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Smokin
Joe Kubek was born
on
November 30, 1956 in Grove City, Pennsylvania. Shortly after he was born
his family moved to Irving, Texas where he grew up. Kubek was playing in Dallas clubs at the age of 14. Three years later, he
took a deeper interest in blues, prompted by Eric Clapton and Peter Green, and
formed his first band. Shortly afterwards, he played rhythm guitar behind
Freddie King until King's death in December 1976. After a short spell with
Robert Whitfield's Last Combo, he joined Al Braggs" band. Examples of his
work can be heard on Braggs" 1979 production of tracks by R. L. Griffin. He
also recorded with Charlie Robinson, Big Ray Anderson and Ernie Johnson, and on
Little Joe Blue's album, "It's My Turn Now". In 1989, he teamed up
with singer/guitarist Bnois King, from Monroe, Louisiana, whose soul-tinged
vocals and jazz-orientated style contrasted well with Kubek's more strident
finger and slide techniques. "The Axe Man" is an album of covers
recorded before their Bullseye Blues debut. Subsequent releases have
consolidated their reputation as a solid, entertaining band.
Kubek made a host of new friends, including Albert King, Stevie
Ray Vaughan (with whom Kubek became close), B.B. King and many other
blues icons. He often found himself jamming with these larger-than-life
blues stars, while playing constantly around the Dallas area. He not
only learned tips and techniques, but also soaked up stories and lessons
of being a professional touring musician. One night, he even had the
chance to play B.B.’s guitar, Lucille. “King admired my enthusiasm and
he encouraged me, which really meant a lot. When times got hard, I
always remembered how B.B. King had given me some encouragement.”
Kubek is one of those people who was born to play the guitar. Kubek has the
technique and the chops to burn up any stage and has been doing so for the past
27 years. A guitar prodigy at the age of 14 the Texas born guitar slinger
frequented the Dallas bar scene during the 1970's and early 80's playing with
Stevie Ray Vaughan and people like the three Kings, B. B., Albert and Freddie.
In 1989, Kubek met guitarist/vocalist Bnois King at a Monday night
Dallas jam session. The two became fast friends, and melded their seemingly
divergent styles—Kubek a rocking and fierce picker and slider, King a
jazz-inflected chorder (who could also solo with flaming electricity)—into one
of the most potent guitar combinations the Southwest had ever produced. Kubek
explains the relationship succinctly: “I pull the blues out of him, and he pulls
the jazz out of me. Bnois knows so much about jazz it’s amazing.”
Kubek, with his staggering arsenal of instruments, effects
and technique, delivers a frenzied, flame-throwing guitar display that is
tempered by the remarkable accompaniment of Bnois King's jazz influenced guitar.
Kubek, coming from the blazing Texas blues/rock background, found in Bnois
King's smooth jazz guitar stylings a finesse and fat chord sound that was a
perfect complement to his technique. The combination just clicked with a
seamless mesh of styles.
King
lays down a bed of smooth supporting jazz chords on his hollow bodied Gibson
that allows Kubek to take center stage and play with almost reckless abandon.
Together this dynamic duo has recorded 7 albums for Bullseye Blues & Jazz
Records.
Muscling
his way through the proceedings both live and on disc, Kubek will pull, bend,
pick, and push his strings well beyond what you'd think they'd normally endure
as he runs through his and King's songs. Using Hendrix-style crybaby wah-wah
leads and ear-bleeding, Johnny Winter-meets-Elmore James slide work on songs
such as the title/leadoff cut and the shuffling "She's It," he
brings things to a boiling point with screeching and shimmering lines that
rattle speaker cones and make the fillings in your teeth vibrate. Then,
applying the brakes, he runs through some of the sweetest, most beautiful slow
blues on "I'm Here for You" and "Cryin' By Myself" with
shimmering high notes, hanging in the air above heavy turnarounds. Throughout,
King (no relation to Freddie) will comp along on his Gibson, shout lyrics,
and, in general, make the whole package complete.
This
union began during a regular Monday-night gig in Dallas when
Kubek invited King to sit in and found that King's softer, jazz-based guitar
and vocals perfectly complemented Kubek's headier rock-inspired guitar work. Although
the partnership is a natural, Kubek still seems amazed that it worked at all.
Months earlier, the two shared an uncomfortable meeting that he still recalls
today. "We
laugh at it now," he says, "but when we first ran into each other,
it was in some club dressing room a while before I'd invited him to sit in
with my band. Neither of us remembers why we were there, because it wasn't our
gig. We never said a word to each other. We just kinda sat there and looked at
each other. It was weird."
The pair
became fast friends and eventually found themselves on the road in
support of their first Bullseye disc, Steppin' Out, released in 1991.
On early tours, the band did weeks in the Northeast in the dead of winter in
an old Ford van, without heat. "It
was kinda like that movie Alive," Kubek notes with a laugh.
"We'd drive all bundled up. And it got so cold sometimes, I'd actually
think of building a fire inside the thing just to keep warm. Then to top it
off, every hotel we stopped at only had heat in the rooms when you rented 'em.
So they never got warm. I had to sleep with my hair dryer the whole time. The
goal was just to get home alive."
In
1991, they signed to Bullseye Blues, releasing their debut, Steppin' Out Texas
Style, the same year. Following its release, the band launched their first
national tour. For the rest of the '90s, the Smokin' Joe Kubek Band toured the
United States and toured frequently and issued records like 1993's Texas
Cadillac, 1996's Got My Mind Back, and 2000's Bite Me. In 2003 Kubek and King
released Roadhouse Research on the Blind Pig label. The duo's second release
for Blind Pig, Show Me the Money, came out in 2004. A single-disc collection
of some of the best tracks from the Bullseye Blues years, Served Up Texas
Style, came out in 2005. A third album from Blind Pig Records, My Heart's in
Texas, was released in 2006.
For almost 20 years, the red-hot Texas rockin’ blues of Smokin’ Joe Kubek
and Bnois King has been thrilling music fans all around the world. Kubek’s
raucous roadhouse fretwork is expertly complimented by the equally fiery
guitar and soulful vocals of Bnois King. With literally thousands of live
performances under their collective belt, the two create a one-two punch of
raw, tough, blues-rock filled with intensity and purpose. Gigging with
legendary musicians like Stevie Ray Vaughan, Albert King, Freddie King and
B.B. King (among so many others), Kubek learned first-hand how to live and
play the blues and how to lead a band. Harp declared, “Kubek and King
pump out rocking, kicking blues for those times when the feet just want to
start stomping.”
The band’s Alligator Records debut, Blood Brothers, produced
by Kubek and Alligator president Bruce Iglauer, is a blues lover’s delight.
The CD features 14 rocking blues songs (13 originals) filled with Kubek’s
larger-than-life fretwork and King’s smoky vocals and economical, tasty
guitar playing. Recorded with Kubek and King’s road-honed touring unit, the
album captures all of the band’s legendary live energy and highlights the
seemingly telepathic interplay between the musicians.
According to Iglauer, “Joe and Bnois are a real powerhouse blues
combination. Joe is an amazing guitarist who can play anything in blues,
from the most traditional Texas style to totally blowout blues-rock. Bnois
is a gorgeous singer with deep Texas soul, and his guitar playing is subtle
and melodic. Together they make an unbeatable two-man front line backed by a
solid, versatile rhythm section.”
And Kubek is simply thrilled to be with Alligator. “Alligator is the Rolls
Royce of blues labels. After all my life of being a musician, this is the
greatest achievement and brightest spot of my career. I’m looking forward to
making the best recordings I’ve ever made, and I’m looking forward to seeing
all of our fans on tour.”
More than anything else, Smokin’ Joe Kubek and Bnois King exist to perform
live. With Blood Brothers and a massive tour planned, the band
will gig from coast to coast, bringing their no-holds-barred brand of
soul-charged, Texas rockin’ blues to old fans and newcomers night after
night. From the smallest Texas roadhouse to clubs and concert stages all
over the country and around the world, Kubek and King—band mates and blood
brothers—are ready to welcome everyone into their Texas blues family.
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