Theodore
Roosevelt "Hound
Dog"
Taylor
(April
12, 1915 - December 17, 1975) was a Chicago
blues guitarist
and singer.
HOUND DOG TAYLOR
Taylor
was born in Natchez,
Mississippi,
in 1915, though some sources say 1917. He first played the piano and
began playing the guitar when he was 20. He moved to Chicago in 1942.
Taylor
had a condition known as polydactylism,
which resulted in him having six fingers on both hands. As is usual
with the condition, the extra digits were rudimentary nubbins and
could not be moved. One night, while drunk, he cut off the extra
digit on his right hand using a straight razor.
He
became a full-time musician around 1957, but remained unknown outside
the Chicago area, where he played small clubs in black neighborhoods
and at the open-air Maxwell
Street Market.
He was known for his electrified slide
guitar playing
(roughly styled after that of (Elmore
James),
his cheap Japanese Teisco
guitars,
and his raucous boogie beats. In 1967, Taylor toured Europe with the
American
Folk Blues Festival,
performing with Little
Walter and
Koko
Taylor.
Bruce
Iglauer (then
a shipping clerk for (Delmark
Records)
tried to persuade his employer to sign Taylor to a recording contract
after he heard Taylor with his band, the HouseRockers (Brewer
Phillips) on
second guitar and Ted Harvey on drums), in 1970 at Florence's Lounge
on Chicago's South Side. In 1971, having no success in getting
Delmark to sign Taylor, Iglauer used a $2,500 inheritance to form
Alligator
Records,
which recorded Taylor's debut album, Hound
Dog Taylor and the HouseRockers.
The album was recorded in just two nights. It was the first release
for Alligator, which eventually became a major blues label.
The second release by Taylor and his band, Natural Boogie, recorded in late 1973, received greater acclaim and led to more touring. In 1975, they toured Australia and New Zealand with Freddie King and the duo of Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee. Taylor's third album for Alligator, Beware of the Dog, was recorded live in 1974 but was not released until after his death.Alligator also released, posthumously, Genuine Houserocking Music and Release the Hound. Bootleg live recordings also circulated after Taylor's death.
In
1984, Taylor was posthumously inducted into the Blues
Hall of Fame.
His induction statement included: "He was not a virtuoso, nor a
master technician. But the few things he could play, he could play
like no one else could. He told writer Bob Neff the way he would like
to be remembered: 'He couldn’t play shit, but he sure made it sound
good.'"
In
1997, Alligator Records released Hound Dog Taylor: A Tribute, a
14-track tribute album in which Taylor's songs are covered by Luther
Allison, Elvin
Bishop, Cub
Koda (with Taylor's
band, the HouseRockers), Gov't
Mule, Sonny
Landreth, and others.
A "Deluxe Edition" series compilation album followed in
1999.
A
live recording by George
Thorogood f Elmore
James' "The
Sky Is Crying"
is dedicated to "the memory of the late great Hound Dog Taylor".
It is included on his album Live (1986); Thorogood also recorded
Taylor's "Give Me Back My Wig" for his album The
Hard Stuff
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