Chris Duarte

Chris Duarte (born February 16, 1963) is an American guitarist, singer, and songwriter. Duarte plays a style of Texas blues-rock that draws on elements of jazz, blues, and rock and roll.[1] In his own words, his musical style is a combination of "rockin' blues" and "punk blues."[2] He is signed to Shrapnel Records.

Chris Duarte
Chris Duarte performing November 9, 2012 at the Alamo Cafe in Brockton, Massachusetts
Background information
Born (1963-02-16) February 16, 1963
San Antonio, Texas, U.S.
GenresBlues rock, electric blues, Texas blues
Occupation(s)Musician, singer, songwriter
InstrumentsGuitar, vocals
LabelsAeroliner
Blues Bureau International
Janblues
Provogue
Rounder
Shrapnel
Silvertone
SRS
World Domination
Zoë
Associated actsDoyle Bramhall
Chris Duarte Group
Bobby Mack
Angela Strehli
Websitehttps://duarte.rocks/

Biography

Duarte was born in San Antonio, Texas, and was first inspired by music at age 8 after seeing Fiddler On The Roof on television. Duarte first began playing on his brother's guitar and then obtained his own electric guitar, a Supro, at the age of 14. In 1979, Duarte moved to Austin, Texas, and purchased a 1963 Fender Stratocaster guitar for $500 and began exploring various genres including the jazz music of John Coltrane and Miles Davis. This guitar he primarily used to learn to play, was stolen in 1993.[3] Duarte was inspired by blues legend Stevie Ray Vaughan,[3] and credits John Coltrane as his number-one musical idol.[3]

Duarte won a label recording contract with Silvertone Records and released Texas Sugar/Strat Magik in 1994, and was named "Best New Talent" in Guitar Player's 1995 Reader's Poll. He finished fourth in the magazine's "Best Blues Guitarist" category behind Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy and B.B. King.

Duarte said once in an interview, "I always thought I was a better live performer anyway."[3] Though Duarte has played a limited number of US dates in recent years with the Japanese band Bluestone Company backing him, he performs primarily as a power trio billed as the Chris Duarte Group. Originally formed with long-time friends and collaborators, John Jordan on bass and Jeff Hodges on drums, the current incarnation features Dustin Sargent on bass and John McKnight on drums.

Apart from his band, Duarte has performed with Julie Burrell, Diana Cantu, Bobby Mack, Tracy Conover, Indigenous, and Omar & the Howlers.

Duarte's concert dates in Asheville, North Carolina; Charlotte, North Carolina; and Greenville, South Carolina; were filmed for the PBS television show, The PBS Project, and featured Steve Bailey on bass and Jeff Sipe on drums.

His thirteenth and latest album, Lucky 13, is billed as a Chris Duarte Group release, featuring Dustin Sargent on the bass, and John McKnight on the drums while Duarte plays the guitar and provides vocals.[4] Following its release in 2014, it received positive reviews for its blend of slow, loping blues with psychedelic, rock and jazz overtones.[5]

Select discography

Albums

  • 1987: Chris Duarte & The Bad Boys (SRS)
  • 1994: Texas Sugar/Strat Magik (Silvertone)
  • 1997: Tailspin Headwhack (Silvertone)
  • 2000: Love Is Greater Than Me (Zoë/Rounder)
  • 2003: Romp (Zoë/Rounder)
  • 2007: Blue Velocity (Blues Bureau International)
  • 2008: Vantage Point (Blues Bureau International)
  • 2009: Chris Duarte & Bluestone Co. (Blues Bureau International)
  • 2009: Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, All Things Blue (Blues Bureau International)
  • 2010: Infinite Energy (Janblues)
  • 2011: Blues In The Afterburner (Shrapnel)
  • 2013: My Soul Alone (Shrapnel)
  • 2013: Live (Blues Bureau International)
  • 2014: Lucky 13 (Shrapnel)
  • 2016: The Fan Club (World Domination)

Other appearances

  • 1985: Bobby Mack & Night Train - Night Train (SJM)

Instructional DVDs

  • 1995: The Total Guitar CD Volume 6 - Total Guitar
  • 2006: Axplorations - Hal Leonard Corporation
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References

  1. Skelly, Richard. "Biography: Chris Duarte". Allmusic. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  2. "Chris Duarte Electronic Press Kit – About". Duarte.rocks. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  3. Murf Murphy (1998-05-27). "Chris Duarte Interview - I". Theslant.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  4. "Chris Duarte Group: Lucky 13 Review". Blues Rock Review. 2014-12-10. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  5. "Chris Duarte Group – Lucky 13 | Album Review". Blues Blast Magazine. 2015-01-19. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
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