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8. Rick Nielsen

8. Rick Nielsen

| March 31, 2008 | 45 Comments

The 20 All-Time Greatest Chicago Guitarists 8. Rick Nielsen Rick Nielsen deserves a spot on this list for his guitar collection alone; he has reportedly owned more than 2,000 sweet axes, including at least one custom five-neck Hamer with 38 strings. (Storage space must be cheap in Rockford.) Equally impressive is his contribution to power […]

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7. Elmore James

7. Elmore James

| March 31, 2008 | 1 Comment

The 20 All-Time Greatest Chicago Guitarists 7. Elmore James All electric slide-guitar playing starts with Elmore James. Argue all you want whether he stole his songs from Robert Johnson or Tampa Red or whoever, because back in the day he was playing with them all and such didn’t matter. What does matter is that in […]

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6. Mike Bloomfield

6. Mike Bloomfield

| March 31, 2008 | 0 Comments

The 20 All-Time Greatest Chicago Guitarists 6. Mike Bloomfield According to the site’s stats, Mikebloomfield.com has averaged 60 visits a day for the last six years – not bad for a white, Jewish blues guitarist who died in 1981 and is best known for his performances on other people’s albums. Mike Bloomfield crammed a lot […]

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5. Magic Sam

5. Magic Sam

| March 31, 2008 | 0 Comments

The 20 All-Time Greatest Chicago Guitarists One of the great what-ifs of blues history. Many a musician met a premature demise (frequently at their own hands), but fate was especially cruel to Samuel Gene Maghett. Struck down by a heart attack just months after a star turn at the 1969 Ann Arbor Blues Festival, the […]

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4. Otis Rush

4. Otis Rush

| March 31, 2008 | 1 Comment

The 20 All-Time Greatest Chicago Guitarists 4. Otis Rush Revered by blues and rock musicians alike, legendary guitarist/vocalist Otis Rush is perhaps the most intense, soulful bluesman of his era. Since the ’50s, when he had his first chart-topping hit on Cobra Records, “I Can’t Quit You Baby,” Rush has gone on to influence musicians […]

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3. Bo Diddley

3. Bo Diddley

| March 31, 2008 | 0 Comments

The 20 All-Time Greatest Chicago Guitarists 3. Bo Diddley Bo Diddley was one of those who took blues by the hand and led it into rock. Diddley’s music includes every aspect of rock: the fuzzy, effect-wielding guitar, humor, volume (Diddley didn’t necessarily play loud, but he always sounds like he was), sex, DIY aesthetic (the […]

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2. Muddy Waters

2. Muddy Waters

| March 31, 2008 | 0 Comments

The 20 All-Time Greatest Chicago Guitarists 2. Muddy Waters When future Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame inductee and Grammy winner Muddy Waters (aka McKinley Morganfield) came to Chicago in 1943 from Clarksdale, Mississippi, he had no idea he would alter the American musical landscape irrevocably, paving the way for a musical revolution.

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1. Buddy Guy

1. Buddy Guy

| March 31, 2008 | 1 Comment

1. Buddy Guy Naysayers will think Buddy Guy tops our list in some glad-handing tribute to Chicago’s most prominent living bluesman. Sheeeeit. Early in his prime he was muzzled by Leonard Chess and the Muddy Waters/Willie Dixon machine.

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File: April 2008

File: April 2008

| March 31, 2008 | 0 Comments

A Festivus For The Rest Of Us If Lollapalooza packs ’em in with the rumored announcement of Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails as headliners, us Chicago folk might be crowded out of our own festival. Pitchfork Music Fest has already squashed the one that gave it birth (Intonation) — you’ll have to excuse us if […]

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Hello, My Name Is Andy

Hello, My Name Is Andy

| March 31, 2008 | 0 Comments

Hello, My Name Is Andy Q&A With Andy McKee IE: What first attracted you to playing the guitar and how old were you? Andy McKee: I was 13 when I got my first guitar and I asked for a guitar for my birthday that year because I heard Eric Johnson on the radio. They played […]

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DVD Zone: April 2008

DVD Zone: April 2008

| March 31, 2008 | 0 Comments

I Am Legend Warner Home Video What is it about the end of the world? The current trend is to speculate about what the planet would be like if humans weren’t around to tend to the old homestead. Both The History Channel and The National Geographic Channel have run specials about it, and there’s I […]

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Gone Too Soon

Gone Too Soon

| March 31, 2008 | 0 Comments

The music world lost two supremely talented and distinctive artists recently when R&B and rock drummer/singer/ songwriter Buddy Miles and Canadian guitarist/vocalist/songwriter Jeff Healey passed away. Miles succumbed to congestive heart failure at the age of 60 on February 26th in Austin, Texas, and Healey died a few days later in Toronto after a lifelong […]

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Chicagoland Studio Happenings

Chicagoland Studio Happenings

| March 31, 2008 | 0 Comments

South Side drummer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Gabriel Anthony (Sgt. Roxx, Raddaka, Pamela Moore) worked on his solo project called Gagorder13 at BAREFOOT STUDIO in Beecher with David Knuth. Gabriel finished drum tracks in March and plans to track all guitars, bass, and vocals through the spring and summer for a fall/winter release.

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Webbed Migration

Webbed Migration

| March 31, 2008 | 0 Comments

Two years ago Steve Rhodes left his post as Chicago magazine media and political writer and launched The Beachwood Reporter, an online magazine chronicling all things Chicago (www.beachwoodreporter.com). Last year longtime New York Daily News TV critic David Bianculli made the leap to the Web with Tvworthwatching.com, after the newspaper he’d been with for 14 […]

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Victorian Era

Victorian Era

| March 31, 2008 | 0 Comments

Victoria Amplifier Co. Electro King Naperville’s Victoria Amplifier Company‘s new amp, the Electro King, was a labor of love re-creation of the 1950s-era Gibson GA-40. The Eisenhower-era cathode-based 6V6 tubes supply a modest 15 watts of power, which make it suited for small-club and recording environments.

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