"Getting to make CDs that people enjoy,
playing festivals, meeting your heroes, winning a contest or two and
getting the occasional "You go girl!" from the blues world? If that’s
what the blues is all about, then let me have ‘em." That’s Karen
Tyler’s motto and a good one for one of the best acoustic blues
artists around these days.
Karen Tyler is the winner of the 2003 Monterey Bay Blues Festival’s
Battle of the Bands and a California Arts Council Touring Artist and she
is a unique and exciting acoustic blues artist. Real Blues Magazine had
this to say about Ms. Tyler in issue #29, 2005. "Karen has proven once
again that she’s one of the world’s top female blues artists and easily
the greatest North American songstress…It doesn’t get any better." Such
praise hasn’t come without a lot of hard work and intense dedication on
Karen’s part.
Karen began her blues career in Central California blues bands and
fronted those bands with a mighty voice and a candy apple red, 1969
telecaster for many years. But upon moving to Texas in the early
nineties, Karen began concentrating strictly on acoustic blues. She
began writing feature articles for Austin Blues Monthly in 1994 choosing
to highlight the lives and careers of
Blind Willie McTell,
Memphis
Minnie, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Mance Lipscomb and
Blind Lemon Jefferson. For
several years Karen listened to nothing but these exceptional, vintage
blues recordings by her heroes and in doing so steeped herself in the
genre. Karen’s intense focus on the
Piedmont, Memphis and
Texas styles
of acoustic blues paid off as She began to be invited to play the
festivals that honored her heroes. Karen’s first big blues festival was
the
Blind Willie McTell International Blues Festival in Thompson,
Georgia, followed shortly thereafter by the Blind Lemon Jefferson
Festival in Wortham Texas and the Navasota Blues Festival in honor of
Mance Lipscomb also in Texas.
In 1998, Karen moved back to the Central California coast and in a few
months found herself opening for John Lee Hooker at the Mid-State Fair.
Karen tells of her meeting with the Shaman of the blues in a short story
entitled "The Sweetest Lie." Upon meeting Mr. Hooker backstage after the
show he asked her to come and sit by him. He asked where Karen was from
and she told him that she now lived in Paso Robles but had recently
moved there from Austin, Texas. Mr. Hooker said, "Oh yes. I knew I’d
heard of you from those folks down at Antone’s." This was indeed a sweet
attempt at putting a nervous Karen at ease in the presence of such
greatness. Of course Karen didn’t say anything until after the show when
she confessed to a local journalist that the only way she could get into
Antone’s was by paying the cover charge. Antone’s may be "The Home of
the Blues," just not the acoustic blues as it turns out. Mr. Hooker’s
generosity didn’t end there. When said local journalist interviewed him
after the show, he spent several minutes singing Karen’s praises. It
wasn’t long after that the Mr. Hooker passed away, but Karen will always
be grateful for a sweet memory of a truly great man and for that sweet,
sweet lie.
That same year, Karen recorded her "Alone & Blue" CD. The CD was met
with critical acclaim and has received airplay all over the world. To
date it has outsold her band CDs three times over. Karen continued to
perform as an acoustic solo and toured extensively in the Northwest and
Southwestern United States. She also kept up her Texas ties as well as
performing at the King Biscuit Festival in Helena, Arkansas. Karen also
fronted her own four-piece band mixing both acoustic and electric
styles. The band played primarily at winery events and community
concerts, but on a lark, Karen decided to enter the band in the Monterey
Bay Blues Festival’s Battle of the Bands. Karen was shocked when they
called her name as the winner that day in November. That June Karen
performed on the main stage and one of the side stages at the festival
and got to rub elbows with the likes of Charlie Musslewhite and Al
Green. "It was like a dream come true." Karen says of the experience.
The win in Monterey really set Karen on the path to an exciting and
successful career in the blues. These days Ms. Tyler has returned to her
acoustic roots and is currently preparing to go into the studio with
songs for another solo CD. As Karen prepares to go to Memphis in
February 2007 to compete in the International Blues Challenge, she is
excited and grateful again for an opportunity to be seen and heard in
such a bright and positive light. "Everyone that gets to go to Memphis
and compete is a winner and I’m just glad to be one of them." Tyler
says. Of course to her fans, Karen has been a winner for some time and
we’re all rooting for her with big hopes and plentiful prayers.
(Biography written by Lisa Smith, San Luis Obispo Blues Society.)