Pittsburgh
native Barry Levenson’s lifelong love affair with the blues began at an
early age. At fourteen, an older friend played him some of
Buddy Guy’s
Vanguard records and Levenson immediately fell hopelessly and
passionately in love with this great American art form.
After playing in numerous blues bands in his home
town, Levenson landed a job doing studio work, which he still does to
this day. He then moved to Boston to study arranging at the Berklee
School of Music. While in Boston, he became the house guitarist at
Boston’s premier rhythm and blues hot spot, the Sugar Shack, backing up
numerous R&B and soul greats. Looking for a better climate, both
musically and weather-wise, Levenson next moved to the sunny climes of
Southern California, where he immediately began working with such blues
greats as Big Mama Thornton, Pee
Wee Crayton, Percy Mayfield, Lowell
Fulson and J.D. Nicholson. Of this exciting and fruitful period,
Levenson says, “I was lucky to get in on the tail end of the incredible
L.A. blues scene because within a few years, most of these great artists
had passed on.” Levenson then formed his own group called the
Automatics, which landed a recording contract with famed Kent Records
where he was the house producer.
The
guitarist’s next step was to land a deal with the prestigious European
jazz and blues label, Storyville Records under his own name. Levenson’s
first release, Heart to Hand, received critical raves and was one of the
most popular instrumental releases of the decade. At this juncture in
Levenson’s career he was hired as a producer and A&R man for Storyville,
finding undiscovered and overlooked talent, then producing and recording
them. This was then followed by the Closer to the Blues release which
garnered an invitation to the prestigious Blues Estafette Festival in
Holland. Levenson’s latest release for Storyville, Hard Times Won,
earned him a Handy Award nomination for Blues Song of the Year. He was
also included on 2 Delta Laserlight compilations, Blues Guitar Heaven
along with Muddy Waters,
T-Bone Walker and
Mike Bloomfield to name a few; and
Blues for a Rainy Day with T-Bone Walker,
Buddy Guy and
Bobby Bland. Other highlights of
Levenson’s career include work on
William Clarke’s Groove Time CD, numerous blues festivals in Europe
and the United States.
Levenson still resides in Southern California and is
an in-demand studio guitarist whose work has appeared in many movies,
television and commercials. He gigs regularly around Southern California
and is now playing with one of America’s greatest and most loved bands,
Canned Heat.