Upload another photo for this artist

Lowell Fulson

14,613 listeners (55,977 plays)

Add to my Library Share

blues, male vocalists, male, funky, guitarsee all

3 shouts

Lowell Fulson recorded every shade of blues imaginable. Polished urban blues, rustic two-guitar duets with his younger brother Martin, funk-tinged grooves that pierced the mid-’60s charts, even an unwise cover of the Beatles’ “Why Don’t We Do It in the Road!” Clearly, the veteran guitarist, who was active for more than half a century, wasn’t afraid to experiment. Perhaps that’s why his last couple of discs for Rounder were so vital and satisfying — and why he remained an innovator for so long.



Exposed to the western swing of Bob Wills as well as indigenous blues while growing up in Oklahoma, Fulson joined up with singer Texas Alexander for a few months in 1940, touring the Lone Star state with the veteran bluesman. Fulson was drafted in 1943. The Navy let him go in 1945; after a few months back in Oklahoma, he was off to Oakland, CA, where he made his first 78s for fledgling producer Bob Geddins. Soon enough, Fulson was fronting his own band and cutting a stack of platters for Big Town, Gilt Edge, Trilon, and Down Town (where he hit big in 1948 with “Three O’Clock Blues,” later covered by B.B. King).

Swing Time records prexy Jack Lauderdale snapped up Fulson in 1948, and the hits really began to flow: the immortal “Every Day I Have the Blues” (an adaptation of Memphis Slim’s “Nobody Loves Me”), “Blue Shadows,” the two-sided holiday perennial “Lonesome Christmas,” and a groovy mid-tempo instrumental “Low Society Blues” that really hammers home how tremendously important pianist Lloyd Glenn and alto saxist Earl Brown were to Fulson’s maturing sound (all charted in 1950!).
Read More… Edit

Similar Artists

Little Milton, Albert King, Hank Shocklee, Willie Dixon, Elmore James, Bo Diddley, The Staple Singerssee all

See more

Videos

See more

Top Albums

See more

Shoutbox

Leave a comment. Log in to Last.fm or sign up (it’s free).

Listeners

See more

Recent Activity

Related Journals

More Information

Links
Labels

What’s New

It’s here. Welcome to the new Last.fm! Read all about it on our blog.