Johnny Rawls
Johnny Rawls
Johnny Rawls (born September 10, 1951) is an American soul blues singer, guitarist, arranger, songwriter and record producer. He was influenced by the deep soul music of the 1960s, as performed by O. V. Wright, James Carr, and Z. Z. Hill, although his styling, production, and lyrics are more contemporary in nature.
To date, Rawls has released over a dozen albums under his name. He has been nominated twelve times for a Blues Music Award.
Rawls was born in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. He was taught the rudiments of guitar playing by his blind grandfather and also played the saxophone and clarinet in high school in Purvis, Mississippi. Having mastered guitar playing by his mid-teens, Rawls' schoolteacher arranged for him to back musicians who were touring through Mississippi, such as Z. Z. Hill and Joe Tex. In the mid-1970s, Rawls joined O. V. Wright's backing band, became his music director, and played together with Wright until the latter's death in 1980. The band then continued billed as the Ace of Spades Band for another 13 years and toured and performed with other musicians over this time span. These included B.B. King, Little Milton, Bobby Bland, Little Johnny Taylor, and Blues Boy Willie. The band included the guitarist L.C. Luckett, and he and Rawls jointly released the 1994 album, "Can't Sleep At Night", on Rooster Blues.
His debut solo album, "Here We Go", was released on JSP in 1996. Rawls also worked as an arranger and record producer for JSP. Other JSP releases included "Louisiana Woman" (1997), "My Turn to Win" (1999), and "Put Your Trust in Me" (2001), although by the time the latter was issued, Rawls had set up his own label, "Deep South Soul". Rawls appeared on the cover of the Living Blues magazine in April 2002, where he was described as "a soul-blues renaissance man". The 2005 release "No Boundaries", on Catfood Records increased his profile.
His 2006 album "Heart & Soul", was nominated for a Blues Music Award for 'Best Soul Blues Album of the Year'. In the same year, the West Coast Blues Hall of Fame named him 'Best Vocalist'. Rawls has played three times at the Chicago Blues Festival and plays as many as 15 festivals each year in the US and Canada. He has toured Europe several times as well as Japan and Australia. "Red Cadillac" (2008), "Ace of Spades" (2010), and "Memphis Still Got Soul" (2012) all won the Critics Choice Award for Best Album of the Year in Living Blues. He has also been honored, along with Little Milton and Tyrone Davis, with a Blues Trail Marker in Hattiesburg. The title song of Rawls's 2009 album, "Ace of Spades", was a tribute to his onetime mentor, O. V. Wright. The album also garnered Rawls his first Blues Music Award for 'Best Soul Blues Album of the Year'.
Rawls's album "Memphis Still Got Soul", was released in April 2011, his fourth album for Catfood Records. It was nominated for the 2012 Blues Music Award for Soul Album of the Year, the title song for 'Song of the Year' and Rawls for 'Male Soul Artist of the Year', his third nomination. With a further reference to Wright, the album's track listing included Rawls's cover of the song "Blind, Crippled and Crazy", which was originally associated with Wright. His 2012 release, "Soul Survivor", included another Wright song, "Eight Men Four Women". It was nominated for 'Soul Blues Album of the Year' and Rawls was again nominated for 'Male Soul Artist of the Year' at the 2013 Blues Music Awards. His 2013 release on Catfood Records, "Remembering O.V.", a tribute to O.V. Wright, featured Otis Clay as a special guest. "Remembering O. V." was nominated for 2014 'Soul Album of the Year' and Rawls for 'Male Soul Artist of the Year', his 11th and 12th Blues Music Awards nominations.
He is a prolific songwriter with over 100 of his songs recorded. He has co-produced all of his albums on Catfood Records and Barbara Carr's "Keep The Fire Burning".
(Johnny Rawls at 19th Annual Poconos Blues Festival 2010)