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Silas Hogan

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Instruments
  
Vocals, guitar

Name
  
Silas Hogan

Role
  
Musician


Silas Hogan wwwwirzdemusichogangrafikhogan11jpg

Born
  
September 15, 1911 Westover, Louisiana, United States (
1911-09-15
)

Occupation(s)
  
Singer, guitarist, songwriter

Died
  
January 9, 1994, Scotlandville, Louisiana, United States

Albums
  
Trouble: The Best of the Excello Masters, Louisiana Swamp Blues Vol. 6

Genres
  
Swamp blues, Louisiana blues

Record labels
  
Excello Records, Arhoolie Records, Flyright Records, Blue Horizon

Similar People
  
Lonesome Sundown, Lightnin' Slim, J D "Jay" Miller, Tabby Thomas, Lazy Lester

Silas Hogan Born In Texas


Silas Hogan (September 15, 1911 – January 9, 1994) was an American blues musician. His most notable recordings are "Airport Blues" and "Lonesome La La". He was the front man of the Rhythm Ramblers. Hogan was inducted into the Louisiana Blues Hall of Fame.

Contents

Biography

Hogan learned to play the guitar as a teenager and was performing regularly by the late 1930s. He was influenced by Jimmy Reed, as were Lazy Lester and Slim Harpo. He had relocated to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, by the early 1950s and, equipped with a Fender electric guitar, formed the Rhythm Ramblers, with Isaiah Chapman (lead guitar), Jimmy Dotson (drums), and Sylvester Buckley (harmonica). They stayed together for almost ten years and contributed to the development of the Baton Rouge blues sound,

In 1962, when Hogan was 51, Slim Harpo introduced him to J. D. "Jay" Miller, a record producer based in Crowley, Louisiana. Miller, through the offices of Excello Records, started Hogan's recording career, at a time when interest in variations of swamp blues was waning. Several singles by Hogan were nevertheless released until 1965, when Miller's disagreement with the record label's new owners brought the recording contract to an abrupt end. On some of his recordings, Hogan was backed by the harmonica player Moses "Whispering" Smith. Hogan had to disband the group and returned to his full-time job at the Exxon oil refinery. In the late 1970s, he recorded additional tracks for Arhoolie and Blue Horizon.

Hogan died in January 1994 of heart disease, at the age of 82.

References

Silas Hogan Wikipedia