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b. Alexis Andrew Nicholas Koerner,
19 April 1928, Paris, France.
d. 1 January 1984, London, England. |
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Alexis Korner was an
English blues musician, born to an Austrian father and Greek
mother. Alexis Korner is probably better remembered as a networker
and blues historian, alhough he was a proficient guitarist and a
distinctive (if not accomplished) vocalist. Often referred to as
"the Father of British Blues", Korner was instrumental in bringing
together various
English blues musicians, such as John Mayall as well as
Brian Jones,
Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, who went on to form the Rolling
Stones. This facet is especially evident in his live recordings
which read as a veritable who's who of the British music scene of
the 60s and 70s. He also brought previously unknown American blues
artists to England to perform. There is an apocryphal story that
the Rolling Stones went to stay at Korner's house late one night,
in the early '60s, after a performance. They entered in the
accepted way, by climbing in through the kitchen window, to find
Muddy Waters' band sleeping on the kitchen floor. Always a blues
purist, Korner criticised better-known British blues musicians,
during the blues boom of the late '60s, for their blind adherence
to Chicago blues, as if the music came in no other form.
Ironically, he would have his greatest commercial success in the
early 1970s with a jazz-rock band called C. C. S. - short for The
Collective Consciousness Society, formed with musical director
John Cameron, singer Peter Thorup and record producer Mickie Most.
They had hits with "Walkin'", "Tap Turns on the Water", "Brother"
which later became the theme tune to the Top 20 (later Top 40) on
BBC Radio 1, "The Band Played the Boogie", and the
best-remembered, an instrumental version of Led Zeppelin's "Whole
Lotta Love". This version was used for many years as the theme
music for the BBC television show "Top Of The Pops". It is said
that Jimmy Page found out about this new singer, Robert Plant,
that had been jamming with the well respected Alexis (whom
wondered why Robert had not yet been discovered). Robert, Alexis,
and Steve Miller were in the process of recording a full album
with Plant on vocals until Jimmy had asked him to join "the New
Yardbirds" aka Led Zeppelin. Only two songs are in circulation of
these recordings: "Steal Away" and "Operator". After they
disbanded in 1974 he formed another group, Snape. In his last
years, he turned more to broadcasting, and presented a weekly
blues and soul show for BBC Radio 1 until a few weeks before his
admission to hospital and eventual death from cancer.
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