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Deborah Coleman

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Instruments
  
Guitar

Role
  
Guitarist

Name
  
Deborah Coleman


Website
  
www.DeborahColeman.com

Years active
  
1995–present

Genres
  
Blues, Rock music

Deborah Coleman Stop the Game Deborah Coleman Songs Reviews Credits


Born
  
October 3, 1956 (age 67) (
1956-10-03
)

Origin
  
Portsmouth, Virginia, United States

Occupation(s)
  
Guitarist, singer, songwriter, record producer

Albums
  
Soul Be It, Blues Caravan: Guitars & Feathers

Record labels
  
Telarc International Corporation, JSP Records

Similar People
  
Sue Foley, Roxanne Potvin, Dani Wilde, Pinetop Perkins, Billy Crawford

Superdjdaba deborah coleman don t lie to me wmv


Deborah Coleman (born October 3, 1956, Portsmouth, Virginia, United States) is an American blues musician. Coleman won the Orville Gibson Award for "Best Blues Guitarist, Female" in 2001, and was nominated for a W.C. Handy Blues Music Award nine times.

Contents

Deborah Coleman Deborah Coleman Nobody To Blame YouTube

Superdjdaba deborah coleman my heart bleeds blue wmv


Biography

Deborah Coleman Deborah Coleman Don39t Lie To Me YouTube

Coleman was born in Portsmouth, Virginia and raised in a music-loving military family that lived in San Diego, San Francisco, Bremerton, Washington, and the Chicago area. With her father playing piano, two brothers on guitar, and a sister who plays guitar and keyboards, Deborah felt natural with an instrument in her hands, picking up guitar at age 8. She has played at the top music venues such as North Atlantic Blues Festival (2007), Waterfront Blues Festival (2002), the Monterey Jazz Festival (2001), Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival (2000), Sarasota Blues Festival (1999), the San Francisco Blues Festival (1999) and the Fountain Blues Festival (1998).

Deborah Coleman Deborah Coleman Wikipedia

Coleman's Blind Pig debut, I Can't Lose (1997), was an album of ballads and blues stories, and guitar playing and singing. Her version of Billie Holiday's "Fine and Mellow" got a lot of airplay on college and public radio stations around the U.S. Soul Be It (2002) included the opener "Brick", "My Heart Bleeds Blue", "Don't Lie to Me," and a jump blues track, "I Believe". These were followed by What About Love? (2004) and Stop the Game (2007).

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Time Bomb (2007) featured three women blues musicians: Coleman, Sue Foley and Roxanne Potvin.

References

Deborah Coleman Wikipedia