Pinetop Perkins
Pinetop Is Just Top
Born Willie Perkins, in Belzoni, MS, in 1913, Pinetop started out playing
guitar at house parties and honky tonks, and switched to piano after
sustaining a serious injury that made picking a guitar painful. He came under
the tutelage of
Clarence "Pinetop" Smith,
for whom he composed the song entitled “Pinetop’s Boogie” that became a hit
and, indeed, one of the more popular tunes from the boogie-woogie era. Pinetop
Perkins started performing the tune himself, and out of admiration for his
mentor, started using the name "Pinetop". Pinetop Perkins worked
primarily in the Mississippi Delta throughout the thirties and forties,
spending five years with
Sonny Boy Williamson
on the King Biscuit Time radio program on KFFA, Helena, Arkansas. Pinetop
Perkins also toured extensively with slide guitar player
Robert Nighthawk
and backed him on an early Chess session. After briefly working with
B.B. King
in Memphis, Pinetop Perkins barnstormed the South with
Earl Hooker
during the early fifties. The pair completed a session for Sam Phillips’
famous Sun Records in Memphis 1953. By this time, Pinetop Perkins had
developed his own unmistakable sound. His right hand plays horn lines while
his left kicks out bass lines and lots of bottom. It was Pinetop Perkins,
along with
Pete Johnson,
Meade Lux Lewis,
Albert Ammons, and
Little Brother Montgomery,
who provided the basic format and ideas from which countless swing bands
derived their sound-whole horn sections playing out what Pinetop Perkins’
right hand was playing. Although Pinetop Perkins never played swing, it was
his brand of boogie-woogie that came to structure swing and eventually, rock
'n' roll. Still, with recent successes the exception, Pinetop Perkins is best
known for holding down the piano chair in the great
Muddy Waters
Band for twelve years during the highest point of
Muddy Waters’
career. Replacing the late, great
Otis Spann
in 1969, Pinetop Perkins helped shape the
Muddy Waters
sound and anchored
Muddy Waters’
memorable combo throughout the seventies with his brilliant piano solos. In
1980, Pinetop Perkins and other
Muddy Waters
alumni decided to go out on their own and formed the Legendary Blues Band.
Legendary recorded two records for Rounder and toured extensively. Pinetop
Perkins, who had been labeled a sideman throughout most of his career,
eventually left Legendary to concentrate on a solo career. Within two years,
he had his first domestic record as a frontman and had a most impressive
touring schedule. Since going solo, Pinetop Perkins has been featured on many
nationally syndicated news and music shows, and he has appeared in numerous
movie productions as well as television and radio ads. He has also headlined
nearly every major showcase room in North America and most of the major
festivals here and abroad. It’s certainly ironic that Pinetop Perkins waited
for his eighth decade to blossom as a headliner. Born In the Delta (a
multimedia enhanced CD), his Telarc debut, documented an amazing historical
figure and had an abundance of entertainment value for a contemporary
audience. On his 1998 release, Legends, Pinetop Perkins collaborated
with master blues guitarist
Hubert Sumlin.
Together, they blended the traditional delta blues sound with modern electric
blues-rock, showcasing the spirit and energy of the music.
Visit Pinetop Perkins' official website.
Visit Pinetop Perkins' page at myspace.com.
Visit Pinetop Perkins' page at musicmaker.org.
Visit also these related Sites:
Biographical Information on Pinetop Perkins
Pinetop Perkins biography at txmusicgroup.com.
Pinetop Perkins biography at nea.gov.
Pinetop Perkins biography at blindpigrecords.com.
Pinetop Perkins biography at blueshoeproject.org.
Pinetop Perkins biography by Bill Dahl.
Various Articles on Pinetop Perkins
Article by Elliot Stephen Cohen.
Article by Paul Wentzell.
Reviews and Critiques of Pinetop Perkins Live Performances and Recordings
Pinetop Perkins with Willie "Big Eyes" Smith at Famous Dave’s – Minneapolis, MN September 24, 2004. Review by Dave "Doc" Piltz.
Pinetop Perkins with The Nighthawks and Special Guest, Steve James at The BamBoo Room - Lake Worth, Florida March 2, 2002. Review by Dave "Doc" Piltz.
Pinetop Perkins Photos
Pinetop Perkins photos at dennisdonnelly.com.
Several Pinetop Perkins photos by Thom Myrers.
Pinetop Perkins Audio Files
Pinetop Perkins - Pinetop's Boogie. WMA file, runtime 03:14.
Pinetop Perkins - Come Back Baby. WMA file, runtime 04:59.
Pinetop Perkins - Grindin' Man. WMA file, runtime 06:08.
Pinetop Perkins Videos
Conrad Oberg (11yrs.) and Pinetop Perkins (92yrs.) Blues!!. Runtime 03:38.
Pinetop Perkins & Co. Runtime 06:26.
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