Called
a "73-year-old vocal and harmonica genius" by Big City Blues magazine,
Mississippi-born Big George Brock knows his music. And when he sings his
blues, he ain't lying. When he sings "they call me a lover," know that
he has 42 kids. When he talks about "that lonesome cotton field,"
understand that he grew up a Delta sharecropper. And when he boasts
about beating a rival and "[taking his] little girl home," remember that
in his younger days, Brock once wrestled a bear for money and flattened
pre-world champion Sonny Liston in a boxing match. Even when Brock
covers blues classics by Muddy Waters,
Howlin' Wolf and others, note
that he learned these songs firsthand -- not just from a record. Between
his youth in the Mississippi Delta and his years as a blues club owner
in St. Louis, Brock has shared the stage with everyone from Muddy and
Wolf to Jimmy Reed and
Albert King. Today, over 60 years after he first
picked up a harmonica, Brock is in the midst of a much deserved
comeback. His newest "Club Caravan" CD (that Juke Blues magazine
described as "Contender for album of the year. Fat Possum meets Chess?
Irresistible.") is up for a Blues Music Award the same week Brock storms
the stage at the Ponderosa Stomp. From recent all-star recording
sessions for actor Steven Seagal to filmings for Mississippi Pubic
Broadcasting, from blues festival dates in Italy to national airplay on
XM Satellite Radio, Brock proves he's back and as real-deal as they
come. According to Blues & Rhythm magazine, Brock "transports us back
fifty years to a Mississippi juke joint." And Mojo magazine sums it up
this way, "Not exactly the way things were. But damn close." Coming in
May 2006, watch for a new "Hard Times" DVD on the Cat Head Presents
label and a new CD on the APO/Acoustic Sounds label. For more
information on Big George Brock, log on at http://www.cathead.biz