Ronnie Earl (born Ronald Horvath, March 10, 1953, New York) is an
American blues guitarist and music teacher.
Career Earl
collected blues, jazz, rock and soul records while growing up. He
studied American History at C.W. Post College on Long Island for a year
and a half, then moved to Boston to pursue a Bachelor's Degree in
Special Education and Education at Boston University where he would
graduate in 1975. He spent a short time teaching handicapped children.
It was during his college years that he attended a Muddy Waters concert
at the Jazz Workshop in Boston. After seeing Waters perform in a close
setting, Earl took a serious interest in the guitar, which he had first
picked up in 1973. His first job was as a rhythm guitarist at The
Speakeasy , a blues club in Cambridge, MA. In addition to playing in the
Boston blues scene, Earl traveled twice by Greyhound Bus to Chicago,
where he was introduced to the Chicago Blues scene by Koko Taylor. Later
he would travel down South to New Orleans and Austin Texas, where he
would spend time with Kim Wilson,
Jimmy Vaughan and
The Fabulous
Thunderbirds. In 1979 he joined The Roomful of Blues as lead guitarist
for the Providence, Rhode Island band. It was also around this time that
he adopted the last name of "Earl". As he put it, "Muddy Waters would
invite me onstage, but he could never say my last name. So because I
liked Earl Hooker, I took the last name of "Earl".
During his eight year tenure with The Roomful of Blues, Earl
continued to refine his own style and the result was a jazzy, soulful
blues style, as well as his slow burn style which fans found both
mesmerizing and exhilarating. He began performing solo in 1986, in
addition to playing with Roomful of Blues, and he released his first
solo album on the Black Top Records label with a quartet that focused on
blues instrumentals. After leaving Roomful of Blues, he began
collaborations with contemporaries Ron Levy and Jerry Portnoy, Earl
King, Jimmy Rogers, and Jimmy Witherspoon. It was also around this time
that Earl got treatment for a substance-addiction.
In 1988 Earl formed his own band that he called The Broadcasters, named
after the first Fender guitar which originally had been labeled The
Broadcaster and was distributed in 1950. The first group of
Broadcasters included Darrell Nulisch (vocalist), Jerry Portnoy
(harmonica), Steve Gomes (bass), and Per Hanson (drums). In 1988 they
released their first album, Soul Searchin, followed by Peace of Mind in
1990. The current group of Broadcasters, Jimmy Mouradian (bass), Dave
Limina (organ), and Lorne Entress (drums), began playing together prior
to the 2003 release of I Feel Like Going On and in 2007 released Hope
Radio, their fourth release from Stony Plain Records and Earl's
twenty second album. In 2008, Ronnie Earl and the Broadcasters celebrate
20 years as a band.
Earl is a two-time W.C. Handy Blues Award winner as Guitar Player of
the Year. For five years he was an Associate Professor of Guitar at
Berklee College of Music and in 1995 he released Ronnie Earl: Blues
Guitar with Soul, an instructional VHS tape that was then rereleased in
DVD format in 2005. Earl was also the blues instructor at the 'National
Guitar Summer Workshop'. His albums primarily consist of strong
instrumental compositions and traditional covers. In the late 1990s,
Earl was diagnosed with depression, forcing him to cut back on his
performances and now primarily tours in the New England area.