In recent years, Dallas-based guitarist
Anson Funderburgh has taken his band the Rockets out of the clubs and onto the festival stages with his critically acclaimed recordings for the BlackTop label out of New Orleans. With Jackson, MS-native
Sam Myers delivering the vocals and harmonica treatments, this band mixes up a powerful gumbo of Texas jump blues and
Delta blues that can't be found anywhere else. Funderburgh & His Rockets are a particularly hard working band, performing across the U.S. and Europe nearly 300 nights a year.
Funderburgh was born November 15, 1954, and got hooked on the
blues when he got his first guitar at age seven or eight. His first musical experiences happened in the clubs in Dallas.
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In recent years, Dallas-based guitarist
Anson Funderburgh has taken his band the Rockets out of the clubs and onto the festival stages with his critically acclaimed recordings for the BlackTop label out of New Orleans. With Jackson, MS-native
Sam Myers delivering the vocals and harmonica treatments, this band mixes up a powerful gumbo of Texas jump blues and
Delta blues that can't be found anywhere else. Funderburgh & His Rockets are a particularly hard working band, performing across the U.S. and Europe nearly 300 nights a year.
Funderburgh was born November 15, 1954, and got hooked on the
blues when he got his first guitar at age seven or eight.
His first musical experiences happened in the clubs in Dallas. He developed his team approach to
blues music while learning from the likes of
Freddie King,
Jimmy Reed, and
Albert Collins when these great bluesmen were passing through Dallas-area clubs, but
Funderburgh had already taught himself guitar mostly from listening to classic
blues records. He never had the chance to see
Muddy Waters, but he did get to play with
Lightnin' Hopkins in the late '70s.
Funderburgh formed the Rockets in 1978, but didn't meet
Sam Myers until 1982.
Funderburgh recorded with
the Fabulous Thunderbirds on their
Butt Rockin' album, and went solo in 1981, when the New Orleans-based BlackTop label released Talk to You by Hand, the label's first release.
Funderburgh added
Myers on harmonica and lead vocals in 1986.
Myers had traveled for years on the chitlin circuit, where he had the chance to accompany people like
Elmore James and
Robert Junior Lockwood.
Funderburgh admits that adding
Myers on vocals and harmonica was a turning point for the Rockets, partly because of the image they project from the stage, a big towering black man and three white guys backing him up.
Funderburgh continued his association in the '90s with Black Top releasing Tell Me What I Want to Hear (1991), Live at Grand Emporium (1995), and That's What They Want (1997). After releasing nine albums on Black Top, in 1999
Funderburgh changed record labels with the release of
Change in my Pocket for Bullseye Blues. At the beginning of the new millennium,
Funderburgh is just coming into his prime by way of his songwriting talents, so his career deserves close watching in the coming years. The best is yet to come from this guitarist and bandleader. ~ Richard Skelly & Al Campbell, All Music Guide
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