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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE – March 6, 2007
Contact:
MARC LIPKIN
ALLIGATOR RECORDS / 773-973-7736 x235
publicity@allig.com
ALLIGATOR PREPARES NEW RELEASE
FROM QUEEN OF THE BLUES,
KOKO TAYLOR!
Alligator
Records has set an April 3 release date
for OLD SCHOOL, the first new CD in
seven years from Grammy-winning Queen of the
Blues, Koko Taylor. Inspired by the sound
and spirit of the Chicago blues of the
1950s, Taylor wrote five new originals and
carefully chose songs from Willie Dixon,
Lefty Dizz, Magic Sam and others to create
an album of tough, "old school" Chicago
blues.
“Blues is my life,” says Taylor,
Chicago’s—and the world’s—undisputed Queen
Of The Blues. “It’s a true feeling that
comes from the heart, not just something
that comes out of my mouth. Blues is what I
love, and singing the blues is what I always
do.” And, in many ways, blues is what saved
Koko Taylor’s life. Back in November of
2003, following emergency surgery for
gastrointestinal bleeding, Taylor’s
condition grew even more serious. She was
struggling just to breathe. Family and
friends feared the worst as she was placed
on a ventilator. But her forceful will to
live, and to sing the blues again, brought
her back. Slowly but surely she recovered,
and by the following spring she was
performing live on stage. Her resurgence not
only led her back to the stage, but also led
her back to the recording studio.
With the aptly titled OLD SCHOOL, Taylor
once again shows the world what she does so
well. From foot-stomping barnburners to
powerful slow blues, Koko proves in an
instant that her blues are joyous and
life-affirming, powerful and soul-stirring.
OLD SCHOOL brings it all back home, with
Taylor supported by a band of veteran
musicians and young revivalists. Singing
like she did for Chess Records early in her
career, Taylor belts out a set of material
that could easily have topped the blues
charts in the 1950s, and will certainly
reach the top of the blues world today.
Koko Taylor, guitarist Criss Johnson and
Alligator president Bruce Iglauer produced
OLD SCHOOL. Recorded in Chicago, the 12
songs all hearken back to Taylor’s early
years in the Windy City. They range from the
humorous truth of Piece Of Man to the
rocking blues advice of Better Watch Your
Step to the tough street scene of Bad Avenue
(done in classic Muddy Waters style), to
Koko’s version of Memphis Minnie’s Black
Rat, a song she used to sing as a teenager.
“I put my heart and soul into everything
that I do,” says Taylor. “I worked long and
hard on OLD SCHOOL, and I want my fans to
enjoy it as much as I do.”
Live, she simply cannot be matched in her
power and raw talent. In fact, reviews of
her 2006 live performances all rave about
how “The Queen” is singing better than at
any other time in her long, storied career—a
career that includes singing with Muddy
Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Willie Dixon, B.B.
King, Buddy Guy, Robert Plant and every
other imaginable legend. She’s performed in
clubs, festivals and concert halls all over
the world, played for two presidents, and
even lent her voice and her likeness (as an
animated bear) to the PBS children’s
television program Arthur.
Over the course of her almost 50-year
career, Taylor has received just about every
award the blues world has to offer and then
some. She’s received Grammy nominations for
seven of her last eight Alligator albums,
and she won a Grammy in 1984 for the live
multi-artist album Blues Explosion on
Atlantic Records. In 2004 she was presented
with the coveted National Heritage
Fellowship Award from the National Endowment
For The Arts. She holds 25 Blues Music
Awards (more than any other blues artist,
male or female). A major feather in her cap
came on March 3, 1993, when Chicago Mayor
Richard M. Daley honored Taylor with a
Legend Of The Year Award, and declared “Koko
Taylor Day” throughout Chicago. In 1998,
Chicago Magazine named her “Chicagoan Of The
Year,” and in 1999, Taylor was inducted into
the Blues Foundation’s Hall Of Fame. “There
are many kings of the blues,” said The
Boston Globe, “but only one queen. Koko’s
voice is still capable of pinning a listener
to the back wall.”
It is not easy being a woman succeeding in
the male-dominated blues world, but Koko
Taylor has done just that. She’s taken her
music from the tiny clubs on the South Side
of Chicago to giant festivals, and continues
to perform all over the world. She’s
appeared on national television numerous
times and has even been the subject of a PBS
documentary. Through good times and personal
hardships, Koko Taylor has remained a major
force in the blues. “It’s a challenge,” she
says. “It’s tough being out here doing what
I’m doing in what they call a man’s world.
It’s not every woman that can hang in there
and do what I am doing.” Without a doubt,
Koko Taylor is the preeminent blues woman in
the world today. She is—and will remain—the
undisputed Queen Of The Blues.
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