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-----After
25 years and many incarnations, the Soulard Blues Band arguably the
hardest working band in town - still tears up the town one show at a
time.
It is not every band you run across that has a mission
beyond just steady giggin', but then again, as one of the longest-lasting
acts around - and with nine straight wins in the "Best Blues Band"
category in a popular local poll - the Soulard Blues Band is not just
any band. As bassist and sole remaining founder Art Dwyer will tell
you, "Our mission always is just to leave things around a little
better than we found 'em." That ethic applies equally to song arrangements,
the mood of the audience and the entire musical scene in this city that
birthed such towering talents as Miles Davis, Johnny Johnson, Henry
Townsend, Oliver Sain and many more.
----- And from all appearances, the mojo
is working: the blues landscape in St.Louis now is "better than
it's ever been since we started out, playing in the intersection of
Menard and Geyer with absolutely no cars or people coming by to cause
us to have to move," Dwyer says. He formed the Soulard Blues Band
in 1978, "just a long-haired guy in blue jeans and sandals,"
motivated in part by memories of the St. Louis of his childhood, when
clubs with names like Shalimar and Oasis and the Peppermint Lounge and
Sadie's Personality Bar jumped with live music and people "dressed
up looking flashy" any night of the week, and fifty cents' cover
got you in to Ike and Tina Turner's set at the Club Imperial.
----- "This town has always been alive
with world-class players in neighborhoods all over the city," Dwyer
says, and the rest of his band's roster bears him out. Guitarist Tom
Maloney,, guitarist Bob "Bumblebee" Kamoske, trombonist John
"Wolfman" Wolf and drummer Leroy Wilson create music from
both originals and standarts that manages to let each player shine without
sacrificing the song to overblown solos. Indeed, that's one of the goals
in group's frequent rehearsals, says Dwyer:"We are in the business
of supporting each other in playing, to play in unison with each other."
And in so doing, blending seamlessly into the fabric of a city with
a deep history in the blues.
Amanda E. Doyle, Where Magazine
St. Louis, January 2003 |
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For booking information, contact:
Art Dwyer
King Solomon Records
314.621.8246
314.832.4924
dwyerart@yahoo.com
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