Artist's albums
I Want To Know
1999 · album
Fast Fingers
1998 · album
Chicago Blues Nights Vol. 2
1997 · album
Come Back Baby (Live In Chicago)
1995 · album
Chicago Blues Nights Vol. 1
1995 · album
Kant Sheck Dees Bluze
1992 · album
All For Business
1990 · album
Feel The Blues
1985 · album
Born in Poverty (Recorded in France 1971-1974)
1971 · album
Classic Chicago Studio Session 1982
2022 · album
The Tide
2020 · single
The Chicago Blues Box 2, Vol. 3
2017 · album
Feel the Blues 2014 Remix
2014 · album
Tell Me Baby
2004 · album
West Side Guitar Hero
2002 · album
Similar artists
Eddie Taylor
Artist
Son Seals
Artist
Magic Slim
Artist
Magic Sam
Artist
Billy Boy Arnold
Artist
A.C. Reed
Artist
J. B. Hutto
Artist
Eddy Clearwater
Artist
Hubert Sumlin
Artist
Jimmy Johnson
Artist
Homesick James
Artist
James Cotton
Artist
Byther Smith
Artist
Lazy Lester
Artist
Luther Allison
Artist
Carey Bell
Artist
Biography
Chicago guitarist Jimmy Dawkins would have preferred to leave his longtime nickname "Fast Fingers" behind. It was always something of a stylistic misnomer anyway; Dawkins' West Side-styled guitar slashed and surged, but seldom burned with incendiary speed. Dawkins' blues were generally of the brooding, introspective variety -- he didn't engage in flashy pyrotechnics or outrageous showmanship. It took a long time for Dawkins to progress from West Side fixture to nationally known recording artist. He rode a Greyhound bus out of Mississippi in 1955, dressing warmly to ward off the Windy City's infamous chill factor. Only trouble was, he arrived on a sweltering July day! Harpist Billy Boy Arnold offered the newcomer encouragement, and he eventually carved out a niche on the competitive West Side scene (his peers included Magic Sam and Luther Allison). Sam introduced Dawkins to Delmark Records boss Bob Koester. Fast Fingers, Dawkins' 1969 debut LP for Delmark -- which remained his best album -- was a taut, uncompromising piece of work that won the Grand Prix du Disque de Jazz from the Hot Club of France in 1971 as the year's top album. Andrew "Big Voice" Odom shared the singing and Otis Rush the second guitar duties on Dawkins' 1971 encore, All for Business. But after his Delmark LP Blisterstring, Dawkins' subsequent recordings lacked intensity until 1991's oddly titled Kant Sheck Dees Bluze for Chicago's Earwig Records. After that, Dawkins waxed discs for Ichiban and Fedora, and continued to tour extensively until health problems slowed him down. Jimmy Dawkins passed away April 10, 2013. ~ Bill Dahl, Rovi