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"Blues Legends" Hand Signed Festival Brochure & Card JG Autographs COA

$ 73.91

Availability: 45 in stock
  • Industry: Music
  • Original/Reproduction: Original

    Description

    Up for auction is a h
    and signed brochure from the 17th Annual Pocono Blues Festival by Jimmy McCracklin and Freddie Cunnigham and a 6 x 9 postcard from the 15th Annual Pocono Blues Festival signed by Bob Stroger, Mel Waiters and Ruthie Foster.
    This piece come
    authenticated
    by
    JG Autographs
    and comes with their COA.
    E
    S-3301
    James David Walker Jr.
    (August 13, 1921 – December 20, 2012), better known by his stage name
    Jimmy McCracklin
    , was an
    American
    pianist
    ,
    vocalist
    , and
    songwriter
    . His style contained
    West Coast blues
    ,
    Jump blues
    , and
    R&B
    . Over a career that spanned seven decades, he said he had written almost a thousand songs and had recorded hundreds of them. McCracklin recorded over 30
    albums
    , and earned four
    gold records
    . Tom Mazzolini of the
    San Francisco Blues Festival
    said of him, "He was probably the most important musician to come out of the Bay Area in the post-World War II years."
    Freddie Cunningham
    , is 77 years old. He’s announced that 2021 will be his last year singing with
    Root Doctor
    . The band got its start in the late 1980s with an offer to assemble a group, and a get ready quick deal to perform at the former Tango’s in downtown Lansing. Cunningham says the club gave them two weeks to prepare. “So we practiced every day for two weeks," Cunningham explains, "and we finally got it together. I can remember the day, it was June the 29
    th
    , 1989. We played a set, and they said ‘whoa, you’ve gotta play another set!’ and I said ‘we only know one set!’” Cunningham says they played the same set again, in reverse order, and it went well enough that they were kept on.
    Bob Stroger
    (born December 27, 1930) is an
    American
    electric blues
    bass guitarist, singer and songwriter. He has worked with many blues musicians, including
    Eddie King
    ,
    Otis Rush
    ,
    Jimmy Rogers
    ,
    Eddie Taylor
    ,
    Eddy Clearwater
    ,
    Sunnyland Slim
    ,
    Louisiana Red
    ,
    Buster Benton
    ,
    Homesick James
    ,
    Mississippi Heat
    ,
    Snooky Pryor
    ,
    Odie Payne
    ,
    Fred Below
    ,
    Willie "Big Eyes" Smith
    , and
    Billy Davenport
    .
    In 2011 and 2013, Stroger was granted a
    Blues Music Award
    as Best Blues Bassist.
    Mel Waiters
    (June 25, 1956 – May 28, 2015) was an American
    R&B
    singer born and raised in
    San Antonio
    ,
    Texas
    , United States. In the early 1970s, he began singing in the church choir and nightclubs. Additionally, he was a radio DJ and entertainer on military bases around this time. In the mid 1990s, he achieved national fame with his first single "Hit It and Quit It." He gave the only copy of his new CD, the soon-to-be
    Got My Whiskey,
    to Tommy Couch Jr. at
    Malaco Records
    in
    Jackson, Mississippi
    , and was subsequently brought onto the label.
    Waiters became popular on the blues festival and touring circuit in the
    South
    , and was known for songs about partying and romance.
    In 1999, his fourth album
    Material Things
    made it to the
    Billboard
    Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums
    chart.
    He claimed that
    Teddy Pendergrass
    was the main influence on his singing style. Waiters was featured in a cover story of the February 2007 issue of
    Living Blues
    magazine I
    n May 28, 2015, Mel Waiters died of cancer.
    Ruthie Cecelia Foster
    (born February 10, 1964) is an American singer-songwriter of
    blues
    and
    folk
    music. She mixes a wide palette of American song forms, from gospel and blues to jazz, folk and soul. She has often been compared to
    Bonnie Raitt
    and
    Aretha Franklin
    . Foster is from
    Gause, Texas
    and comes from a family of
    gospel
    singers. At the age of fourteen, Ruthie was a soloist in her hometown choir, and was certain that her future would revolve around music. After high school, she moved to
    Waco, Texas
    to attend community college, where her studies concentrated in music and audio engineering. She began fronting a blues band, learning how to command a stage in the bars of Texas.
    Hoping to travel and gain a wider world perspective, Foster joined the
    Navy
    , and soon her musical talents had her singing in the naval band Pride, that played pop and funk hits at recruitment drives in the southeastern United States. Following her tour of duty, Foster headed to
    New York City
    where she became a regular performer at various local folk venues.
    Atlantic Records
    got wind of Foster's talent and offered her a recording deal, with the intent of cultivating her as a budding pop star, but Foster wasn't interested in a pop career, preferring instead to explore the various strains of American roots music that had informed her childhood. When her mother fell ill in 1993, Foster left New York and her recording deal and returned to Texas to be with her family. She began working as a camera operator and production assistant at a television station in
    College Station, Texas
    while she cared for her mother, who died in 1996.