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Hard-rocking blues-soaked guitarist/vocalist/song-writer Tinsley
Ellis sings and plays with the energy and soul of all the great
Southern musicians who have come before him. Ellis attacks his music
with rock power and blues feeling, following in the tradition of
Deep South musical heroes Duane Allman, Freddie King, Derek Trucks
and Warren Haynes. His live shows feature extended fretwork filled
with melodic and rhythmic experimentation, in the spirit of jam
bands like his friends Widespread Panic and The Allman Brothers.
Atlanta Magazine declared Ellis "the most significant blues artist
to emerge from Atlanta since Blind Willie McTell."
Since first hitting the national scene with his Alligator Records
debut, GEORGIA BLUE, in 1988, Ellis has toured non-stop and
continued to release one critically acclaimed album after another.
His stellar guitar work, always a staple of his live shows and CDs,
is matched by his strong songwriting and powerful, soulful vocals.
Tinsley's hometown paper, The Atlanta Journal Constitution, calls
his music, "a potent, amazing trip through electric blues-rock."
Ellis made five critically acclaimed albums for Alligator between
1988 and 1997 before recording for the Capricorn and Telarc labels.
His high-energy LIVE-HIGHWAYMAN, the long-awaited live album his
fans have been demanding for years, marked his return to Alligator
records. "Tinsley is one of the finest younger generation blues
rockers. He's made great albums for us in the past, and we're
excited to have him back in the Alligator family. He's great in the
studio, but even better live, so I'm really excited about this
recording," said Iglauer.
Ellis' latest release on Alligator, MOMENT OF TRUTH, captures all
the power and energy of his legendary live performances. His vocals
reach new heights of soulfulness and expressiveness; his guitar
playing is ferocious and relentless, but, when the mood calls for
it, gentle and moving. What really sets the album apart, though, is
the depth of Ellis’ songwriting. The material deals in matters both
personal and universal and runs the gamut of human emotions. MOMENT
OF TRUTH is Ellis’ most wide-ranging and inspired recording.
Born in Atlanta in 1957, Ellis grew up in southern Florida and
first played guitar at age eight. He found the blues through the
backdoor of the British Invasion bands like The Yardbirds, The
Animals, Cream, and The Rolling Stones. He especially loved the
Kings--Freddie, B.B. and Albert--and spent hours immersing himself
in their music. His love for the blues solidified when he was 14. At
a B.B. King performance, Tinsley sat mesmerized in the front row.
When B.B. broke a string on Lucille, he changed it without missing a
beat, and handed the broken string to Ellis. After the show, B.B.
came out and talked with fans, further impressing Tinsley with his
warmth and down-to-earth attitude. By now Tinsley's fate was sealed;
he had to become a blues guitarist. And yes, he still has that
string.
Already an accomplished teenaged musician, Ellis left Florida and
returned to Atlanta in 1975. He soon joined the Alley Cats, a gritty
blues band that included Preston Hubbard (of Fabulous Thunderbirds
fame). In 1981, along with veteran blues singer and harpist Chicago
Bob Nelson, Tinsley formed The Heartfixers, a group that would
become Atlanta's top-drawing blues band. Upon hearing LIVE AT THE
MOONSHADOW (Landslide), the band's second release, The Washington
Post declared, "Tinsley Ellis is a legitimate guitar hero." After
cutting two more Heartfixers albums for Landslide, COOL ON IT
(featuring Tinsley's vocal debut) and TORE UP (with vocals by blues
shouter Nappy Brown), Ellis was ready to head out on his own. Ellis
sent a copy of the master tape for his solo debut to Bruce Iglauer
at Alligator Records. "I had heard COOL ON IT," recalls Iglauer,
"and I was amazed. I hadn't heard Tinsley before, but he played like
the guys with huge international reputations. It wasn't just his raw
power; it was his taste and maturity that got to me. It had the
power of rock but felt like the blues. I knew I wanted to hear more
of this guy."
GEORGIA BLUE, Tinsley's first Alligator release, hit an
unprepared public by surprise in 1988. Critics and fans quickly
agreed that a new and original guitar hero had emerged. "Dazzling
musicianship pitched somewhere between the exhilarating volatility
of rock and roll and the passion of urban blues," raved the Los
Angeles Times. Before long, Alligator arranged to reissue COOL ON IT
and TORE UP, thus exposing Tinsley's blistering earlier music to a
growing fan base." The Chicago Tribune celebrated the release by
saying, "Ellis takes classic, Southern blues-rock workouts and jolts
them to new life with a torrid axe barrage."
Tinsley's next release, 1989's FANNING THE FLAMES, further
expanded the guitarist's hero status. By now his talents as a
songwriter equaled his guitar prowess. Guitar World shouted, "Ellis
stands alongside Stevie Ray Vaughan and Johnny Winter, and that
ain't just hype." 1992's TROUBLE TIME added guests Peter Buck
(R.E.M.) and keyboardist Chuck Leavell (Rolling Stones), and brought
even more critical acclaim Ellis' way. The song >Highwayman received
airplay on commercial rock radio stations across the country.
"Alive, kicking and drenched in sweat," declared The Washington
Post.
1994's STORM WARNING was Ellis' true breakthrough. Recorded live
in the studio with his road-savvy band and produced by Eddy Offord
(John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Yes), the album was a tour-de-force of
smoking guitar workouts and radio-friendly blues rockers. Features
and reviews ran in Rolling Stone, The Chicago Tribune, The
Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, The Boston Globe, and in
many other national and regional publications. His largest audience
by far came when NBC Sports ran a feature on Atlanta's best blues
guitarist during their 1996 Summer Olympic Coverage viewed by
millions of people all over the world.
FIRE IT UP followed in 1997. Produced by the legendary Tom Dowd (Allman
Brothers, Ray Charles), the album featured Ellis' blazing guitar
playing and expressive, soulful vocals in better form than ever.
With Dowd's deft production touch--along with Tinsley's fiery road
band and a host of talented musicians, including famed bassist
Donald "Duck" Dunn on seven songs--Ellis reached new heights, coming
up with some of the best performances of his career. The Associated
Press called the CD, "A solid heaping of blues...a mixture of
well-written originals and covers all held together with scorching
guitar and a big voice to carry his sharply written lyrics."
A move to Capricorn Records in 2000 saw Ellis revisiting his
Southern roots with KINGPIN. Unfortunately, the label folded soon
after the CD's release. In 2002, he joined the Telarc label,
producing two well-received albums of soul-drenched blues-rock, HELL
OR HIGH WATER and THE HARD WAY. All the while, Ellis never stopped
touring. "A musician never got famous staying home," he's quick to
note.
Ellis has played in all 50 states, as well as Canada, Europe,
Australia and South America. Whether he's out with his own band or
sharing stages with The Allman Brothers, Robert Cray, Koko Taylor or
Widespread Panic, he averages over 150 performances a year, bringing
his fast-moving, high-energy, guitar-drenched performances to fans
all over the world. Live, there's simply no one better at igniting a
crowd, jamming with focus and purpose...
DISCOGRAPHY
Moment of Truth 2007 (Alligator)
Live-Highwayman 2005 (Alligator)
The Hard Way 2004 (Telarc)
Hell Or High Water 2002 (Telarc)
Kingpin 2000 (Capricorn)
Fire It Up 1997 (Alligator)
Storm Warning 1994 (Alligator)
Trouble Time 1992 (Alligator)
Fanning The Flames 1989 (Alligator)
Georgia Blue 1988 (Alligator)
Cool On It 1986 (Landslide/reissued on Alligator)
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Artist's Web Site
See a YouTube clip from Tinsley Ellis
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