Janice Brooks
From: Pleasant Gap Pa
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Posted 26 Feb 2004 3:44 pm
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Blues saxophonist A.C. Reed dies
Wed 25 February, 2004 22:45
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Blues songwriter and saxophonist A.C. Reed, who shared
the stage and recording studio with Buddy Guy and Stevie Ray Vaughan and led
his own band, the Spark Plugs, has died, his record label said. He was 77.
Reed, who was born Aaron Corthen in Wardell, Missouri, on May 9, 1926, died
in Chicago of complications from cancer, Alligator Records said in a
statement on Wednesday.
Raised in southern Illinois, Reed began playing tenor sax on hearing the
band of trumpeter Erskine Hawkins, and later modeled his elegantly simple,
honking style on jazzman Gene Ammons.
Reed played with an array of artists that included Albert Collins, Bonnie
Raitt and Son Seals. He also recorded three solo albums and wrote humorous
songs also recorded by Magic Slim and Charlie Musselwhite.
Down Beat magazine once called Reed "one of the blues' most incisive
originals."
Reed moved to Chicago in 1942 and found work at a steel mill, using his
first paycheque to buy a saxophone at a pawnshop.
Reed studied at the Chicago Conservatory of Music and was tutored by J.T.
Brown, Elmore James' tenor sax player.
Reed joined Guy and Junior Wells' band in 1967, and opened for the Rolling
Stones during a 1970 tour.
In recent years, Reed performed constantly at clubs and at blues festivals.
He recorded the albums "Junk Food" in 1998 and "I Got Money" in 2002.
http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsPackageArticle.jhtml?type=entertainmentNews&storyID=464445§ion=news
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Janice "Busgal" Brooks
ICQ 44729047
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