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Tag: Sonny Landreth

  • Sonny Landreth and Cindy Cashdollar – Hard Time Killing Floor

    Sonny Landreth and Cindy Cashdollar – Hard Time Killing Floor

    Sonny Landreth and Cindy Cashdollar – Hard Time Killing Floor
    Sonny Landreth and Cindy Cashdollar – Hard Time Killing Floor

    Sonny Landreth and Cindy Cashdollar performing Hard Time Killing Floor Blues at the 2006 New York Guitar Festival’s tribute to Skip James at Merkin Concert Hall.

    Sonny Landreth

    Sonny Landreth was born on Feb 1, 1951 in Canton Mississippi to Clide and Jeraldine (Jerry) Landreth. When Sonny was in the second grade, the family relocated to Lafayette Louisiana where Sonny was surrounded by the many musical and cultural influences that we can hear so much of in his music today. He is very much in demand as a session player as he never holds back and gives his all for whomever he is working with. He has played with many different artists including: Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown, Clifton Chenier, Steve Conn, Michael Doucet, Jerry Douglas, John Hiatt, Dr. John, Mark Knopfler, Kenny Loggins, John Mayall, Maria Muldaur, Dolly Parton, Zachary Richard and Junior Wells just to name a few. His haunting slide technique is quite different from anything I had ever heard before; sometimes he is able to coax sounds from his guitars that sound like other instruments. Sonny uses a style that combines finger picking, palming and slapping the strings and what looks to me like he’s trying to “excite the strings” like you would with a bow on a violin. His slide technique is quite unique in that he also frets behind the slide, giving him a different sound and “feel” than most slide players. Not only is he an incredible player but also a singer/song writer.

    (Read more: sonnylandrethfan.com)

    Cindy Cashdollar

    Cindy Cashdollar grew up in Woodstock, New York. Cashdollar is an old local family name. Her great-uncle Albert Cashdollar was the Town Supervisor and the family ran Locust Grove Dairy. The whole musical community watched as Cindy’s talent swiftly grew on the Dobro and then lap steel as she played with “everyone in town” during the late 1970s and ‘80s, The demand for her musical touch led her to touring and performing regionally with local Woodstock luminaries Levon Helm, Rick Danko, bluegrass singer John Herald, blues legend Paul Butterfield, and folk heroes Happy & Artie Traum. However, in 1992 her restless musical quest took her to Nashville where she met and landed a job with America’s premiere Western Swing group Asleep At The Wheel, leading her to Austin. Expanding her instrumental prowess to the steel guitar, Cindy’s taste and style added to the band’s sound as she toured and recorded with them for nine years. During her time with the band she had the chance to collaborate with legends such as Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard, Dolly Parton and Lyle Lovett, among others, and won five Grammys. Upon leaving AATW to once again engage in a wider variety of music, the names of those who sought her out and hired her to add fire and sweetness to their music are lifted out of the record books: Ryan Adams, Bob Dylan (on his Grammy-winning Time Out of Mind album), Van Morrison, Dave Alvin, Rod Stewart, Albert Lee, Marcia Ball, Rory Block, Jorma Kaukonen, Leon Redbone, BeauSoleil, Peter Rowan, Sonny Landreth, Amy Helm …and on and on. She was the first woman to be inducted into the Texas Steel Guitar Hall of Fame in 2011. Cindy was inducted into The Texas Music Hall of Fame in 2012 and was nominated as Instrumentalist of the Year by the Americana Music Association in 2016.
    (Read more: cindycashdollar.com)

  • Dion – I Got The Cure – featuring Sonny Landreth

    Dion – I Got The Cure – featuring Sonny Landreth

    Dion

    “Dion knows how to sing, and he knows just the right way to craft these songs, these blues songs. He’s got some friends here to help him out, some true luminaries. But in the end, it’s Dion by himself alone, and that masterful voice of his that will keep you returning to share these Blues songs with him.” – Excerpt from Bob Dylan’s liner notes for Blues With Friends

    ‘Blues With Friends’ is available at: https://amzn.to/3eTP9Cm

    Sonny Landreth

    Although hardly anyone would see Landreth in the pantheon of guitar gods, the American musician has managed to gain the respect of, for example, John Mayall, in whose band he played, or Eric Clapton. Slowhand recognizes Sonny as one of the most technically advanced guitarists in the world.

    Anyway, rarely any instrumentalist was able to create such a characteristic style of playing as Sonny Landreth. Sonny is also known as “The King of Slydeco,” while “slydeco” is a neologism referring to two concepts: slide technique and zydeco – a musical style from Louisiana. The Landreth put the slide tube on the smallest finger, thanks to which the rest of the hand can easily walk on the fingerboard, and he uses thumb pick, which allows for quick transitions between playing with the fingers and using the pick.

    Sonny Landreth has recently more and more marked his participation in the blues world. Recorded Live In Lafayette from 2017 was nominated for a Grammy and Bound by the Blues (2015) for the Blues Music Awards.

  • Tab Benoit and Sonny Landreth – Louisiana Style

    Tab Benoit and Sonny Landreth – Louisiana Style

    Engage your senses: Press play on the video, then stimulate your brain with the article.

    Tab Benoit

    One of the most impressive guitarists to emerge from the rich Bayous of Southern Louisiana in recent years, Tab Benoit’s guitar tone can be recognized before his Otis-Redding-ish voice resonates from the speakers. He doesn’t rely on any effects and his setup is simple. It consists of a guitar, cord, and Category 5 Amplifier. The effects that you hear come from his fingers.

    Born on November 17, 1967, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Benoit grew up in the nearby oil and fishing town of Houma, where he still resides today. Musically, he was exposed early on to traditional Cajun waltzes and the country music broadcast on his hometown’s only radio station. Benoit’s father was himself a musician; as such, the family home was filled with various instruments. He began playing drums but switched to guitar because the only gigs to be had in rural Louisiana were held in churches and at church fairs, and organizers would not allow loud drums to be played at these events.

    A guitar player since his teenage years, Tab Benoit appeared at the Blues Box, a music club and cultural center in Baton Rouge run by guitarist Tabby Thomas. Playing guitar alongside Thomas, Raful Neal, Henry Gray, and other high-profile regulars at the club, Benoit learned the blues first-hand from a faculty of living blues legends. He formed a trio in 1987 and began playing clubs in Baton Rouge and New Orleans. He began touring other parts of the South two years later and started touring more of the United States in 1991. Today he continues to perform across the country.

    Benoit was featured in the IMAX film, Hurricane on the Bayou.

    Sonny Landreth

    Sonny Landreth is known as “the King of Zydeco” and plays with a strong zydeco influence. Guitarist Eric Clapton has said that Landreth is one of the most advanced guitarists in the world and one of the most under-appreciated. Landreth is best known for his slide guitar playing, having developed a technique where he also frets notes and plays chords and chord fragments by fretting behind the slide while he plays.

    Landreth plays with the slide on his little finger so that his other fingers have more room to fret behind the slide. He’s also known for his right-hand technique, which involves tapping, slapping, and picking strings, using all of the fingers on his right hand. He wears a special thumb pick/flat pick hybrid on his thumb so he can bear down on a pick while simultaneously using his fingerstyle technique for the slide.

    Sonny usually plays in an open tuning his favorite is open E (low to high: E B E G# B E). Sonny prefers a heavy glass slide, which he wears on the fourth finger of his fretting hand, leaving his remaining fingers free to fret in a conventional manner. He often frets a note or two behind the slide to give unusual voicings.

    Tab Benoit and Sonny Landreth – Louisiana Style
    Tab Benoit and Sonny Landreth – Louisiana Style
  • Sonny Landreth – Zydeco Shuffle

    Sonny Landreth – Zydeco Shuffle

    Sonny Landreth

    Sonny Landreth is known as “the King of Zydeco” and plays with a strong zydeco influence. Guitarist Eric Clapton has said that Landreth is one of the most advanced guitarists in the world and one of the most under-appreciated. Landreth is best known for his slide guitar playing, having developed a technique where he also frets notes and plays chords and chord fragments by fretting behind the slide while he plays.

    Landreth plays with the slide on his little finger so that his other fingers have more room to fret behind the slide. He’s also known for his right-hand technique, which involves tapping, slapping, and picking strings, using all of the fingers on his right hand. He wears a special thumb pick/flat pick hybrid on his thumb so he can bear down on a pick while simultaneously using his fingerstyle technique for the slide.

    Sonny usually plays in an open tuning his favorite is open E (low to high: E B E G# B E). Sonny prefers a heavy glass slide, which he wears on the fourth finger of his fretting hand, leaving his remaining fingers free to fret in a conventional manner. He often frets a note or two behind the slide to give unusual voicings.

    Albums

    1981 – Blues Attack
    1985 – Way Down in Louisiana
    1992 – Outward Bound
    1995 – South of I-10
    1999 – Crazy Cajun Recordings
    2000 – Prodigal Son
    2000 – Levee Town
    2003 – The Road We’re On (charted No. 1 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2005 – Grant Street (charted No. 2 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2007 – Sonny Landreth – Live At Jazz Fest 2007
    2008 – From the Reach (charted No. 1 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2009 – Voices of Americana
    2009 – Leeve Town (Expanded Addition)
    2012 – Elemental Journey
    2012 – Sunrise
    2015 – Bound by the Blues
    2017 – Recorded Live In Lafayette
    2020 – Blacktop Run

    blues music t-shirts

  • Sonny Landreth – True Blue

    Sonny Landreth – True Blue

    Sonny Landreth

    Sonny Landreth is known as “the King of Zydeco” and plays with a strong zydeco influence. Guitarist Eric Clapton has said that Landreth is one of the most advanced guitarists in the world and one of the most under-appreciated. Landreth is best known for his slide guitar playing, having developed a technique where he also frets notes and plays chords and chord fragments by fretting behind the slide while he plays.

    Landreth plays with the slide on his little finger so that his other fingers have more room to fret behind the slide. He’s also known for his right-hand technique, which involves tapping, slapping, and picking strings, using all of the fingers on his right hand. He wears a special thumb pick/flat pick hybrid on his thumb so he can bear down on a pick while simultaneously using his fingerstyle technique for the slide.

    Sonny usually plays in an open tuning his favorite is open E (low to high: E B E G# B E). Sonny prefers a heavy glass slide, which he wears on the fourth finger of his fretting hand, leaving his remaining fingers free to fret in a conventional manner. He often frets a note or two behind the slide to give unusual voicings.

    Albums

    1981 – Blues Attack
    1985 – Way Down in Louisiana
    1992 – Outward Bound
    1995 – South of I-10
    1999 – Crazy Cajun Recordings
    2000 – Prodigal Son
    2000 – Levee Town
    2003 – The Road We’re On (charted No. 1 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2005 – Grant Street (charted No. 2 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2007 – Sonny Landreth – Live At Jazz Fest 2007
    2008 – From the Reach (charted No. 1 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2009 – Voices of Americana
    2009 – Leeve Town (Expanded Addition)
    2012 – Elemental Journey
    2012 – Sunrise
    2015 – Bound by the Blues
    2017 – Recorded Live In Lafayette
    2020 – Blacktop Run

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  • Sonny Landreth – Pedal to the Metal

    Sonny Landreth – Pedal to the Metal

    Sonny Landreth

    Sonny Landreth is known as “the King of Zydeco” and plays with a strong zydeco influence. Guitarist Eric Clapton has said that Landreth is one of the most advanced guitarists in the world and one of the most under-appreciated. Landreth is best known for his slide guitar playing, having developed a technique where he also frets notes and plays chords and chord fragments by fretting behind the slide while he plays.

    Landreth plays with the slide on his little finger so that his other fingers have more room to fret behind the slide. He’s also known for his right-hand technique, which involves tapping, slapping, and picking strings, using all of the fingers on his right hand. He wears a special thumb pick/flat pick hybrid on his thumb so he can bear down on a pick while simultaneously using his fingerstyle technique for the slide.

    Sonny usually plays in an open tuning his favorite is open E (low to high: E B E G# B E). Sonny prefers a heavy glass slide, which he wears on the fourth finger of his fretting hand, leaving his remaining fingers free to fret in a conventional manner. He often frets a note or two behind the slide to give unusual voicings.

    Albums

    1981 – Blues Attack
    1985 – Way Down in Louisiana
    1992 – Outward Bound
    1995 – South of I-10
    1999 – Crazy Cajun Recordings
    2000 – Prodigal Son
    2000 – Levee Town
    2003 – The Road We’re On (charted No. 1 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2005 – Grant Street (charted No. 2 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2007 – Sonny Landreth – Live At Jazz Fest 2007
    2008 – From the Reach (charted No. 1 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2009 – Voices of Americana
    2009 – Leeve Town (Expanded Addition)
    2012 – Elemental Journey
    2012 – Sunrise
    2015 – Bound by the Blues
    2017 – Recorded Live In Lafayette
    2020 – Blacktop Run

    Louisiana slide-virtuoso Sonny Landreth came by the Guitar World studio to teach a lesson on some of his incredible, unconventional slide techniques. Check it out!

  • Sonny Landreth – Where They Will

    Sonny Landreth – Where They Will


    AcA’s Louisiana Crossroads 2015 in Lafayette, Louisiana featuring Sonny Landreth & Friends.

    Sonny Landreth

    Sonny Landreth was born in Canton, Mississippi, but his music has shaped the culture of Louisiana. February 1, 1951, when he came into the world, America experienced an economic boom. Prior to enterprising Southerners world stood open. Canton quickly became too small for his father Sonny. When the children were growing up, he moved with his family to Jackson, and later on, to Louisiana. They lived in Lafayette, two hours from New Orleans.
    “It was a providential step – recalled many years later, Sonny – you have no idea how many times I thanked my dad that brought us here.”

    Louisiana, where he grew up Sonny was a real cultural melting pot. Culture Creoles met here with the traditions of Spanish and English-speaking settlers and immigrants from the Caribbean. New Orleans radiated jazz and blues piano, in the south, flourished cajun and zydeco. Sonny absorbed them all. “I’ve always loved music – says – my older brother brought home tons of plates. We listened to Elvis Presley, Scotty Moore, Wes Montgomery, and Chet Atkins. ”

    Lafayette classical music

    At the school in Lafayette classical music intertwined with jazz. At age 10, Sonny began to learn to play the trumpet, after a few years but dropped it for an electric guitar. “Learning to play the trumpet was my future a lot to give – says – playing a wind instrument forces a different approach to the phrase – in front of each of them you have to pause to take a breath. Similarly phrasing today Robben Ford, and he began as a child of a saxophone … For me, it is applied to the New Orleans even less syncopal. My game is a version of guitar music played on a washboard. ”

    Sonny was 13 years old when he discovered the music of Chet Atkins, a country guitarist white inspired by the style of Django Reinhardt. “Chet treated guitar as a solo instrument, was coming from it at the same time the melody, rhythm, and bass line. His style has inspired me for years “- he recalls. At one school dance met a year younger Dave Ranson, his future bassist, and longtime friend. “I and Dave were inseparable. Exchanged plates jamowaliśmy in blues clubs, listening to Clapton and Jimi Hendrix, and in the summer dorabialiśmy in a music store. All the kids from Lafayette dreamed to work there, “- he recalls.

    Sonny Landreth – King of Zydeco

    Although peers Sonny Landreth listened to rock’n’roll, he and Ranson went in a different direction. “In high school, I discovered B.B. King and the great guitarist’s Delta – Sonny told a reporter from the Los Angeles Times – I can not express how great impression made on me guitar blues. I have not seen the slides on my eyes only read about it, but his melodious, close vocal tone and richness of sound literally blew me away. ” “When I brought home slide, I had no idea how to play it, do not even know which finger to wear it – he adds – I tried and tried until I was able to extract sounds close to those of the records.”
    Blues was to become the foundation of music Sonny Landreth, but he took it to the stage. “I was 16 or 17 years, when a small, funky club I first heard Clifton Chenier, the King of Zydeco – Sonny recalls in an interview with Sante Fe New Mexican – Dave and I were the only white in the room. After the performance, Clifton invited me on stage. That moment changed my whole life. ”

    Soon after Sonny joined Chenier, experimenting with the sounds of big-city soul, blues, and R & B. He was the first white musician to play in the Red Hot Louisiana Band, but Clifton chose it not only because of the color of the skin. Sonny was going to be an excellent guitarist. Fascinated by the music of Robert Johnson joined playing slide with a finger-picking in Chet Atkins style, laying the foundation after your own original technology, which has become famous in the future on the stage. Music, which played Chenier was not foreign to him. “These rhythms lived all Louisiana – he explains – we absorb them by osmosis, enough to pour it on violin, accordion or tare, and then go further, towards new ideas and sounds …”
    “I started from Delta – he adds – by Sam Charters, Robert Palmer, and Mississippi John Hurt got to Elmore [James] and electric blues. And later, in the 1970s, I heard in Lafayette Duane Allman. I already knew what I wanted to do. ”

    Landreth worried about his son’s future. To reassure them Sonny enrolled to study music at the University of Lafayette. He lasted two years. “Studies were done me good, really good – I say today – but chose to have his way. I wanted to play the blues and to play it, I had to reject a lot of what I was taught at the academy. ” In 1971, Sonny threw studies and together with Dave Ranson went to Colorado. In autumn they returned to Louisiana and founded his own band. They started with Allman’s style blues-rock, but Sonny was insatiable. “Then I discovered Lowell [Fullson], its wonderful, long, single notes and phrasing – says – this guy was a genius. Everything he did – his singing, plays, songs, and production – was brilliant. I listened to him as God, and I tried to absorb as much of his music. ”
    Sonny admired, but not copied. “Each of the musicians, which I loved – he said – has its own unique sound. Guitars, pickups, preamps, amplifiers, all just a toy. The most important is its own tone, its own sound and it to him from the beginning … I strove guitar must sing! ”

    1973 and 1977 years

    In the first half of the 70s music of Sonny interested in Columbia. Label but had no idea of promotion boards and recordings from 1973 and 1977 years – spreading today like hot cakes – lain on the shelf for nearly three decades. A milestone in the career Sonny was a meeting with Eric Johnson. Under his influence Landreth in 1979, he returned to the formula of trios, assuming David Ransom and Gregg Morrow team Bayou Rhythm (later renamed The goners), he also realized how great is its unique style of play. He focused on perfecting the playing “under” Slide, allowing the strings biased to the threshold of three fingers glide under glass and combined with the sound of the strings pressed worn on the little finger slide. The guitar was for him always a very strong vocal dimension, and the connection slide with the technique of finger-picking allowed out of the instrument “heavenly overtones and thundering, lightning harmonies.” “The combination of” ghost notes “and sounds extracted slide turned out to be totally unbelievable, expanded opportunities slide guitar more than I could have imagined,” – he recalls.

    In the early ’80s, Sonny Landreth starts working for its own release. His debut album – firmly rooted in the tradition of “Blues Attack” recorded with Bayou Rhythms – was released in 1981, for the local label Blues Unlimited. Although the album went almost unnoticed, another – released in 1986 “Down in Louisiana,” attracted the attention of producers from Nashville. Sonny – already close to abandoning music after seven years of playing in bars – toured with folk-rock guitarist and singer John Hiatt, also invited him to record with John Mayall.

    The 80 mainly work in the studio. Sonny Landreth has become a sought-after session musician, accompanied by Junior Wells, Mark Knopfler, Beausoleil, Mayall, and Riley. The album “Slow Turning” recorded with Hiatt proved so successful that Landreth interested in the label Zoo / Praxis. Released in 1992, “Outward Bound” finally broke the charts.

    Subsequent albums Sonny – with recorded with Mark Knopfler “South of I-10” (1995) and “Levee Town” (2000) at the head – already have gone far beyond the traditional frames, experimenting with the Cajun and southern rock. In the past two decades, this gave them a total of eleven (including previously unreleased recordings from 1973 and 1977) and appeared on dozens of albums, Jimmy Buffett, John Hiatt, and Eric Johnson.

    Our quality blues t-shirts are perfect for your next music festival, concert or jam, and make great gifts.

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  • Sonny Landreth & John Hiatt – Riding With The King

    Sonny Landreth & John Hiatt – Riding With The King

    Sonny Landreth

    Sonny Landreth is known as “the King of Zydeco” and plays with a strong zydeco influence. Guitarist Eric Clapton has said that Landreth is one of the most advanced guitarists in the world and one of the most under-appreciated. Landreth is best known for his slide guitar playing, having developed a technique where he also frets notes and plays chords and chord fragments by fretting behind the slide while he plays.

    Landreth plays with the slide on his little finger so that his other fingers have more room to fret behind the slide. He’s also known for his right-hand technique, which involves tapping, slapping, and picking strings, using all of the fingers on his right hand. He wears a special thumb pick/flat pick hybrid on his thumb so he can bear down on a pick while simultaneously using his fingerstyle technique for the slide.

    Sonny usually plays in an open tuning his favorite is open E (low to high: E B E G# B E). Sonny prefers a heavy glass slide, which he wears on the fourth finger of his fretting hand, leaving his remaining fingers free to fret in a conventional manner. He often frets a note or two behind the slide to give unusual voicings.

    Sonny Landreth Albums

    1981 – Blues Attack
    1985 – Way Down in Louisiana
    1992 – Outward Bound
    1995 – South of I-10
    1999 – Crazy Cajun Recordings
    2000 – Prodigal Son
    2000 – Levee Town
    2003 – The Road We’re On (charted No. 1 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2005 – Grant Street (charted No. 2 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2007 – Sonny Landreth – Live At Jazz Fest 2007
    2008 – From the Reach (charted No. 1 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2009 – Voices of Americana
    2009 – Leeve Town (Expanded Addition)
    2012 – Elemental Journey
    2012 – Sunrise
    2015 – Bound by the Blues
    2017 – Recorded Live In Lafayette
    2020 – Blacktop Run

    blues music t-shirts

    John Hiatt

    John Hiatt is an American rock guitarist, pianist, singer, and songwriter. He has played a variety of musical styles on his albums, including new wave, blues and country.

  • Sonny Landreth – Next of Kindred Spirit

    Sonny Landreth – Next of Kindred Spirit

    Sonny Landreth

    Sonny Landreth is known as “the King of Zydeco” and plays with a strong zydeco influence. Guitarist Eric Clapton has said that Landreth is one of the most advanced guitarists in the world and one of the most under-appreciated. Landreth is best known for his slide guitar playing, having developed a technique where he also frets notes and plays chords and chord fragments by fretting behind the slide while he plays.

    Landreth plays with the slide on his little finger so that his other fingers have more room to fret behind the slide. He’s also known for his right-hand technique, which involves tapping, slapping, and picking strings, using all of the fingers on his right hand. He wears a special thumb pick/flat pick hybrid on his thumb so he can bear down on a pick while simultaneously using his fingerstyle technique for the slide.

    Sonny usually plays in an open tuning his favorite is open E (low to high: E B E G# B E). Sonny prefers a heavy glass slide, which he wears on the fourth finger of his fretting hand, leaving his remaining fingers free to fret in a conventional manner. He often frets a note or two behind the slide to give unusual voicings.

    Albums

    1981 – Blues Attack
    1985 – Way Down in Louisiana
    1992 – Outward Bound
    1995 – South of I-10
    1999 – Crazy Cajun Recordings
    2000 – Prodigal Son
    2000 – Levee Town
    2003 – The Road We’re On (charted No. 1 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2005 – Grant Street (charted No. 2 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2007 – Sonny Landreth – Live At Jazz Fest 2007
    2008 – From the Reach (charted No. 1 on Billboard’s Blues Album Chart)
    2009 – Voices of Americana
    2009 – Leeve Town (Expanded Addition)
    2012 – Elemental Journey
    2012 – Sunrise
    2015 – Bound by the Blues
    2017 – Recorded Live In Lafayette
    2020 – Blacktop Run

    blues music t-shirts

  • Warren Haynes & Sonny Landreth – Death Letter Blues

    Warren Haynes & Sonny Landreth – Death Letter Blues

    Warren Haynes

    Warren Haynes is the guitarist of Gov’t Mule, is one of the most stylish and presenting an unusual feeling blues-rock guitarists in today’s music world. Warren is 23rd on the list of the greatest guitarists of all time. It is impossible to calculate how many projects Warren gave himself as a guitarist or singer. This is certainly one of the busiest musicians in the world.

    Throughout his prolific career as part of three of the greatest live groups in rock history – Allman Brothers Band, Gov’t Mule, and the Dead – his virtuosic artistry has led to thousands of unforgettable performances and millions of album and track sales. Despite all of the ground that Haynes has covered on his musical journey, the impressive thing is that he still has many miles to explore.

    Sonny Landreth

    Sonny Landreth was born on Feb 1, 1951 in Canton Mississippi to Clide and Jeraldine (Jerry) Landreth. When Sonny was in the second grade, the family relocated to Lafayette Louisiana where Sonny was surrounded by the many musical and cultural influences that we can hear so much of in his music today. He is very much in demand as a session player as he never holds back and gives his all for whomever he is working with. He has played with many different artists including: Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown, Clifton Chenier, Steve Conn, Michael Doucet, Jerry Douglas, John Hiatt, Dr. John, Mark Knopfler, Kenny Loggins, John Mayall, Maria Muldaur, Dolly Parton, Zachary Richard and Junior Wells just to name a few.

    His haunting slide technique is quite different from anything I had ever heard before; sometimes he is able to coax sounds from his guitars that sound like other instruments. Sonny uses a style that combines finger picking, palming and slapping the strings and what looks to me like he’s trying to “excite the strings” like you would with a bow on a violin. His slide technique is quite unique in that he also frets behind the slide, giving him a different sound and “feel” than most slide players. Not only is he an incredible player but also a singer/song writer. (Read more: sonnylandrethfan.com)

    blues music t-shirts