Big
Pete Pearson is Arizona's King of the Blues. He has ruled the Phoenix
blues bars since the late 1950's. His physical stature and
overwhelmingly strong voice command attention. Off stage, Pete can be
found with a snifter of Christian Brothers brandy in hand as he joyously
greets his many fans. He is a father figure to many local bluesmen and
blueswomen who have cut their teeth playing in his band. Though highly
regarded locally, Big Pete's greatness is still one of Arizona's best
kept secrets. Today, you'll find Big Pete backed by four of the nation's
finest young blues entertainers. Each is a master blues musician. Born
in Jamaica on October 4, 1936, Big Pete landed in Phoenix by way of
Austin, Texas. He was raised by his grandparents in St. John's, a
Baptist community just outside Austin. His grandfather was a minister
and his grandmother ran a local mission. "I kinda got on my own at an
early age and I was into music full force. I've always loved music,"
Pete says. His grandparents arranged for piano lessons. "I despised the
piano, but I took lessons anyway because it was music and I didn't
care." He eventually learned how to play guitar and bass. "My grandma
was the one who taught me to use my voice," Pete says. She would sit me
down and teach me how I should express my words. She told me, "When you
hit a high note, you turn it loose...you bring it from here'"..he rubs
his ample belly. He was known as L.P. Pearson in Austin and played his
first gig at age 9 at the Triple J, a local beer joint. His grandparents
thought he was playing guitar and singing with a spiritual group at the
church. Big Pete was a regular at the juke joints on the east side of
Austin such as The Victory Grill, Charlie's Playhouse, Big Mary's Bar &
Grille, Ernie's Chicken Shack and Sam's Showcase. "Playing in the jukes
was dangerous, dangerous, man, real dangerous," says Pete. "But I played
them anyway and those were my up days." Pete played the three string
bass with the Jets, fronted by Blues Boy Hubbard, and frequently sat in
with T.D. Bell and the Cadillacs. Big Pete's cousin is the famous W.C
Clark. Pete was a major influence to his now famous cousin
W.C. Clark,
who said in an interview: "I had a cousin -- I've got a cousin -- Big
Pete Pearson. He was my biggest influence. He was already singing the
blues, and playing the blues, and he got me into it. I followed in his
footsteps. He's still going, and I am, too." W.C. adds, "Big Pete is a
man that has a lot of little boy in him and is so full of jolly." Big
Pete first came to Phoenix in the late 1950's and settled in the mid
60's. The late Duke Draper gave Big Pete his first gig in the desert.
Big Pete went on to join and record with Jimmy Knight and the Knights of
Rhythm. These vintage sides though never issued should see the light of
day on a Phoenix R&B anthology that is forthcoming on the German Bear
Family label. From the 1970's on, Big Pete fronted a number of bands
with a variety of names~~Driving Wheel, The Detroit Blues Band and the
Blues Sevilles. His bands not only maintained Pete's high blues stature
but would be both a camp for experienced veterans and a training ground
for up and comers. Band alumni include saxophonists Bernard Williams (of
Dyke And The Blazers fame), Bob Tate, Fred Robinson and Emerson
Carruthers, guitarist T.D. Bell, Lucius Parr, Scotty Spenner and Tommy
Dukes, harmonicist Bob Corritore, keyboardist Dr. Fish and drummers
Elmer Scott and Delmar Stewart, to name a few. Big Pete has worked with
blue legends Ray Charles, BB King, Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker and
others.