Delbert McClinton

Delbert McClinton Biography

The venerable Delbert McClinton is a legend among Texas oots music aficionados, not only for his amazing longevity, but for his ability to combine country, lues, soul, and ock & roll as if there were no distinctions between any of them in the best time-honored Texas tradition. A formidable harmonica player long before he recorded as a singer, McClinton's career began in the late '50s, yet it took him nearly two decades to evolve into a bona fide solo artist. A critics' darling and favorite of his peers, McClinton never really became a household name, but his resurgence in the '90s helped him earn more widespread respect from both the public at large and the Grammy committee.

Delbert McClinton was born in Lubbock, TX, on November 4, 1940, and grew up in Fort Worth. Discovering the lues in his teenage years, McClinton quickly became an accomplished harmonica player and found plenty of work on the local club scene, where musicians often made their living by playing completely different styles of music on different nights of the week. His most prominent early gig was with the Straitjackets, the house band at a lues/R&B club; it gave McClinton the opportunity to play harp behind lues legends like Howlin' Wolf, Jimmy Reed, Sonny Boy Williamson II, and Bobby "Blue" Bland. In 1960, McClinton's cover of Williamson's "Wake Up Baby" made him the first white artist to have a record played on the local lues station KNOK. McClinton's harmonica was prominently featured on Fort Worth native Bruce Channel's 1962 number one smash &"Hey! Baby"; brought along for Channel's tour of England, McClinton wound up giving harp lessons to a young John Lennon. Upon returning to the States, McClinton founded a group called the Rondells (sometimes listed as the Ron-Dels), which had a minor chart single in 1965 with &"If You Really Want Me to, I'll Go." Although the Rondells recorded for several different labels, wider success eluded them and McClinton spent much of the '60s making the rounds of the Texas club and roadhouse circuit, where his reputation kept growing steadily.

Read the full bio

LiveDaily Sessions: Lykke Li

Lykke Li--a hip, 20-something Swedish indie-pop singer--had a creative, almost nomadic upbringing with her musician father and photographer mother. Winters... continued
Listen now:
 

LiveDaily Song of the Day: Anjulie - "Boom"

Today's Song of the Day is by Anjulie. The featured cut is "Boom," which appears on a recently released three-song... continued
Listen now: