Corky Siegel and Jim Schwall: Never before released
Remember the Siegel Schwall band?
For those of you that don’t know, here’s a write up about them:
“Corky Siegel and Jim Schwall met each other when both were music students at Roosevelt University. Siegel, originally a saxophonist, was interested in blues, while Schwall’s background was mostly in country music. They combined these two genres, producing a lighter sounding blues as compared to Butterfield Blues Band or John Mayall. The Siegel–Schwall Band included Shelly Plotkin on drums and Rollo Radford on bass. Radford had previously played with Martha and the Vandellas and Sun Ra.
They were the house band at Pepper’s Lounge on Chicago’s South Side. Every important Chicago blues musician sat in with Corky and Jim at Pepper’s, including Junior Wells,Buddy Guy, Billy Boy Arnold, Little Walter, Muddy Waters, Magic Sam, Otis Spann, Bo Diddley, Lazy Lester and Sam Lay, just to name a few. The band moved to Big John’s in Old Town after the Butterfield Blues Band began touring and left a vacancy.
In 1965, Sam Charters signed the band to Vanguard Records. In 1966, the band released their first eponymous album, and began a national tour in 1969. While they weren’t as commercially successful as Butterfield or Mayall, the band was still able to perform at large venues such as Fillmore West. Also around that time, the Siegel–Schwall Band became the first blues band to ever perform with a symphony. They performed “Three Pieces for Blues Band and Symphony Orchestra” with the San Francisco Symphony. The piece was written by William Russo and conducted by Seiji Ozawa. After four albums with Vanguard, the band signed with Wooden Nickel, a Chicago label distributed by RCA. Their first release on the label won a Grammy Award for Best Album Cover in 1973.
The band broke up in 1974 after releasing the album R.I.P. Siegel/Schwall, and reunited in 1987. Alligator Records signed them and released a live reunion album in 1988. The band continues to tour occasionally, usually during summer because Jim Schwall is now a professor of music. Schwall also ran unsuccessfully for mayor of Madison, Wisconsin. The Siegel–Schwall Band released a second album on Alligator Records in 2005, entitled Flash Forward, which was a top 15 hit on the Billboard Blues Albums chart.” more
Special thanks go to Norm Miller for sharing this with us over at our facebook site. Norm also wrote this about the video:
“Two guy’s in a room with a harmonica & a guitar, Sweet! Shows you don’t need a $3,000 guitar either! I believe that’s a Taylor, Big Baby Corky’s playing…$389 on Ebay!”