W.C. Clark


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W.C. Clark
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Guitarist, singer and songwriter W.C. Clark was one of Austin's original blues musicians, and he is considered the godfather of that city's blues scene. Wesley Curley Clark was born and raised in Austin and grew up surrounded by music, since his father was a guitar player and his mother and grandmother sang in the choir at St. John's College Baptist Church. By the time he was 16, he played his first show at Victory Grill and was introduced to local legends T.D. Bell and Erbie Bowser. He began playing bass with Bell's band, honing his blues chops on guitar on his own time. While East Austin's club scene flourished in the late 1950s and early '60s, white students from the nearby University of Texas campus began to patronize the blues clubs, and after taking a regular gig at Charlie's Playhouse, Clark made music his full-time occupation. After six years at the playhouse, he met R&B singer Joe Tex and joined his band as guitarist. After leaving Tex's band and returning to Austin, Clark was surprised and encouraged by the infusion of young white blues players on the local scene. Bill Campbell, Angela Strehli, Lewis Cowdrey and Paul Ray and the Vaughan brothers were attracting growing crowds to their shows and forming close bonds with the black blues players who had already been on the scene. In the early 1970s, Clark teamed up with guitarist and piano player Denny Freeman and vocalist Angela Strehli to form a group called Southern Feeling. With this group, Clark was able to blossom as a songwriter, but after a record deal fell apart, he took a job as a mechanic at a local Ford dealership. However, a young guitarist named Stevie Ray Vaughan kept visiting him at the garage. Vaughan was putting his own band together and insisted that Clark be a part of it. Calling themselves the Triple Threat Revue, they eventually took to the road with Lou Ann Barton as lead vocalist. Clark and keyboardist Mike Kindred wrote "Cold Shot," which went on to become one of Vaughan's biggest hits in the mid-1980s. Clark has recorded three albums -- Something for Everybody (1986), released independently on his own label, and two albums for the New Orleans-based BlackTop label, 1994's Heart of Gold and 1996's Texas Soul. On Texas Soul, Clark is accompanied by a band of Austin-area blues veterans, including Chris Layton and Tommy Shannon of Vaughan's Double Trouble, producer and guitarist Derek O'Brien, and saxophonist Mark "Kaz" Kazanoff. In March 1997, Clark and his band had an accident while returning to Austin in their van; he lost his fiancee and drummer. Clark was uninjured, but the experience slowed him down for awhile. However, Clark continues to be active on the Austin blues scene, of which he is affectionately referred to as "the godfather," releasing Lover's Plea in 1998. He hit the road to promote the album around the same time that the PBS show Austin City Limits began showing a rare performance with Stevie Ray Vaughan as a part of their "Best of" series. After the tour, he went back to the studio and didn't return until 2002, when From Austin with Soul was released.
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02/16/2007 - Texas Soul: Austin bluesman W.C. Clark to perform at Cine El Rey  - Read More
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Average Rating : 5              Total Reviews: 4


W.C. Clark  11/02/2005            
Yea yuh
Acoustic negro
W.C. Clark  08/25/2005            
Doug Gearing
Wade Bowen
W.C. Clark  06/20/2005            
W.C. Clark  01/26/2004            
SMcDowell
I was staying in a small pension hotel in Tbilisi, Georgia. My first evening meal in the tiny dining room, I was all alone. Willie Nelson's "Stardust" began playing on the stereo system. "Stardust" and "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" - after Frank Sinatra's "My Way" - my favorites. Assam played it every night when I came in for dinner. My eventual table-mates began teasing him about favoring me by playing the cd I liked so much. Tried to buy it - owner wouldn't part with it. I bought my own. It is one of those special albums that makes you just stop and listen.
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