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ONE HOT JULY
The legendary Swamp Fox, Tony Joe White, returns with "One Hot July", his first album of all new material in over 15 years. Already one of the most revered singer / songwriters in AMerican music, Tony Joe White's songs have been covered by the likes of Elvis Presley, Ray Charles, Brook Benton, Tina Turner and Waylon Jennings to name a few. Highlights of his recording career includes such classics as "Rainy Night In Georgis", "Polk Salad Annie" and "Steamy Windows".
On "One Hot July" he once again showcases the trademark Whomper-Stomper guitar and resonant vocal style that put Louisiana swamp rock on the map and help make him a star in the process. "One Hot July" finds him in top form which will please his legion of diehard fans as well as create a generation of new ones.
Tony Joe White has toured Australia several times, most in february 1998 as support act to Joe Cocker, and has developed a fan base and gained some very influential supporters at media. The last time Tony Joe White toured Australia, music critics praised his performances as being "...in the prcense of an exeptional musician and an authentic exponent of a rotts musical style which has all but died". He was hailed as "...the great missing link between black Delta blues and white Rock'n'roll".
Polygram Australia, 1999.
ONE HOT JULY
Tony Joe White has parlayed his songwriting talent into a modestly successful country and rock career in Europe as well as America. Born July 23, 1943, in Goodwill, LA, White was born into a part-Cherokee family. He began working clubs in Texas during the mid-'60s, and moved to Nashville by 1968. White's 1969 debut album for Monument, Black and White, featured his Top Ten pop hit "Polk Salad Annie" and another charting single, "Roosevelt and Ira Lee (Night of the Moccasin).
"That same year, Dusty Springfield reached the charts with White's "Willie and Laura Mae Jones." Brook Benton recorded a version of White's "Rainy Night in Georgia" that hit number four early in 1970; the song has since become a near-standard with more than 100 credits. White's own "Groupie Girl" began his European success with a short stay on the British charts in 1970. White moved to Warner Bros. in 1971, but success eluded him on his three albums — Tony Joe White, The Train I'm On, and Homemade Ice Cream. Other stars, however, continued to keep his name on the charts during the 1970s: Elvis charted with "For Ol' Times Sake" and "I've Got a Thing About You Baby" (Top Five on the country charts), and Hank Williams Jr. took "Rainy Night in Georgia" to number 13 on the country charts.
White himself recorded Eyes for 20th Century Fox in 1976, but then disappeared for four years. He signed to Casablanca for 1980's The Real Thang but moved to Columbia in 1983 for Dangerous, which included the modest country hits "The Lady in My Life" and "We Belong Together."
Tony Joe White was inactive through much of the '80s, but worked with Tina Turner on her 1989 Foreign Affair album, writing four songs and playing guitar and harmonica. He released Closer to the Truth a year later for his own Swamp label, and toured with Eric Clapton and Joe Cocker to very receptive French crowds (Closer to the Truth has sold 100,000 copies in that country alone).
His 1993 album, Path of a Decent Groove, was released only in France, though Warner's The Best of Tony Joe White earned an American release the same year. Lake Placid Blues (1995) and One Hot July (1998) were Europe-only efforts until 2000, when Hip-O Records brought out One Hot July in the U.S., giving White his first new major label domestic release in 17 years.John Bush, 2000.
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