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With well over 35
years of performing experience, Michael “Hawkeye” Herman exemplifies the range of possibilities
in acoustic Blues, and personifies versatile musicianship, originality, and
compelling artistry as a Blues storyteller. His dynamic performances have won
him a faithful following, and he leads a very active touring schedule of
performances at festivals, concerts, school programs, and workshops. Hawkeye
performs a wide variety of traditional Blues, ballads, Swing, and original
tunes, on six-string and twelve-string guitar, and is an adept and exciting
practitioner of slide guitar and slide mandolin. His music has been included
in video documentaries and in three hit theatrical productions, and his solo
CD, Blues Alive!, released in 1998,
was greeted by rave reviews and greatly increased the demand for his live
performances at major Blues and Folk festivals. His newest CD, It’s
All Blues To Me!, was released in May of 2004.
Hawkeye
was born in Davenport, IA, on January 11th, 1945. As a teenager, he
discovered a broad variety of Blues music in late night radio broadcasts from
Memphis, Shreveport, Dallas, New Orleans, Little Rock, Chicago, Detroit, and
other points beyond the Iowa/Illinois Quad Cities, in the upper Mississippi
River Valley area where he was growing up. Hawkeye got his first guitar in
1959, at the age of fourteen, and was performing two years later. Seeking to
broaden his musical horizons, he relocated in the San Francisco Bay area in
1968. He sought out, and learned at the feet of many icons of the Blues,
including: Son House, Brownie McGhee, Bukka White,
Mance Lipscomb, Furry Lewis, Lightnin’
Hopkins, John Jackson, K.C.
Douglas, and Sam Chatmon. He became a staple in the Bay Area Blues scene as both
a solo artist and a back-up guitarist and worked with Charles Brown, Haskell
“Cool Papa” Sadler, Sonny
Rhodes, Jimmy McCracklin, Buddy Ace, Charles Houf, Little
Joe Blue, Boogie Jake, and
many others.
Hawkeye
began touring outside of California in 1984, and has performed at Blues and
Folk festivals, and in concert, across the US/Canada and Europe.
His
1989 album, Everyday Living,
featuring Charles Brown and Cool Papa, received much critical acclaim. His
song, “The Great Flood of ’93,” has been used on the soundtracks of two
video documentaries on that Midwest disaster, and has been included in a
compact disc anthology of singer/songwriters produced by the New York based
music magazine, Fast Folk.
As
a music educator, Hawkeye has taken his love of Blues music to students of
all ages, from pre-school to university campuses through his enthusiastically
received Blues In The Schools programs, which he initiated in 1980. He has
taught guitar for over 25 years, and has presented Blues and slide guitar
instructional workshops at major Folk and Blues festivals as a part of his
frequent concert touring schedule. In May of 1998, Hawkeye received the
Keeping The Blues Alive Award for achievement in education from the Blues
Foundation in Memphis. The award was the result of many years of Blues
educational programs he has done for students of all ages. He began this
effort long before most Blues support organizations and Blues festivals even
existed. Hawkeye has helped to initiate in-school educational programs for
many Blues societies and has single-handedly introduced Blues music workshops
to major festivals. He is the co-founder of the Rogue Valley Blues Festival
in his home area of Southern Oregon.
Hawkeye
was the composer/musical director/musician for the hit play, El
Paso Blue, which has had successful runs in San Francisco, Seattle, San
Diego, Chicago, Portland, at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC,
Philadelphia - where he was awarded the prestigious Barrymore Theater Award
for Best Original Music (Philadelphia’ version of the Tony Award) in a play
for the ’99/’00 season - and at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in
Ashland, Oregon - the largest theater complex in the US. Most recently, he
collaborated with Pulitzer Prize winning playwright, Robert Schenkkan, on the
music for the 2002 West Coast premiere of Schenkkan’s play, Handler,
also produced at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival.
Hawkeye
has provided musical soundtracks for a number of video productions, most
recently, Tying Bob Quigley’s
Signature Flies / Volume One (Pegasus Productions).
Hawkeye
served for six years on the Board of Directors of the Blues Foundation in
Memphis, and was chairperson of the Foundation’s education committee. He
maintains an active touring schedule performing in concert and at Blues
festivals throughout the US/Canada/Europe, and his original articles about
Blues history appear in numerous national and regional Blues magazines and
newsletters.
This
musician has definitely carved out a spot for himself in the contemporary
acoustic Blues/Folk field, and has earned a reputation as one of the most
accomplished artists in the genre. Michael “Hawkeye” Herman has been
called “The Midwest’s Blues Ambassador,” and audiences throughout the
US/Canada/Europe have come to know and appreciate Hawkeye’s talent,
dedication, and captivating performances.
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Don "T-Bone" Erickson
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