Albert
Castiglia was born on August 12, 1969 in New York during the weekend of
the famous (infamous) Woodstock music festival. At the age of 5, his
family moved to Miami. With a Cuban mother and an Italian father, he is
an example of the melting pot of culture that is Miami. He learned to
play guitar at the age of 12 and soon realized that the passions in his
heart were expressed best by his music. He realized too that he could
sing as well as he played. Upon completion of his high school and
college education, he worked for four years as a social service
investigator for the State of Florida. During that time Albert continued
to hone his musical skills playing nights and weekends with local bands
around South Florida. In 1990 he joined The Miami Blues Authority. After
performing with the group as lead guitarist and vocalist for more than 7
years, and developing a very exciting and dynamic musical style, Albert
won the award for “Best Local Blues Guitarist for 1997” by the Miami New
Times Magazine and soon after, decided to pursue his lifelong dream of
“hitting the road” as a blues performer.
Though a mutual friend and music promoter, Gloria Pierce, Albert got an
audition with international and Chicago blues great Junior Wells, and so
impressed Wells with his playing and vocal style, that he was asked to
work in the band as a fill-in lead guitarist for a 3 city mini-tour in
clubs from Cleveland, Buffalo and Detroit. He performed so well on the
tour, that he was asked in 1997 to become the permanent lead guitarist
in the Junior Wells band playing
both guitar and vocals. With Junior and his band, Albert performed in
major Chicago clubs as well as clubs and blues festivals all over the
US, Canada and Europe including France, Switzerland and Italy winning
rave reviews for his performances along the way. Unfortunately, Junior
Wells became ill and passed away in 1998. As well as playing with
Junior, Albert has performed and jammed with important blues artists and
bands such as Sandra Hall, Pinetop Perkins,
Aron Burton,
Ronnie Baker Brooks,
Sugar Blue, Melvin Taylor,
Ronnie Earl, Billie Boy Arnold,
Phil Guy, John Primer,
Lurrie Bell, Jerry Portnoy,
Larry McCray, Lee Oskar, Michael
Coleman, J.W. Williams, Little Mack Simmons,
Eddy Clearwater,
Jimmy Burns and Otis Clay.
Albert, living in Chicago at the time of Junior’s death, stayed with
Junior’s band for awhile as the lead singer and guitar player in the
“Hoodoo Man’s Band.” During this time the band started touring with
Sandra Hall, nationally known as the “Empress of the Blues.” Albert
opened the shows for Sandra and the touring continued for the next
several years.
In 2001, Albert decided to work on his own material and began writing
and working in a recording studio. He returned to his hometown of Coral
Gables, Florida. Using his exceptional writing skills and some
collaboration with Graham Drout, from the Miami-based band IKO IKO,
Albert finished his own debut CD entitled “Burn,” produced and recorded
by Clazzy Studios in Nashville, TN.
He is poised now to step out under his own name and light up the
stages again throughout the US, Europe and beyond with his own exciting
and unique musical style.
Castiglia continues to show off his growth as a guitarist and vocalist
on his follow-up CD "A Stone's Throw" on Blues Leaf Records. To quote
Art Tipaldi in Blues Revue April/May 2006 issue "His partnership with
Miami Songwriter Graham Drout continues: In Castiglia's hands, Drout's
song "Big Toe" and "Ghosts Of Mississippi" become emotionally resonant
pieces of cultural history. "Ghosts Of Mississippi" could be the blues
song of the year: As Castiglia sings about the place where "southern
crosses the dog/Where the ghosts of Mississippi meet the gods of
Africa," his acoustic slide evokes life in the hot, back breaking Delta.
Castiglia's own originals, "Hurricane Blues", "Speed On", and "Someone
Else's Problem" show off his blues-rock side. A Stone's Throw confirms
that Castiglia is among the next generation of hot young blues-committed
guitarists."