Lonnie
Mack is a roadhouse blues-rock legend --
modern rock's first true guitar hero. His
playing has influenced the course of rock and
roll and had an impact on many of modern rock's
current guitar heroes, including
Eric
Clapton,
Keith Richards, Jimmy Page and especially
Stevie Ray
Vaughan. His early music bridged the
gap between '50s rockabilly and the psychedelic
blues-rock of the following decade, and, like
the best rock and roll, his work continues to
embody a mixture of white and black roots music.
Rock, blues, soul and country -- Lonnie brings
them all together for a sound that has been all
his own for nearly forty years.
Lonnie was born in 1941 in Harrison, Indiana --
some twenty miles west of Cincinnati. From
family sing-alongs he developed a love of
country music, while he absorbed rhythm and
blues from the late-night black radio stations
and gospel from his local church. Starting off
with a few chords that he learned from his
mother, Lonnie gradually blended all the sounds
he heard around him into his own individual
style.
He
began playing professionally in his early teens
(he quit school after a fight with his
sixth-grade teacher), working clubs and
roadhouses around the tri-state border area of
Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio. In 1958, he bought
the guitar he still plays today -- Gibson Flying
V serial number 7. In addition to his live gigs,
Lonnie began playing sessions for the King and
Fraternity labels in Cincinnati. He recorded
with blues and r&b greats like Hank Ballard,
Freddie King and James Brown.
In
1963, at the end of another artist's session,
Lonnie cut an instrumental version of Chuck
Berry's "Memphis." He didn't even know
that Fraternity had issued the single until he
heard it on the radio, and within a few weeks
"Memphis" had hit the national Top 5 Lonnie Mack
went from being a talented regional roadhouse
player to a national star virtually overnight.
Suddenly, he was booked for hundreds of gigs a
year, criss-crossing the country in his Cadillac
and rushing back to Cincinnati or Nashville to
cut new singles. "Wham! ' ''Where There's A Will
There's A Way", ''Chicken Pickin'" and a dozen
other records followed "Memphis.'' None sold as
well as his first hit (though "Where There's A
Will" earned extensive black radio airplay
before the DJs found out Lonnie was white!) but
there was enough reaction to keep him on the
road for another five years of grueling one-nighters.
Fraternity Records died, but Lonnie kept on
gigging, and in 1968 a Rolling Stone article
stimulated new interest in his music. He signed
with Elektra Records and cut three albums.
Elektra also reissued his original Fraternity
LP, The Wham Of That Memphis Man (now available
on Alligator Records). He began playing all the
major rock venues, from Fillmore East to
Fillmore West. Lonnie also made a guest
appearance on the Doors' Morrison Hotel album.
You can hear Lonnie's guitar solo on "Roadhouse
Blues" preceded by Jim Morrison's urgent ''Do
it, Lonnie! Do it!'' He even worked in Elektra's
A&R department. When the label merged with giant
Warner Brothers, however, Lonnie grew disgusted
with the new bureaucracy and walked out of his
prestigious job.
He
headed back to rural Indiana, playing
back-country bars, going fishing and laying low.
After five years of relative obscurity, Lonnie
signed with Capitol and cut two albums that
featured his country influences. He played on
the West Coast for a while and even flew to
Japan for a Save The Whales benefit. Then he
headed to New York to team up with an old friend
named Ed Labunski. Labunski was a wealthy jingle
writer that wrote "This Bud's For You" who was
tired of commercials and wanted to write and
play for pleasure. He and Lonnie built a studio
in rural Pennsylvania and spent three years
organizing and recording a country-rock band
called South, which included Buffalo-based
keyboardist Stan Szelest, who later played on
Lonnie's Alligator debut. Ed and Lonnie had big
plans for their partnership, including producing
an album by a then-obscure Texas guitarist named
Stevie Ray Vaughan. But the plans evaporated
when Labunski died in an auto accident, and the
South album wasn't released until 1998.
Disheartened, Lonnie headed for Canada and
joined the band of veteran rocker Ronnie Hawkins
for a summer. After a brief stay in Florida, he
returned to Indiana in 1982, playing clubs in
Cincinnati and the surrounding area.
Lonnie began his re-emergence on the national
scene in November of 1983. At Stevie Ray
Vaughan's urging, he relocated from southern
Indiana to Austin, Texas. He began jamming with
Stevie Ray in local clubs and flying to New York
for gigs at the Lone Star and the Ritz. When
Alligator Records approached him to do an album,
Lonnie immediately called on Vaughan to help him
out. The result was Strike Like Lightning (AL
4739), co-produced by Lonnie and Stevie Ray and
featuring Stevie's guitar on several tracks. "We
went for Lonnie's original sound here," Vaughan
said. The joint effort was one of 1985's best
selling independent records and topped many
critics' "Best Of" list for that year.
Lonnie's re-emergence was a major music industry
event. Keith Richards, Ron Wood, Ry Cooder and
Stevie Ray Vaughan all joined Lonnie on stage
during his '85 tour. Other celebrities -- Bob
Dylan, Mick Jagger, Paul Simon, Eddie Van Halen,
Dwight Yoakum, actor Matt Dillon and comedienne
Sandra Bernhard -- attended shows during the
Strike Like Lightning tour. The year was capped
off with a stellar performance at New York's
prestigious Carnegie Hall with label-mates
Albert Collins and the late Roy Buchanan. That
show recently aired on Britain's BBC-TV and is
currently available as a home video cassette
entitled "Further On Down The Road."
His
Alligator follow-up, Second Sight (AL 4750),
highlighted Lonnie's continuing evolution as a
musician and singer/songwriter. He self-produced
the album and wrote eight of the ten tunes. The
album spotlighted his cured-in-the-wood vocals
more than Strike Like Lightning but also
included a healthy dose of Lonnie's burning
Flying V.
Lonnie's re-found visibility earned him a
contract with Epic Records, and in 1988 that
label released Lonnie's Roadhouses and
Dancehalls album. Critics applauded the
recording, but CBS didn't know quite how to
market it. They tried to force it into a country
music niche, ignoring its roots-rock and r&b
influences. Not able to push the album to its
full sales potential, Epic let the project slide
from the top of its priority list. Lonnie, again
disenchanted with the major label scenario,
began making plans for his return to
Alligator.
Lonnie Mack's career traces the history of rock
and roll. Drawing from influences as diverse as
rhythm and blues, country, gospel and
rockabilly, Lonnie has won the hearts of fans
worldwide. He is revered by a new generation of
rock performers. He has played everywhere from
tiny roadhouse clubs to huge rock showcases and
national television. He has recorded for major
labels and indies alike. |