| John Mayall
& the Bluesbreakers |

John
Mayall and the Bluesbreakers with Eric Clapton album cover
|
| Background information |
| Origin |
London, England |
| Genre(s) |
Blues Rock |
| Years active |
1963—present |
| Label(s) |
Decca, Deram |
| Website |
johnmayall.com |
| Members |
John
Mayall
Buddy Whittington
Joe Yuele
Hank Van Sickle
Tom Canning |
| Former members |
Eric
Clapton
Jack
Bruce
Peter Green
John
McVie
Mick Fleetwood
Hughie
Flint
Mick
Taylor
Colin
Allen
Don Harris
Harvey
Mandel
Larry Taylor
Aynsley Dunbar
Dick Heckstall-Smith
Andy
Fraser
Johnny Almond
Jon Mark
Kal
David
Chris Barber
Walter
Trout
Coco
Montoya
Soko Richardson |
John Mayall and Paul Butterfield, 1967
John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers are
a pioneering English blues band, led by singer, songwriter,
and multi-instrumentalist John
Mayall, OBE, that has included
such luminaries as:
- Eric Clapton and Jack
Bruce (both later in Cream),
- Peter Green, John
McVie and Mick Fleetwood (later all in Fleetwood
Mac),
- Mick Taylor (later in The Rolling Stones),
- Don
"Sugarcane" Harris, Harvey Mandel, Randy
Resnick, Walter Trout, Larry
Taylor (later in Canned Heat),
- Aynsley Dunbar, Dick
Heckstall-Smith, Andy Fraser (Free), Chris Mercer, Henry
Lowther, Johnny Almond and Jon Mark (later of Mark-Almond).
|
Contents
- 1 History
- 2 Discography
- 3 See
also
- 4 External
links
|
History
The Bluesbreakers were formed in January 1963 with an
ever-evolving lineup. Eric Clapton joined in 1965 just a few months
after the release of their first album. Clapton brought the blues
influences to the forefront of the group, as he had left The
Yardbirds in order to play the blues.
The group lost their record contract with Decca
that year, which also saw the release of a single called "I'm Your
Witchdoctor" (produced by Jimmy Page), followed by a
return to Decca in 1966. The album Bluesbreakers with
Eric Clapton, also known as The Beano
Album, was released later that year; it reached
the Top
Ten in the UK.
Clapton and Jack Bruce left the group that year to form Cream.
Clapton was replaced by Peter Green for A Hard
Road, after which he left to form Fleetwood
Mac. Finally, in 1969, the third Bluesbreaker-guitarist departed when
Mick Taylor joined the Rolling Stones. He would soon be replaced by blues guitarist Kal David.
By the time the 1960s were over, the Bluesbreakers had finally
achieved some success in the United States.
With some interruptions, the Bluesbreakers have continued to
tour and release albums (over 50 to date), though they never achieved
the critical or popular acclaim of their earlier material. In 2003,
Eric Clapton, Mick Taylor and Chris Barber reunited with the band for
John Mayall's 70th Birthday Concert
in Liverpool
— the concert was later released on CD and DVD. In 2004, their line up
included Buddy Whittington, Joe Yuele, Hank
Van Sickle and Tom Canning, and the band toured the UK
with Mick Taylor as a guest musician.
Discography
Albums
- 1965 John Mayall Plays John Mayall (Decca*)
- 1966 Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton (Decca*)
- 1967 A Hard Road (Decca*)
- 1967 Bluesbreakers with Paul Butterfield (Decca EP single)
- 1967 Crusade (Decca*)
- (1967 Blues Alone (Ace of Clubs*)
- 1968 Diary of a Band Volume 1 (Decca*)
- 1968 Diary of a Band Volume 2 (Decca*)
- 1968 Bare Wires (Decca*)
- 1968 Blues from Laurel Canyon (Decca*)
- 1969 Looking Back (Decca*)
- 1969 Thru The Years (London)
- 1969 Primal Solos (Decca)
- 1969 The Turning Point (Polydor*)
- 1970 Empty Rooms (Polydor*)
- 1970 USA Union (Polydor*)
- 1971 Back to the Roots (Polydor*)
- 1971 Memories (Polydor*)
- 1972 Jazz Blues Fusion (Polydor*)
- 1973 Moving On (Polydor)
- 1973 Ten Years Are Gone (Polydor)
- 1974 The Latest Edition (Polydor)
- 1975 New Year,New Band,New Company (ABC - One Way*)
- 1975 Notice to Appear (ABC - One Way*)
- 1976 Banquet in Blues (ABC - One Way*)
- 1977 Lots of People (ABC - One Way*)
- 1977 A Hard Core Package (ABC - One Way*)
- 1978 Last of the British Blues (ABC - One Way*)
- 1979 The Bottom Line (DJM)
- 1980 No More Interviews (DJM)
- 1982 Road Show Blues (DJM*)
- 1982 Return of the Bluesbreakers (Aim Australia)
- 1985 Behind the Iron Curtain (GNP Crescendo*)
- 1987 Chicago Line (Entente - Island*)
- 1988 The Power of the Blues (Entente*)
- 1988 Archives to Eighties (Polydor*)
- 1990 A Sense of Place (Island*)
- 1992 1982 Reunion Concert (One Way*)
- 1992 Cross Country Blues (One Way*)
- 1993 Wake Up Call (Silvertone*)
- 1995 Spinning Coin (Silvertone*)
- 1997 Blues for the Lost Days (Silvertone*)
- 1999 Padlock on the Blues (Eagle*)
- 1999 Rock the Blues Tonight (Indigo*)
- 1999 Live at the Marquee 1969 (Eagle*)
- 2000 Time Capsule (Private Stash) Limited release, website
only, no longer in print
- 2001 UK Tour 2K (Private Stash) Limited release, website
only, no longer in print
- 2001 Boogie Woogie Man (Private Stash*) Limited release,
website only
- 2001 Along For The Ride (Eagle/Red Ink*)
- 2002 STORIES (Eagle/Red Ink*)
- 2003 No Days Off (Private Stash*) Limited release, website
only
- 2003 Rolling With The Blues (Shakedown UK*)
- 2003 70th Birthday Concert CD & DVD (Eagle*)
- 2004 Cookin' Down Under DVD (Private Stash*) Limited
release, website only
- 2004 The Godfather of British Blues/Turning Point DVD
(Eagle*)
- 2004 The Turning Point Soundtrack (Eagle*)
- 2005 Road Dogs (Eagle*)
- 2007 Live At The BBC (Decca*)
- 2007 In The Palace of the King (Eagle*)
DVDs
- 1982: Blues Alive VHS (Also released as
Jammin' With the Blues Greats on DVD)
- 2003: 70th Birthday Concert
CD & DVD (with Eric Clapton)
- 2004: The Godfather of British Blues/Turning Point
DVD
From John Mayall's website only:
- 2004: Cookin' Down Under DVD
See also
- Bluesbreakers Albums
Category
- Marshall Bluesbreaker
External links
| Blues
| Blues
genres |
| Jug band - Classic
female blues - Country blues - Delta
blues - Electric blues - Jump blues
- Piano
blues - Fife and drum blues |
| Jazz blues
- Blues-rock
- Soul
blues- Punk
blues |
| British
blues - Chicago blues - Detroit
blues - Kansas City blues - Louisiana
blues - Memphis blues - Piedmont
blues - St. Louis blues - Swamp
blues - Texas
blues - West Coast blues |
| Musicians |