Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Doug MacLeod (musician)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Labels
  
Reference Recordings

Name
  
Doug MacLeod


Genres
  
Blues

Doug MacLeod (musician) bbslawnsidebbqcomwpcontentuploads201205doug


Born
  
April 21, 1946 (age 77) New York, United States (
1946-04-21
)

Role
  
Musician · doug-macleod.com

Albums
  
There's a Time, Exactly Like This, Doug's Slide Guitar

Similar People
  
George Harmonica Smith, Rod Piazza, Carl Sonny Leyland

Profiles


Record label
  
Reference Recordings

Doug macleod some old blues song


Doug MacLeod (born April 21, 1946, New York City, United States) is an American storytelling bluesman. Although now associated with his home in Los Angeles, he has lived and worked in North Carolina, St. Louis, Port Washington, New York, and Norfolk, Virginia, where he was stationed in the United States Navy. He became acquainted with the blues in St Louis in his teens and started his career playing country blues on acoustic guitar, finding that singing eased a chronic stutter and helped him to eventually overcome it. Although predominantly associated with acoustic guitar, his skills were developed as a blues bass player, and honed by his subsequent journeys into jazz and electric blues.

Contents

Doug MacLeod (musician) Interview Doug MacLeod

Doug macleod break the chain


Influences

Doug MacLeod (musician) wwwearlybluescom Blues Interviews List

MacLeod's formative blues instruction is attributed to a man he knew as Ernest Banks who also gave him the guiding principles of his music and performances:
“Never play a note you don't believe”
“Never write or sing about what you don't know about”
He also formed a strong friendship with George "Harmonica" Smith who not only became his mentor, but also the source or experience for many of his songs and stories in his live performances. Unable or unwilling to use his correct name, George always called him "Dubb", a name also adopted by his loyal followers, the DubbHeads.

Writing

Doug MacLeod (musician) Interview blues traveler Doug McLeod lived the music

MacLeod plays only his own compositions (of which he is credited with over 300), but his music has also been recorded by many other artists, including Dave Alvin, James Armstrong, Eva Cassidy, Albert Collins, Pee Wee Crayton, Papa John Creach, Albert King, Chris Thomas King, Coco Montoya, Billy Lee Riley, Son Seals, Tabby Thomas, and Joe Louis Walker.

Doug MacLeod (musician) wwwhamjamhousecomimagesdougmacleodjpg

He has also been a long-time contributor to Blues Revue magazine with his column "Doug's Back Porch".

Performance

Doug MacLeod (musician) Live Music Lawrence Lebo and Doug MacLeod at McCabes Guitar Shop

MacLeod's live performances preserve the tradition of the blues as a story-telling medium, expressed by his soulful voice and powerfully rhythmic acoustic guitar style. He usually plays a National Delphi guitar (accompanied by his left foot), with stories or introductions between pieces. The tales come from his early performances when he felt that he did not have enough music to fill a show. He has appeared in blues and jazz festivals and his own shows around the world, but particularly in the US and Europe.

Other activities

Doug MacLeod (musician) FileDoug MacLeodJPG Wikimedia Commons

As well as writing and performing, he also teaches guitar and has released his own instructional DVD, and has hosted blues radio shows Blues Highway and Nothin' but the Blues (1999 to 2004), and was the voice for the Blues Showcase of Continental Airlines.

Recognition

Doug MacLeod (musician) Doug MacLeod Rosa Lee Bing Lounge YouTube

He has won four Blues Music Awards (formerly W.C. Handy):

  • Acoustic Artist of the Year 2014, 2016, 2017
  • Acoustic Album Of The Year 2014.
  • He has been nominated for several consecutive years for:

  • Best Song in 2006 ("Dubb's Talkin' Politician Blues"), in 2014 ("The Entitled Few") and in 2016 (“You Got It Good (and That Ain’t Bad)”),
  • Acoustic Artist of the Year: 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017.
  • Acoustic Album of the Year in 2012 (Brand New Eyes), 2014 (There's a Time) and 2016 (Exactly Like This).
  • Historical Album in 2017 (Live in Europe).
  • His portrait is displayed in the Delta Blues Museum in Clarksdale, Mississippi. He received the Golden Note award for Best Original Recording (for his album You Can't Take My Blues). His songs have featured in Grammy Award-nominated albums: Albert King's I'm in a Phone Booth, Baby (1984) ("Your Bread Ain't Done"), and Albert Collins' Cold Snap (1986) ("Cash Talking, The Working Man’s Blues").

    Discography

  • Break the Chain (Reference Recordings) 2017
  • Live in Europe (Black & Tan) 2016
  • Exactly Like This (Reference Recordings) 2015
  • There's a Time (Reference Recordings) 2013
  • Come To Find -Reissue (APO) 2013
  • Doug MacLeod Direct-To-Disc (APO) 2012
  • Brand New Eyes (Fresh! from RR) 2011
  • The Utrecht Sessions (Black & Tan) 2008
  • Live at XM Radio vol. 2 (Black & Tan) 2007
  • Live at XM Satellite (Black & Tan) 2007
  • Where I Been (Black & Tan) 2006
  • Dubb (Black & Tan) 2005
  • A Little Sin (Black & Tan) 2002
  • 101 Blues Guitar Essentials (instructional DVD) (Solid Air Record / Alfred Publishing) 2006
  • Whose Truth, Whose Lies (Sledgehammer Blues (formerly AudioQuest Music)) 2000
  • Live As It Gets (with John "Juke" Logan) (Mocombo Records) 1999
  • Unmarked Road (Sledgehammer Blues (formerly AudioQuest Music)) 1997
  • You Can't Take My Blues (Sledgehammer Blues (formerly AudioQuest Music)) 1996
  • Come To Find (Sledgehammer Blues (formerly AudioQuest Music)) 1994
  • Live in 1991 vol. 1 (Black & Tan) 1991
  • Live in 1991 vol. 2 (Black & Tan) 1991
  • Ain't The Blues Evil (Volt/Fantasy) 1991
  • 54th and Vermont (Stomp) 1987
  • Woman In The Street (Stomp) 1986
  • No Road Back Home (Hightone) 1984
  • Film appearances

    MacLeod appeared in Resonate: A Guitar Story along with Catfish Keith, Bob Brozman and Mike Dowling. Resonate is a story of contemporary players of National Reso-Phonic Guitars.

    References

    Doug MacLeod (musician) Wikipedia