HabFans 11/01/2009
chicago
Helpful
Funny
Agree
Disagree
TraryMavers 10/27/2009
yep fur shure
WhaDaFa 10/03/2009
brilliant
LateAgain 09/20/2009
player!
DaveDiamond 09/04/2009
oh my god, legendary blues rocker
BrianAdumbs 08/21/2009
best of the best blues men
TheGreat1 08/19/2009
damn fine bluesman
DARINs2Pay 08/09/2009
Born to Play the Blues. Personable / Legendary.
ChildNwinter 08/09/2009
fan-friendly blusman, deserves recognition from innovative Chicago-blues style. Toiled in France for a decade befoe returing to win over USA
Doriella Du Fontaine 08/07/2009
great blues singer and player
SuziQueue 08/05/2009
fantastic Chicago Bluesman. he is missed!
MyLORD 07/29/2009
great bluesman
SykoKilla 07/25/2009
really great, personable blues guitartist
TripleTTT 07/17/2009
His big break came in 1957 when Muddy Waters invited Allison to the stage. He worked the club circuit throughout the late 1950s and early 1960s and recorded his first single in 1965. Allison was signed to the Delmark Records label in 1967 and released his debut album Love Me Mama the following year. A well-received set at the 1969 Ann Arbor Blues Festival resulted in his being asked to perform there each of the next three years.[2] He also toured nationwide and, in 1972, was signed to Motown Records, the first and one of the few blues artists to do so.[3] By the mid 1970s he began touring Europe, and moved to France in 1977.[3] He would not return to the United States for another fifteen years. Allison was known for his lengthy concert performances, lengthy guitar solos and crowd walking with his Gibson Les Paul.Allison's manager, and European agent, Thomas Ruf founded the label Ruf Records in 1994. Since signing with Ruf Records, Allison then launched a comeback in association with Alligator Records. Alligator founder, Bruce Iglauer, convinced Allison to return to the United States. The album Soul Fixin' Man was recorded and released in 1994, and Allison toured the U.S. and Canada. Allison won four W.C. Handy Awards in 1994. With the James Solberg Band backing him, non-stop touring and the release of Blue Streak (featuring song "Cherry Red Wine"), Allison continued to earn more Handys and gain wider recognition. Allison scored a host of Living Blues Awards and was featured on the cover pages of major blues publications.He appeared at the 1995 San Francisco Blues Festival.Allison covered "You Can't Always Get What You Want" for the 1997 Rolling Stones' tribute album, Paint it Blue: Songs of the Rolling Stones.In the middle of his summer of 1997 tour, Allison checked into a hospital for dizziness and loss of coordination. It was discovered that he had a tumor on his lung that had metastasized to his brain.[4] In and out of a coma, Allison died on August 12, 1997, five days before his 58th birthday, in Madison, Wisconsin.[2] His album Reckless had just been released. His son Bernard Allison, at one time a member of his band, is now a solo recording artist.He was posthumously inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 1998. In 2000, the Chicago Sun-Times called him "The Bruce Springsteen of the blues".[5]Allison is buried at Washington Memory Gardens Cemetery in Homewood, Illinois.
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