020 through the current year of 2021 has served as SBS President. In addition to the Presidency and chairing the Hall of Fame Committee, over the past year she has also taken charge of SBS merchandise and volunteers. The Sacramento Blues Society is fortunate and honored to have Sally’s continuing dedication to keeping the Sacramento blues scene alive! |
Bobby “Blues” RayInducted 2021 Bio
Sacramento Blues singer Bobby “Blues” Ray began performing professionally in 1962 when he was 16 years old after moving here from Croesset, Arkansas. He loved gospel music and became a member of the choir at Mt. Calvary Baptist Church in North Sacramento. Early music influences included Sam Cooke and Bobby Blue Bland. Sacramento in the 60’s had an abundance of live music venues, talented musicians, and an explosion in popular music tastes making for a unique, unprecedented, and rich time in our musical history. Bobby Ray would sit in and sing at every opportunity afforded him. In 1972, Bobby got the break of a lifetime, one that would cement his future. He was asked to open for B.B. King, and Bobby “Blue” Bland at Memorial Auditorium. The promoter loved how Ray fit in and afterward dubbed the trio; the “King, the Premier, and the Knight of the Blues”. The nickname stuck and was used as his latest CD title. Afterward, Ray played gigs up and down California, opening for artists like Lowell Folsom, Jimmy McCracklin, Albert King, Muddy Waters, Buddy Ace, and Johnny Heartsman. He recorded a single Soul Pt. 1 during this time and later an LP was cut titled Bobby “Blues” Ray, Live Vol. 1, at Melarkey’s in 1989. Ray was a regular at numerous music venues that were part of the music scene at that time. He performed at the Heritage Festival, Jazzman’s Art of Pasta, Po’ Boyz Sports Bar, Access TV, and many others. He loved attending community events like the Sacramento Blues Society’s Blues in the Schools program with Guitar Mac and Peppermint Harris, Bobby loves the richness, diversity, history, and relaxed climate of the Sacramento’s music scene. As with all musicians, his career was a series of pronounced ups and downs. His low point took place 10 years ago when he was sitting at a local club when the DJ played one of his songs. .He overheard a patron ask the bartender, “Whatever happened to Bobby Ray?” He was stunned to hear him answer, “He died a long time ago”. One of his high points was when he was invited to play with Lavay Smith and the Red Hot Skillet Lickers. After that, Ray was inspired to cut his newest CD Bobby “Blues” Ray, Blues Knight of the West Coast. Bobby is indeed alive and well and is deeply honored to be inducted into the SBS’ Hall of Fame. |
Greg Roberts
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Charles WashingtonInducted 2021 Bio
In 1938, midway between San Antonio and Houston in the back woods of Texas, is where Charles Washington was born into a family that worked in the fields of cotton, corn and other crops under the Texas sun. Most of the Blues’ music he listened to came from small local bands, a radio station out of Tennessee, and albums he listened to as much as he could as he was growing up. Soon some local stations in the area started a Blues Hour, which increased his scope of obtaining Blues music. Radio was his main source of Blues music and he watched the Blues give birth to R&B, Rock & Roll and other genres of music. Sadly, around graduation from high school, the family’s house burned down, so he ended up back in the fields chopping cotton. Realizing he wanted more for his life, he joined the Air Force and was with the military for over 20 years. He enjoyed his time in the service and was able to build a life and start a family. Of course, he listened to the Blues as much as he could while in the service. Once out of the service, he and his family settled in Sacramento. He was able to track down where to hear live Blues music in the area and would take his family to some of the local spots like, a pizza joint in Old Sacramento, to hear music whenever they could. Charles wanted to be part of the Blues music community, so he joined the Sacramento Blues Society shortly after it formed. Phil Givant was leading the Society and Charles became an active member, working events and serving on committees and the Board. Charles was President for three full terms (1991-1992, 1996-1997, 1998-1999), Vice President for two terms, and Parliamentarian. After Phil’s passing, the Society started on a bit of decline and almost folded. However, thanks to Derek Washington’s motivation, Derek, Demouy Williams, “Guitar Mac” and Charles got together and held a Sunday event with Guitar Mac headlining, thereby resurrecting the SBS. Charles states “It’s a refreshing and loving feeling to see the Sacramento Blues Society still alive in Sacramento. I am grateful to be part of the Hall of Fame and will forever be proud of being part of such a wonderful organization.” |
Ronnie James WeberInducted 2021 Bio
Blues bassist Ronnie James Weber has ascended to the top of his field and is now one of the most respected and in-demand players of both the electric and the stand-up acoustic bass in the country. His career began in earnest when he joined the band of Blues harp virtuoso Mark Hummel in the early 1990’s. With Hummel, Ronnie got the opportunity to back many of the living masters of Chicago Blues, including Muddy Waters' guitarist Jimmy Rogers, Billy Boy Arnold, Luther Tucker, and Snooky Pryor. Before long, Ronnie had made a strong impression on some high profile players on the contemporary Blues scene and was recruited into the Fabulous Thunderbirds’ front man Kim Wilson's solo Blues project. Almost immediately after, Ronnie was hired to join one of the hardest working bands in Blues, Little Charlie & The Nightcats, spending the better part of a decade touring the world and recording with them for Alligator Records. As a member of that band, he also backed John Hammond on the Grammy nominated CD "Long As I Have You". In addition, Ronnie has played and recorded with numerous other artists, including Rusty Zinn, Chicago blues legend Dave Myers, Kim Wilson, and many others. In 2001, he was hired by Kim Wilson to join The Fabulous Thunderbirds, a band he toured the world with for many years. Ronnie’s move to Austin in 2005 led him straight to accepting Jimmie Vaughan’s offer of joining his Tilt-a-Whirl band after he was hired to play bass on Jimmie and Omar Dykes’ band The Jimmy Reed Highway. Ronnie played on Jimmie’s CD “Blues, Ballads, And Favorites”, and its sequel, “More Blues, Ballads, And Favorites”; both of which were nominated for a Grammy award. During his 10 years in Austin he also played with Gary Clark Jr., including Gary’s showcase for Warner Brothers, who signed him. He also appeared in an episode of the TV show Friday Night Lights with Gary. In 2009 Ronnie was hired by the legendary Booker T. Jones for his American and European tours supporting his album “Potato Hole”. Since returning to Sacramento in 2015, Ronnie has been freelancing, touring often with McKinley James out of Nashville and recording the 2018 Blues Music Awards’ Best Traditional Blues Album with Michael Ledbetter and Mike Welch called “Right Place, Right Time”. You can find Ronnie playing locally at The Torch Club often with Aaron King, The Hucklebucks, and most recently his new project, The Harold Sessions Trio. |
James Winegan
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Leo Bootes
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Martin ‘Marty’ DeradoorianInducted 2019 Bio
Martin “Marty” Deradoorian was born in Providence, Rhode Island and started playing professionally at age 19 with friend and band leader the great Jeffrey Osborne. While in Providence he toured with the Fatman Wilson Revue on the East Coast and up into Canada and Nova Scotia. He moved to San Francisco and played with Johnny Mars and Mike Henderson and backed up the great Albert Collins. He moved to Sacramento and got his first gig with fellow inductee Gary “Wailin” Black. Then he went onto Dave Bonds/Dave Rees band and was asked to join fellow HOF members Jimmy Morello and Ray “Catfish” Copeland to join The Blue Flames. Marty then opened for and/or shared the stage with the following legends: Bobby”Blue” Bland, Eddie “Cleanhead” Vinson, Taj Mahal, James Cotton, Bo Diddly, Elvin Bishop, Lowell Folson, and Delbert McClinton, and is currently playing his sax with The Foxtrot Mary Revue and gratefully “guesting” with Red’s Blues as well as The Hucklebucks. |
Kenny Marchese
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Robert Nakashima
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Gary “Whalin” BlackInducted 2019 Bio
Gary “Whalin” Black got his professional name back in 1968 when he joined a band called Rich Waylon. The band never really caught on but Gary liked the name “Whalin” and kept it. Shortly after, he joined a local group called St. George and the Dragons as the lead singer. It wasn’t until another two years that he picked up the guitar. Seems Gary had always been part of the blues scene in the late 60’s and back in 1970 – 1971. When his number came up for the draft, he refused induction, which got him a two-year stint in minimum security prison. A friend sent him an inexpensive guitar and when he was released, he came out quite a guitar phenomenon; “top of the class” according to Ray “Catfish” Copeland. Gary also learned furniture upholstery and opened his own business “Good as Wood” where he would host after-hour parties when the bars closed. He was part of the Sunland Blues Band with Nate “Snakeboy” Shiner, Johnny Nugget, Jerry Eddleman, Tony Montanino and Evan Jenkins. Gary started the jams at the Press Club, where he played for over 3 years, and at the Torch Club. He could sing anything and wasn’t limited by genre restraints. He had the talent, history, and dedication for the Blues and was inextricably entwined in the Sacramento Blues scene. |
Richard “RW” GrigsbyInducted 2018 Bio
Richard “RW” Grigsby has a special relationship with Sacramento. He has moved here twice! In 1984 after a number of years of playing in Georgia bar bands, RW caught the blues bug when he took to the road with famed harmonica man Fingers Taylor from the Jimmy Buffet band. They toured from Jackson to New Orleans, Austin, Houston and Memphis. In 1988 Richard hooked up with Austin, TX accordion star Ponty Bone’s Squeezetones. At one of Ponty’s gigs, RW met Carlene Carter of the legendary Carter Family. He toured with her through the summer of 1990 behind her top ten single, “I Fell in Love”. A three year stint with Austin harp man Gary Primich touring North America led RW to Sacramento playing at the old Sam’s Hofbrau in 1993. RW (AKA Guitar Grady) joined Dallas guitarslinger and Black Top recording/touring artist Mike Morgan & The Crawl in late 1993, but in 1995, headed for Sacramento. RW joined up with Sacramento mainstays The Hucklebucks. In the late 90’s they were playing 15-20 gigs a month. The road called again though, this time with New Orleans #1 harp man Johnny Sansone. More tours and a move back down south to Alabama until 2006 –when he headed back to Sacramento and got a call from California harmonica ace Mark Hummel. They’ve been working together for over a decade now. As a member of Mark’s ambitious Harmonica Blowouts, RW has backed up almost every major blues harp player in the U.S. including James Cotton, Charlie Musselwhite, Curtis Salgado, Billy Boy Arnold, Lazy Lester, Billy Branch, Mojo Buford, Willie Smith, Johnny Dyer, Rod Piazza, James Harman, Rick Estrin, Sugar Ray Norcia, RJ Mischo, Andy Santana and many more. Their 2013 CD, Remembering Little Walter was nominated for a Grammy and won two Blues Music Awards including Album Of The Year. The last several years, Mark’s project the Golden State-Lone Star Revue has been busy touring here in the states and overseas. Members have included Little Charlie Baty, Anson Funderburgh, Wes Starr, Mike Keller, Rusty Zinn, Mark Hummel–and of course, RW Grigsby, just nominated for the prestigious 2017 Blues Music Awards “BEST BASSIST.” When RW is not on the road, he and wife Beth Reid-Grigsby( AKA Red) have Red’s Blues, formed six years ago. You can find them playing in northern California with Dave Earl on guitar, SBS Hall of Famer Tim Wilbur on drums, RW on bass/vocals and Beth on lead vocals and fronting the band. Sometimes you can even find RW laying down the bottom with another SBS HOFer, Ray “Catfish” Copeland. Two highly regarded recent albums, Red’s Blues and You Knock Me Out feature stellar originals from these two–and many outstanding special guests including Rusty Zinn, Rick Estrin, Anson Funderburgh, Kyle Rowland, Rockin’ Johnny Burgin, Mark Hummel, Mike Keller, Jon Lawton, Steve Freund, John Cocuzzi and Sacramento’s Johnny “Guitar” Knox. |
Artis “AJ” Joyce
Inducted 2018 Bio
ANY bass player should go to school on Sacramento’s Artis “AJ” Joyce. In one jaw-dropping extended solo, he can seamlessly quote Cream’s Sunshine of Your Love” to Sly Stone’s “Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)” to “Mama’s Little Baby Loves Shortnin’ Bread” to Henry Mancini’s “Pink Panther” to the “Habanera“ from Bizet’s opera “Carmen.” AJ is perhaps best-known for playing on Alligator Records releases by Charlie Musselwhite, beginning with the critically acclaimed Ace of Harps album in 1990, which marked the start of a new era for the legendary singer and harmonica player. Musselwhite was quoted as saying it was made by “the best band I’ve ever had.” A big man with a big heart, he has toured North America and Europe, backing Musselwhite, Johnny Heartsman, Ron Thompson, Arbess Williams, Harvey Mandel, Little Milton, Sister Monica, Ron Hacker, Mick Martin, Leah Tysse, Alabama Mike and many more. He still makes it a point to come back home and volunteer to play numerous Northern California benefits. As he would say, PEACE! |
Frankie Lee
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Jimmy Morello
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Andy Santana
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Bill Scholer
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Fred “Deacon” Baker
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Ken (Obie Dee) Van CromphauInducted 2017 Bio
Ken (Obie Dee) Van Cromphaut has been a fixture on the West Coast music scene for more than forty years. With formal classical training, he had a love for Gospel and Blues music at an early age. He has also donned the composer hat and is a member of ASCAP as well as being a session musician and performing artist. As a guitarist, Obie Dee has crafted a crystalline guitar tone and screaming leads, and along with his raspy vocals, they have become his signature sound. His membership in some of the best known bands include The BluesExciters (founder), performed with Mick Martin and the Blues Rockers, The Grant Urias Band, Ro Harpo, the Slim Chance Band, Sleeper, Bone Jelly, and most recently the Zola Moon Band. In addition, Ken has been active in fund-raising events such as Loaves and Fishes, MDA Telethon, and the Multiple Sclerosis Society. He is a continuing member of the Sacramento Blues Society and the now-defunct Sierra Blues Society, where he once served on the Board of Directors. |
Stan Powell
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Tim Wilbur
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