Rod Piazza

born on 18/12/1947 in Riverside, CA, United States

Rod Piazza

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Rod Piazza

Rod Piazza (born December 18, 1947,[1] Riverside, California) is an American blues harmonica player and singer. He has been playing with his band The Mighty Flyers since 1980 which he formed with his pianist wife Honey Piazza.[2] Their boogie sound combines the styles of jump blues, West Coast blues and Chicago blues.

Biography

Piazza grew up in Southern California, where he studied blues records and perfected his harmonica work. He originally started on guitar, an instrument he began playing at the age of six or seven.[3]

In the mid 1960s, Piazza formed his first band The House of DBS, which later changed its name to the Dirty Blues Band. The band signed with ABC-Bluesway and released two albums in 1967 and 1968.[1] The band broke up in 1968, and Piazza formed Bacon Fat that year.[4] Piazza's idol and mentor, George "Harmonica" Smith joined the band and they had a "dual harp" sound. Bacon Fat released two albums the following two years. Piazza left and worked in other bands before going solo in 1974.

He formed the Chicago Flying Saucer Band the following year, which later evolved into the Mighty Flyers. The band recorded their first album in 1980. Piazza started touring and recording as Rod Piazza and the Mighty Flyers Blues Quartet, after the departure of long-time bassist Bill Stuve in the early 2000s. Piazza has recorded twenty-four studio albums between 1967 and 2009, including the live concert DVD Big Blues Party in 2005 (recorded at the Sierra Nevada Brewing Company in Chico, California). In addition, he has appeared as a guest performer on over twenty-one releases since 1968.[5] Between 1995 and 2001, Rick Holmstrom played in the Mighty Flyers.[6]

Piazza has toured blues clubs, concert venues and festivals in the US, Canada, United Kingdom, Germany, Japan and Spain, among other countries. He and his wife currently live in Riverside, California.

Discography

Pre-Mighty Flyers Era

  • 1967 Dirty Blues Band / Dirty Blues Band (ABC-Bluesway)
  • 1969 Dirty Blues Band / Stone Dirt (ABC-Bluesway)
  • 1970 Bacon Fat / Grease One for Me (Blue Horizon)
  • 1971 Bacon Fat / Tough Dude (Blue Horizon)
  • 1973 Rod Piazza / Blues Man (LMI)
  • 1979 Chicago Flying Saucer Band / Flying Saucer Band (Gangster)

The Mighty Flyers

  • 1980 Radioactive Material (Right Hemisphere)
  • 1981 The Mighty Flyers (Right Hemisphere)
  • 1982 Robot Woman II (Shanghai)
  • 1984 From the Start to the Finnish (Right Hemisphere)
  • 1985 File Under Rock (Takoma)
  • 1985 Harp Burn (Murray Brothers; Rod Piazza solo)
  • 1988 So Glad to Have the Blues (Murray Brothers; Rod Piazza solo)
  • 1991 Blues in the Dark (Black Top)
  • 1992 Alphabet Blues (Black Top)
  • 1994 Live at B.B. King's Club (Big Mo)
  • 1997 Tough and Tender (Tone-Cool)
  • 1999 Here and Now (Tone-Cool)
  • 2001 Beyond The Source (Tone-Cool)
  • 2004 Keepin' It Real (Blind Pig)
  • 2005 For The Chosen Who (Delta Groove)
  • 2007 Thrillville (Delta Groove)
  • 2009 Soul Monster (Delta Groove)
  • 2011 Almighty Dollar (Delta Groove)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Rod Piazza & the Mighty Flyers History
  2. [Rod Piazza at All Music Guide Biography on Allmusic]
  3. Interview with Rod Piazza
  4. Rod Piazza & the Mighty Flyers History Page 2
  5. Rod Piazza Discography
  6. [Rod Piazza at All Music Guide Rick Holmstrom biography by Char Ham]. Allmusic.com. Retrieved on October 8, 2011.

External links

This page was last modified 07.12.2013 16:34:43

This article uses material from the article Rod Piazza from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia and it is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.