After first finding acclaim as a member of the
Steve Miller Band, singer/songwriter
Boz Scaggs went on to enjoy considerable solo success in the 1970s. Born
William Royce Scaggs in Ohio on June 8, 1944, he was raised in Oklahoma and Texas, and while attending prep school in Dallas met guitarist
Steve Miller. After joining
Miller's group the Marksmen as a vocalist in 1959, the pair later attended the University of Wisconsin together, playing in
blues bands like
the Ardells and the Fabulous Knight Trains.
In 1963
Scaggs returned to Dallas alone, fronting an
R&B unit dubbed the Wigs; after relocating to England, the group promptly disbanded, and two of its members --
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After first finding acclaim as a member of the
Steve Miller Band, singer/songwriter
Boz Scaggs went on to enjoy considerable solo success in the 1970s. Born
William Royce Scaggs in Ohio on June 8, 1944, he was raised in Oklahoma and Texas, and while attending prep school in Dallas met guitarist
Steve Miller. After joining
Miller's group the Marksmen as a vocalist in 1959, the pair later attended the University of Wisconsin together, playing in
blues bands like
the Ardells and the Fabulous Knight Trains.
In 1963
Scaggs returned to Dallas alone, fronting an
R&B unit dubbed the Wigs; after relocating to England, the group promptly disbanded, and two of its members -- John Andrews and Bob Arthur -- soon formed
Mother Earth.
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Scaggs remained in Europe, singing on street corners; in Sweden he recorded a failed solo LP, 1965's Boz, before returning to the U.S. two years later. Upon settling in San Francisco, he reunited with
Miller, joining the fledgling
Steve Miller Band; after recording two acclaimed albums with the group,
Children of the Future and
Sailor,
Scaggs exited in 1968 to mount a solo career. With the aid of Rolling Stone magazine publisher Jann Wenner,
Scaggs secured a contract with Atlantic. Sporting a cameo from
Duane Allman, 1968's soulful
Boz Scaggs failed to find an audience despite winning critical favor; the track "Loan Me a Dime" later became the subject of a court battle when bluesman
Fenton Robinson sued (successfully) for composer credit. After signing to Columbia,
Scaggs teamed with producer Glyn Johns to record 1971's Moments, a skillful blend of
rock and
R&B which, like its predecessor, failed to make much of an impression on the charts.
Scaggs remained a critics' darling over the course of LPs like 1972's My Time and 1974's
Slow Dancer, but he did not achieve a commercial breakthrough until 1976's
Silk Degrees, which reached number two on the album charts while spawning the Top Three single "Lowdown," as well as the smash "Lido Shuffle." 1977's
Down Two Then Left was also a success, and 1980's
Middle Man reached the Top Ten on the strength of the singles "Breakdown Dead Ahead" and "Jo Jo."
However,
Scaggs spent much of the 1980s in retirement, owning and operating the San Francisco nightclub Slim's and limiting his performances primarily to the club's annual black-tie New Year's Eve concerts. Finally, in 1988 he resurfaced with the album Other Roads, followed three years later by a tour with
Donald Fagen's Rock and Soul Revue. The solo
Some Change appeared in 1994, with
Come on Home and My Time: The Anthology (1969-1997) both released in 1997. The newly energized
Scaggs spent the next few years consistantly releasing new material including Here's the Low Down, Fade into Light,
Dig and a collection of
standards called
But Beautiful. An expanded reissue of
Silk Degrees and Runnin' Blue, a recording of a 1974 performance, appeared in 2007. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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