Artist's albums
The Bluebird Recordings 1934-1936
1997 · album
The Bluebird Recordings, 1936-1938
1997 · album
Tampa Red The Guitar Wizard
1994 · album
Tampa Red Vol. 15 1951-1953
1993 · album
Tampa Red Vol. 6 1934-1935
1993 · album
Tampa Red Vol. 7 1935-1936
1993 · album
Tampa Red Vol. 8 1936-1937
1993 · album
Tampa Red Vol. 9 1937-1938
1993 · album
Red of the South
2022 · compilation
Tampa Red Is Still My Name
2021 · album
They Called Him Tampa Red
2020 · album
Anna Lou Blues
2018 · album
Big Fat Mama
2018 · album
So Far, so Good
2018 · album
Travel On
2018 · album
His Blues
2016 · album
Song Collection
2016 · album
Voice of the Blues
2015 · album
Greatest Blues Licks 1931-1946
2010 · album
Sweet Little Angel
2009 · EP
Sugar Mama Blues
2009 · album
Denver Blues
2009 · EP
The Ultimate Jazz Archive 10 (4 Of 4)
2007 · album
The Best of Tampa Red
2006 · compilation
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Biography
Out of the dozens of fine slide guitarists who recorded blues, only a handful -- Elmore James, Muddy Waters, and Robert Johnson, for example -- left a clear imprint on tradition by creating a recognizable and widely imitated instrumental style. Tampa Red was another influential musical model. During his heyday in the '20s and '30s, he was billed as "The Guitar Wizard," and his stunning slide work on electric or National steel guitar shows why he earned the title. His 30-year recording career produced hundreds of sides: hokum, pop, and jive, but mostly blues (including classic compositions "Anna Lou Blues," "Black Angel Blues," "Crying Won't Help You," "It Hurts Me Too," and "Love Her with a Feeling"). Early in Red's career, he teamed up with pianist, songwriter, and latter-day gospel composer Georgia Tom Dorsey, collaborating on double-entendre classics like "Tight Like That." Listeners who only know Tampa Red's hokum material are missing the deeper side of one of the mainstays of Chicago blues. His peers included Big Bill Broonzy, with whom he shared a special friendship. Members of Lester Melrose's musical mafia and drinking buddies, they once managed to sleep through both games of a Chicago White Sox doubleheader. Eventually alcohol caught up with Red, and he blamed his latter-day health problems on an inability to refuse a drink. During Red's prime, his musical venues ran the gamut of blues institutions: down-home jukes, the streets, the vaudeville theater circuit, and the Chicago club scene. Due to his polish and theater experience, he is often described as a city musician or urban artist in contrast to many of his more limited musical contemporaries. Furthermore, his house served as the blues community's rehearsal hall and an informal booking agency. According to the testimony of Broonzy and Big Joe Williams, Red cared for other musicians by offering them a meal and a place to stay and generally easing their transition from country to city life. Today's listener will enjoy Tampa Red's expressive vocals and perhaps be taken aback by his kazoo solos. His songwriting has stood the test of time, and any serious slide guitar student had better be familiar with Red's guitar wizardry. ~ Barry Lee Pearson, Rovi