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Johnny Mars

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Instruments
  
Harmonica, vocals

Name
  
Johnny Mars

Role
  
Singer


Labels
  
Various

Genres
  
Website
  
www.johnnymars.com

Record label
  
Various

Johnny Mars Johnny Mars King Of The Blues Harp Full Album 1980 YouTube


Born
  
December 7, 1942 (age 81) Laurens, South Carolina, United States (
1942-12-07
)

Occupation(s)
  
Harmonicist, singer, songwriter

Music group
  
Climax Blues Band (Since 2012)

Albums
  
King of the Blues Harp, Blues From Mars, On My Mind, Life On Mars

Similar People
  
Otis Grand, Paul Lamb, Pete Haycock, Jeff Rich, Mel Collins

Years active
  
Early 1960s – present

Johnny mars band live at blues to bop


Johnny Mars (born December 7, 1942) is an American electric blues harmonica player, singer, and songwriter. Over a long career, he has worked with Magic Sam, Earl Hooker, B.B. King, Jesse Fuller, Spencer Davis, Ian Gillan, Do-Re-Mi, Bananarama and Michael Roach.

Contents

Johnny Mars Johnny Mars Biography History AllMusic

Johnny mars manish boy


Biography

Johnny Mars httpsiytimgcomvinEzOwpS4NKkhqdefaultjpg

Mars was born in Laurens, South Carolina, to sharecropping parents. His family regularly moved house when Mars was a youngster, but at the age of nine, he was presented with his first harmonica. When he was aged fourteen, and on the death of his mother, Mars and his younger siblings moved to New Paltz, New York, and having left high school, Mars began playing in various clubs in New York City. He signed a recording contract with Mercury Records whilst a member of the band Burning Bush, and they recorded several sides with the label.

By the mid-1960s, Mars had moved to California and formed the Johnny Mars Band, which found work but no recognition beyond their North California base. However, they toured with Magic Sam and played on the same bill as Earl Hooker, B.B. King and Jesse Fuller. After advice from Rick Estrin (Little Charlie & the Nightcats), Mars toured the United Kingdom in 1972 and subsequently recorded two albums there before relocating to Somerset in 1978. He worked with the record producer Ray Fenwick plus Spencer Davis and Ian Gillan. His 1984 album, Life on Mars, received critical acclaim.

In 1988, Mars was a guest musician on the Do-Re-Mi album The Happiest Place in Town. He later worked with Bananarama on "Preacher Man" (1990) and their 1991 cover version of "Long Train Running", appearing in the group's music video for the former track. Mars also taught for 15 years in primary schools in England and worked with teenagers in music projects. He continued touring across the UK and Europe, where he had a strong fan base. In 1992, Mars played at the San Francisco Blues Festival. In 1999, he released the album Stateside. On My Mind followed in 2003. In 2003 and 2004, he played with the Barrelhouse Blues Orchestra.

More recently, Mars teamed up with the blues guitarist Michael Roach and appeared at the Bath Music Festival (2008, UK), The Pocono Blues Festival (US) and the Kastav Blues Festival (Croatia). In January 2010, the pair toured the Middle East.

References

Johnny Mars Wikipedia


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