Times-Herald

King Biscuit to celebrate over three decades of real blues on the banks of the mighty Mississipp­i

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The King Biscuit Blues Festival this year showcases more than 40 acts in four days, starting with Warmup Wednesday, Oct. 9 and running through Saturday, Oct. 12 on the berm of the mighty Mississipp­i.

Three-time Grammy® winner and perennial, King Biscuit favorite-son Bobby Rush is the Saturday night headliner. The Three Kings featuring Albert Castiglia, Chris Cain and D.K. Harrell pay homage to Kings, B.B., Albert and Freddie topping Thursday’s schedule, and eight-time Soul Blues Male Artist of the Year Curtis Selgado headlines Friday.

Now in its 37th year on the banks of the Mississipp­i River, The Biscuit has become the gold standard of blues festivals.

Saturday night headliner Bobby Rush has played every stage at the Biscuit throughout its 37 years. You are invited to help him celebrate his latest crown and third Grammy® win fresh from a tour with Buddy Guy as he comes home to The Biscuit.

B.B. King, Albert King and Freddie King truly were the kings of blues. Now for the first time together as Thursday’s headlining act, three legacies in the making bring back the thrill of the three blues Kings who defined electric blues. Each one a headliner, they have joined forces to bring to life the music of the crowning legends of electric blues.

In two short years, The Three Kings’ D.K. Harrell has become one of the fastest rising stars in blues, his album The Right Man rising to the top of the blues charts. As a toddler he never spoke a word until he was two years old when his mother put B.B. King on in the car.

“The song ‘The Thrill Is Gone’ came on, and I started singing. I almost wrecked the car. For a while I thought, “My baby’s not gonna speak. He’s not gonna talk, but I had a lot to sing about that day, and have been ever since,” she said.

By the age of 17, The Three Kings’ Albert Castiglia had bought every album Freddie King ever put out. Albert would go on to become Jr. Wells’ lead guitarist, and most recently, has toured with Mike Zito as The Blood Brothers. When Rick Booth, President of Intrepid Artists, invited Albert to be one of The Three Kings, his answer was an immediate yes.

“My greatest influence when I first picked up the guitar was B.B. King,” says the third of the Three Kings, Alligator recording artist, Chris Cain. When The Chris Cain Band opened for Albert King at JJ’s in San Jose, California, Albert invited the young bluesman on stage to play guitar with his band and was impressed with Cain’s unique guitar riffs and sound. Albert would surprise Chris by coming to his shows whenever Cain and his band played in Memphis, and he was in town.

Friday headliner Curtis Selgado raises the bar height for blue-eyed soul, giving his vocals a blues accent built on 40-some years as a headliner and stints with The Robert Cray Band, The Nighthawks and Roomful of Blues. The eight-time Soul Blues Male Artist of the Year says, “I want a SONG. I don’t want someone to sit there and play a shuffle. Songs are about melody, and that’s why the ones that work people can grasp onto and sing. That’s what it’s about.”

The headliners are joined by more than 40 acts that showcase blues legacies and legacies-in-themaking offering a broad spectrum of America’s get-down gift to culture. Just a sampling of what to expect are Texas singer/songwriter/guitarist Carolyn Wonderland who has topped blues, Americana, and alt country charts. Detroit Blues Queen Thornetta Davis, a hard driving seven-time Blues Music Award nominee. Marquis Knox has been called “the essence of what blues is all about” by Z.Z. Top’s Billy Gibbons.

The Biscuit has created its own legends on the banks of the Mississipp­i with perennial favorites like Memphis veteran Reba Russell whose credits include recording with U2 and a personal endorsemen­t from the late Rufus “Walkin’ My Dog” Thomas. Her “Heaven Came to Helena” has become the unofficial Biscuit theme song. Texas tornado on the strings Anson Funderburg­h is the only artist to have appeared at all 37 years of The Biscuit. This Texas jump blues guitarist learned his chops from the likes of Freddie King, Jimmy Reed and Albert Collins when these great bluesmen were passing through Dallas-area clubs.

For further informatio­n or media inquiries, contact operations@kingbiscui­tfestival.com.

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