Career
Born in Great Lakes, Branch was raised in
Los Angeles,
California, but in 1969 he moved to
Chicago where he attended the
University of Illinois. He soon took the place of the
harmonica player
Carey Bell in a
band led by
Willie Dixon called the Chicago Blues All-Stars.
In the 1970s he founded his own group, The Sons of the Blues, along with
Lurrie Bell on
guitar and Freddie Dixon on
bass guitar. They are the sons of Carey Bell and Willie Dixon respectively, and they
recorded for
Alligator Records and under new personnel for Red Beans Records. The new band consisted of Carlos Johnson on guitar and J.W. Williams on vocals and bass guitar. He has also recorded for
Verve Records and Evidence Records.
[1]
[2]
Other than co-headlining Alligator's 1990 summit meeting
Harp Attack!
with fellow
harp masters
Junior Wells, Carey Bell, and
James Cotton, Branch largely busied himself with extensive
sideman work (he's first-call session harpist around the Windy City) and teaching an innovative "Blues in the Schools" program until 1995.
[3]
Branch has appeared at numerous major festivals including the
Long Beach Blues Festival [4],
Chicago Blues Festival [5], and the
San Francisco Blues Festival [6].
See also
- List of Chicago blues musicians
- List of Electric blues musicians
- List of Harmonica blues musicians
Gallery
References
- Billy Branch Biography
- Encyclopedia of the Blues
- Allmusic biography - accessed February 2008
- http://www.csulb.edu/~d49er/archives/2000/fall/diversions/v8n4-festival.html
- http://www.chicagoreader.com/features/stories/sidebars/music/BLUESFEST/
- http://www.sfblues.com/highlights/2000/