
“Paul Oscher plays the
soul I feel”
Muddy Waters
“Paul Oscher’s a monster: harp, piano, and
guitar—plays slide like Muddy.” James Cotton
“A legend… a musician’s musician. When I saw him
working with Muddy Waters
and Otis Spann, it was the toughest band I’d ever seen… an inspiration.”
Rick Estrin of Little Charlie & the Nitecats
“Classic Chicago Blues… his blues has the bite and
gravity of the tradition he upholds.”
John Pareles, The New York Times
“…a
deep satisfying blues experience.”
Critics Choice, Billboard
“You can hear Muddy in his guitar, and Otis Spann
in the piano, but the overriding sensation is of Oscher at the height of his
powers and maturity. This is a man who has spent his life steeped in a blues
tradition, and it
shows.”
Juke Blues (U.K.)
“He’s got all my respect.”
William Clark
“The most natural musician I know.”
Jerry
Portnoy, harp with Muddy Waters & Eric Clapton
“The first guy that I ever met who could really
play the harp, he used tongue
blocking before any of his contemporaries.”
Magic Dick
“Muddy Water’s album Live at Mr. Kelly’s, featuring
Paul Oscher on harmonica
was one of the first blues albums I purchased when I was in high school. His
harmonica playing has been inspirational and I admire the road he has
traveled. He paved the way for all the blues harmonica players of my
generation.”
Bob Corritore, harp player & owner of The Rhythm Room,
Phoenix, Arizona
“No one on the scene can beat his low-down harp
tone, his ability to summon
Muddy’s spirit in his slide guitar playing, and his blue note piano
technique. He’s right where he’s always been: smack in the middle of the
real unadulterated blues.”
Kim Field, Author of Harmonicas, Harps, and
Heavy Breathers
“…If you like the real thing, that is the blues
played without compromise:
Paul Oscher’s ‘Down In The Delta’ should be in your CD player right now.”
Sing Out!
"A must for devotees and players." Knight
Rider wire service
“Paul Oscher not only channels the guitar sound of Muddy
Waters, piano of Otis Spann, and the deepest toned blues harp this side of
Big Walter Horton,
he’s also a fine songwriter in the classic blues tradition. Oscher is one of
a kind.”
Scott Dirks, Author, Little Walter biography, Blues With A
Feeling
“Paul Oscher’s blues are deep as the Delta soil.
With just a guitar, a slide, a harmonica and his voice, Oscher rekindles the
fire, soul and spirit of the music of the late, great Muddy Waters.”
Ted
Drozdowski, The Boston Phoenix, Tower Pulse!, Guitar World, and winner 1998
Keeping the Blues Alive in
Journalism Award
“Paul Oscher carries the soul of Muddy
Waters in his music, he deserves wider
recognition as a superb musician, singer and songwriter.”
Sandra Tooze,
Author of Mojo Man biography of Muddy Waters
“He seems to be channeling the riffs
straight from Blues Heaven.”
Blue Suede News
“One of the best authentic blues albums
of the year.”
Andy Grigg Real Blues
Magazine
|


|
download one-page bio here >>

Muddy Waters & Paul Oscher
Miss Herbs Moonlight Lounge in
St. Louis, Missouri 1968
Paul Oscher,
award-winning blues singer, songwriter, recording artist, and
multi-instrumentalist, (harmonica, guitar, piano, melodica, and
bass harp), first came to national attention as Muddy Waters’
harmonica player, 1967-1972 following in the footsteps of
Little Walter, Junior Wells, James Cotton, and
Big Walter Horton. Paul Oscher was the first white
musician in the world to become a full-time member of a black
blues band of this stature.
Paul started playing the blues at the
age of twelve when his uncle gave him a marine band harmonica
and was taught the rudiments of blues harmonica by Jimmy
Johnson, a southern medicine show harp player. By the time
Paul was fifteen he had hooked up with guitarist/singer
Little Jimmy Mae and was playing professionally in soul
revues at black clubs like the Baby Grand, The 521 Cub, Seville
Lounge and the Nitecap.
In the mid-l960s Paul met Muddy Waters back stage at the Apollo
Theatre and in 1967, when Muddy came to New York without a harp
player, Paul sat in with the band. He played two
numbers: "Baby
Please Don’t Go" and "Blow Winds Blow." Muddy hired him on the
spot. Working alongside blues greats like Muddy Waters, Otis
Spann, Sammy Lawhorn, Pee Wee Madison and S.P. Leary, Paul
learned the deep Blues phrasing and timing characteristic of his
music today. Paul lived on the Southside of Chicago in Muddy
Waters’ house along with Otis Spann. Spann taught Paul the
piano. Paul learned the guitar by looking over the shoulders of
Muddy and Sammy Lawhorn.

(Left to right) Paul Oscher, Otis Spann, S.P.
Leary, Pee Wee Madison,
Little Sonny, Muddy Waters, Snake Johnson - Germany, 1968
While in Muddy’s band Paul toured the US and abroad and played
all kinds of venues from the rough and tumble juke joints of the
chitlin’ circuit to the major concert stages of the world and
during that time backed up major blues artists such as John Lee
Hooker, Earl Hooker, Son House, Fred McDowell, Lightning
Hopkins, T. Bone Walker, Albert King, Magic Sam and Big Mama
Thornton. Paul recorded a number of records with Muddy Waters
for the legendary Chess Records label in Chicago. These
recordings and live performances would influence an entire
generation of young players. Paul remained in Muddy’s band till
the end of 1971 when he left to form his own band using the name
Brooklyn Slim.
In 1976, Paul toured Europe with Louisiana Red and continued
playing with his own band in the New York area as well as
backing up Big Joe Turner, Doc Pomus, Victoria Spivey, Big
Walter Horton and Johnny Copeland.
In the 80s, Paul quit music—he’d gotten tired of the life and
the disappointments—and got a day job. But he couldn’t stay away
from the blues for long and in 1992 hooked up with piano players
Dave Maxwell and Bob Gaddy and his old drummer Candy MacDonald
and started playing again. His career took off. He recorded
several tapes for Mojo Productions and Lollipop Records Under
the name Brooklyn Slim. In 1994, Paul toured in the US with
Jimmy Rogers and the Muddy Waters Tribute Band. In 1995 he
recorded his first CD, The Deep Blues of Paul Oscher
for Blues Planet records which led to a second CD with Viceroy
Records, Knockin’ on the Devils’ Door and a W.C.
Handy Award Nomination. Paul started touring the US and abroad
with his own six-piece band. Since that time Paul has recorded
more CDs in his own name and has appeared on other artists’
recordings and on videos and movie soundtracks.

Carey Bell and Paul Oscher, San Francisco
Blues Festival, 1999
"The Superharps of Muddy Waters"
photo © David Horwitz
In 1999, Paul performed at the San Francisco Blues Festival
with Carey Bell and Jerry Portnoy in a show titled
"The Super Harps of Muddy Waters" and traveled to Europe
with Willie "Big Eyes" Smith.
In October 2000, Paul Oscher won the L.A. Music Award for
"Outstanding Blues Artist of the Year".
Paul is now touring as a solo artist or in a trio setting. His
"Alone with the Blues" show, featuring Paul on harmonica,
bass harmonica, guitar and piano, has received rave reviews from
blues fans, musicians, press, promoters and club owners. As a
songwriter, his songs have been covered by Alligator recording
artists Little Charlie & the Nightcats and Blind Pig
recording artist Big Bill Morganfield.

Paul
Oscher - 2006 Blues
Music Awards (formerly W.C. Handy
Awards)
photo © Jen Taylor
www.vividpix.com
|
|
2004 was a busy and very productive year. Paul’s Alone
with the Blues album for the Electro-Fi label, was
released on May 18, 2004 and was nominated for FOUR 2005 W.C.
Handy Awards: "Acoustic Blues Album of the Year",
"Acoustic Blues Artist of the Year", "Harmonica instrumentalist
of the Year", and "Blues song of the Year". Paul also
appeared on Mos Def’s CD New Danger
released Oct 12, 2004 on the Geffen label. Paul is also a
featured guest artist along with Mickey Champion and Johnny Dyer
on The Mannish Boys’ 2004 Delta Groove release That
Represent Man. Paul also appears on Mark Hummel
and Johnny Dyer’s tribute to Muddy Waters CD
Rollin’ Fork Revisited released Nov 2004 on Mountain Top
records.

Hubert Sumlin, Eric Clapton. Dave Maxwell,
Paul Oscher, and Keith Richards
In the studio recording Hubert Sumlin's new album
In January 2005, the long awaited Hubert Sumlin CD
About Them Shoes was released on the Tone Cool/Artemis
label and features Paul along with Eric Clapton, Keith
Richards, Levon Helm and others. This album garnered
a Grammy nomination and won a Blues Music Award
for "Traditional Blues Album of the Year".
Paul’s
latest release, Down in the Delta, won two 2006
Blues Music Awards (formerly W.C. Handy Awards);
"Acoustic Album of the Year" and "Acoustic Artist of the
Year".
Paul is currently in the process of writing a book about his
life’s experience in the blues, some of which has already been
quoted in extensive interviews for Sandra Tooze’s book about
Muddy Waters, Mojo Man, and Robert Gordon’s book
about Muddy Waters, Can’t be Satisfied. An excerpt
of Paul’s book appears in the companion book to the PBS series
Martin Scorsese Presents the Blues.
As Muddy Waters’ harp player Paul Oscher inspired a whole
generation of blues players including Rick Estrin,
Jerry Portnoy, Paul Delay, and William Clark.
Paul Oscher is the real deal—he learned his blues from the
Masters. He plays only the real, unadulterated,
down-in-the-alley, gutbucket blues. He is not a retro player; he
just plays the blues the way he learned them… lowdown and
lonesome and has been doing so for the last forty years.
<< back to top
|
|
 |
 |