As a teenager in the early â90s growing up in the muddy potato fields of Idaho, John NĂ©meth was drawn to the hard-edged hip hop sounds and rock bands of the day, until a friend, Tom Moore, introduced him to the Junior Wells and Buddy Guy classic âHoodoo Man Blues.â Together they formed Fat John & the 3 Slims, which is still regarded as a legendary band in the Boise region. John played harp and sang in local bands, often opening the show for nationally touring blues acts and quickly caught the ear of established blues musicians. It didnât take long before he was releasing his own recordings, âThe Jack Of Harpsâ (2002) and âCome And Get Itâ (2004), featuring Junior Watson, and performing in Junior Watsonâs band. John relocated to San Francisco in 2004, where he had the bitter-sweet good fortune to undertake a two-year stint with Anson Funderburgh and the Rockets, filling in for the ailing Sam Myers...
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As a teenager in the early â90s growing up in the muddy potato fields of Idaho, John NĂ©meth was drawn to the hard-edged hip hop sounds and rock bands of the day, until a friend, Tom Moore, introduced him to the Junior Wells and Buddy Guy classic âHoodoo Man Blues.â Together they formed Fat John & the 3 Slims, which is still regarded as a legendary band in the Boise region. John played harp and sang in local bands, often opening the show for nationally touring blues acts and quickly caught the ear of established blues musicians. It didnât take long before he was releasing his own recordings, âThe Jack Of Harpsâ (2002) and âCome And Get Itâ (2004), featuring Junior Watson, and performing in Junior Watsonâs band. John relocated to San Francisco in 2004, where he had the bitter-sweet good fortune to undertake a two-year stint with Anson Funderburgh and the Rockets, filling in for the ailing Sam Myers. NĂ©meth immersed himself in the deep musical waters of the Bay area, absorbing more of the soul and funk grooves of what he calls âthe early East Bay Grease soundâ of San Francisco and Oakland bands.Johnâs talents did not go unnoticed and he soon signed a recording contract with Blind Pig Records. His national debut for that label, âMagic Touchâ (2007), produced by Anson Funderburgh and featuring Junior Watson on guitar, received an ecstatic response from fans and the media, and he was hailed as the new voice of the blues. Living Blues enthused, âMagic Touch gives hope that the blues will survive.â In 2008 NĂ©meth was recruited by Elvin Bishop to do some performances and contribute four vocal tracks to his Grammy-nominated album âThe Blues Rolls On.â NĂ©meth released two more albums on the Blind Pig label, âLove Me Tonightâ (2009) & âName The Day (2010), both hitting #6 on the Billboard Blues Chart, and beginning his long string of Blues Music Award (BMA) nominations, numbering 20 at last count. John has also won two Blues Blast Music Awards â Best New Artist Debut Recording and Sean Costello Rising Star Award. John followed up with two independently released live albums in 2012, âBlues Liveâ and âSoul Live.â In 2013 John relocated to Memphis, Tennessee, where he teamed up with producer Scott Bomar and his classic Memphis Soul band, the Bo-Keys, to create an album of revisited soul classics, âMemphis Greaseâ (2014 Blue Corn), which debuted at #4 on the Billboard Blues Chart. John won the 2104 BMA for Best Soul Blues Male Artist, followed by âMemphis Greaseâ winning Best Soul Blues Album in 2015. In 2017 NĂ©meth released âFeelinâ Freakyâ (produced by Luther Dickinson) on his own Memphis Grease label, crushing all barriers of style and genre with an album of original songs that defied all the usual pigeonholes, drawing from his strong influences in blues and R&B, as well as contemporary sounds in hip hop and rock ânâ roll. Later that same year, NĂ©meth was part of a side project âThe Love Light Orchestra Featuring John NĂ©methâ recorded live at one of Memphisâ favorite watering holes, Bar DKDC. The 10-piece band was initially envisioned by guitarist Joe Restivo, vocalist John NĂ©meth and arranger/trumpeter Marc Franklin. NĂ©meth returned to Electraphonic in December of 2019 with his seasoned road band of young gun players, The Blue Dreamers, featuring 19 year-old guitar phenom from Philadelphia, Jon Hay, drummer Danny Banks and Matt Wilson on bass for a rowdy southern swamp roots session resulting in his 10th album, âStronger Than Strongâ demonstrating, yet again, his uncanny ability to skillfully blend retro and modern blues and soul into compelling music that is simultaneously old and new. Website
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