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Bobby G.: Press/Reviews

UPCOMING Radio Show Interview

CB Roy, long-time blues show radio host ("Mostly Blues, WWCU 90.5 FM) is planning to interview Bobby G on his weekly Sunday night show, during July -- immediately after a regular Sunday afternoon gig at Annie's Food & Spritis, Sylva.
Stay tuned! Date for broadcast: TBA
CB Roy "Mostly Blues" - WWCU 90.5 FM (Jun 17, 2008)

News Reviews

Blues soloist Bobby G: LIFE OF BLUES
By Greg Sessoms • Correspondent

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It’s funny how people who excel in a particular endeavor, be it athletic or artistic, often make the extraordinary look easy. Whether it is Tiger Woods chipping in from 30 yards out or the late painter Bob Ross making a large pine tree appear on a canvas with just a few brush strokes (“I think we’ll let this little guy live right over here”), the seeming ease with which the truly talented perform often belies the magnificent achievements that result.

Bobby Gilbert, a.k.a. Bobby G., is just this sort of blues guitarist.

Gilbert’s sound, with its intricate chord progressions and frenetic pace, brings to mind guitar originals such as Carlos Santana and J.J. Cale. Heady company indeed, but it is the seemingly relaxed manner in which Gilbert delivers such a high-energy blues sound that impresses most. Gilbert does not display the extreme face contortions or over-wrought arm motions that some other guitarists indulge in. He plays with an efficiency and ease of motion that almost seems at odds with the torrent of notes screaming out of the amp, and can only be the product of decades of experience. If you ignore his fingers gliding smoothly up and down the fret board and look only at his face, you could almost forget he is the man actually playing.

Gilbert’s stage presence is understated as well. One will not find pyrotechnics, choreographed dancers or elaborate costumes (Gilbert usually performs in a pair of sneakers, blue jeans and an open button-up shirt over a T shirt) At a Bobby G. show there isn’t even a band as the percussion, bass, brass and other instruments that accompany Gilbert’s searing blues guitar are recorded beforehand by Gilbert and reproduced by a small, gray box called a sequencer. The show is all about Bobby G. and his guitar and that is more than enough.

Gilbert comes by his talent honestly, having started playing guitar in the 1960s as a child growing up in Arkansas.

“I was 11 or 12 when I started. I had a cousin who played guitar and he was the one who really got me into it. He was quite a bit older than I and was playing all that 60s rocker stuff like The Venturas. He showed me some stuff and I took lessons for a couple of weeks, but the instructor was giving me stuff that I didn’t want to learn, so I wound up teaching myself. I got a two-speed tape recorder and I would slow down songs and listen to the guitar parts and play along,” said Gilbert.

Gilbert continued to learn how to play and eventually formed a touring band called Outer Drive while he attended college in Michigan. Gilbert’s hobby would soon become a profession that would place him in the company of some of the biggest names in rock and blues.

“I met the manager for the band Frigid Pink, who had a big hit with their cover of ‘House of the Rising Sun’ (the single reached number seven on the charts) and started playing in their band. I stayed with them for four years and basically got to tour the world. I finished college too and got a degree in psychology. I’ve never used it,” said Gilbert.

Indeed, Gilbert has managed to support himself as a professional musician ever since, and in the years that followed his tour with Frigid Pink, has appeared and toured with such musical greats as B.B. King and Buddy Guy. He also performed at AC/DC lead singer Bryan Johnson’s 50th birthday party. True to his understated playing style, Gilbert remains modest about his success as a musician.

“Some people will tell you you’re good and this or that. I’m not going to say I’m great or better than anyone else. I’m just lucky. I’d rather be lucky than good,” said Gilbert.

Gilbert now resides near Bethel in Haywood County and continues to tour the country as a solo act as well as play a few shows locally at Towne Square in Waynesville. He also has just released his first solo album titled Smokey Mountain Blues available at www.cdbaby.com. While the songs on the album are lyrically simple and adhere strictly to the conventional blues paradigm (lost love, lost friends, regret, etc.) they do showcase Gilbert’s impressive talent as a world-class blues guitarist.
Bobby G. and the Blues
By Chuck Waters

Bobby G. has pretty much seen it all during his 30 odd years in the music business. One of his earliest claims to fame is when he moved to Michigan and joined the rock band Frigid Pink, which scored a massive hit with their heavier-than-metal version of The House of the Rising Son, which was a hit for the British blues band The Animals in the mid-60s.

I think The Animals version sold about 800,000 copies, and ours sold ten million. To me, that song destroyed Frigid Pink as a band. That’s all anyone wanted to hear, and we had a lot of other great songs.

Bobby G. has knocked around quite a bit since those heady days touring as guitarist with The Pink. He was voted top guitarist and recently relocated to the Waynesville area the butt of Cold Mountain, to be precise. He says his time is taken up with recording and playing music, he is involved with a couple of bands and has a solo show, which he¹ll be doing a set at Towne Square on Main Street in Waynesville Friday night.

It sounds like a seven-piece band with drums and horns and everything, but it is just me and my guitar, a computer sequencer and a microphone.

The Towne Square gig will also serve as a CD showcase for his new album, Smokey Mountain Blues.

I try to do my own thing. It¹s all originals. I play all the regular instruments on it, guitar, bass, drums and keyboards. I wanted it to have a raw sound, no special effects, no slick production,he said.

In Florida, Bobby G. had been working with a strong three-piece band Eddie E. on bass, and Gary Guzzardo, previously with the Marshall Tucker Band, on drums. Now that he¹s in Western North Carolina, he says he¹s thinking about putting another three-piece together, one that appreciates his passion for Chicago-style rock, rhythm and blues.

I really like that electric blues Muddy Waters, Howlin Wolf and Buddy Guy. I have done shows with B.B. King and James Peterson ‹ he is like 65 and still does it. I just love to play, and have been fortunate enough to have had made a great living at it. I am the best kept secret.

Over the years, Bobby G. and traded licks with some of the best musicians in the business. Here are some random quotes:

They latest book I read was Jerry Wexler¹s ŒRhythm and The Blues. I loved everything about it.

Aerosmith is one of my favorite blues-based metal bands. They are still cranking it out.

I played with Nazareth and was at Brian Johnson¹s 50th birthday party, sucking on a bottle of whiskey and a cigarette. AC/DC are still balls to the wall.I¹ve never met Keith Richards, but I have to admire his longevity. One of my fondest memories was sharing a bill with Mountain, Humble Pie and Rod Stewart and the Faces. And Frank Zappa was one of my heroes.

Pete Townsend [The Who] is the greatest rhythm guitar player in the world.
Chuck Waters - The Guide (Aug 24, 2005)
Too Old to Rock 'n Roll?
By Art Levy - Staff Writer

A few people sat waiting in the dark on a Tuesday night, drinking their beer and smoking their cigarettes. They watched the band set up behind the pool tables, and then they watched Bobby Gilbert (a/k/a Bobby G) strap on his guitar and get ready to play.

Gilbert, 40, has wanted to be a rock star since he was a child. Along the way, he had his successes and his failures, but the bottom line is he's still trying. He has a blues band now, called The Bobby G Band, and they play festivals and night clubs throughout Southwest Florida and, on nights like this, they play bars. They began their first set at Sidelines Bar & Grill in Bradenton with a blues classic by B. B. King.

"The thrill is gone," Gilbert sang, but deep down, he knows this really isn't true.

After more than 30 years of performing and being in so many bands he can't remember all the names, Gilbert still gets excited about getting up on stage and playing his guitar. "Every single time I make music, it's cool," he said. "The bad nights are even cool."

In this way, Gilbert is no different from Pete Townsend, Roger Daltrey and John Entwistle, who -- as original members of the band The Who -- continue playing rock 'n roll long after most figured they would. The Who, currently on a tour of the United States, is scheduled to perform at Tampa's Ice Palace. And another veteran band, the Rolling Stones, announced Friday that they would begin a U.S. tour, probably in September. Gilbert likes the idea of that because Townsend, Daltrey, and Entwistle are even older than he is. So re Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ron Wood and Charlie Watts of the Stones.

"Those guys are in their 50s," Gilbert said. "That's cool. I'm happy for them that they still want to be making music, but they don't inspire me or anything like that. I'd be making my music, anyway." This has always been Gilbert's dream. As a teenager, playing in rock bands, he decided that this is what he wanted to do the rest of his life. Even back then, the thought of being a middle-aged man playing music appealed to him. It still does.

"I knew I'd be doing this one way or another," he said. "I just didn't know if I'd be lucky enough to make a living at it." Gilbert actually decided to be a rock star when he was 5. "I saw The Beatles on TV," he said. "People were screaming and they were playing. I thought that was great, so that's what I wanted, too."

Growing up in Detroit, Gilbert started his first band when he was 10. "I remember playing little pre-teen parties and stuff," he said. "It was pretty strange. It was more like everybody getting up and banging on their instruments. Nobody had a style or anything." All through school, Gilbert was in a band. Eventually, he went to college and got a degree in psychology, but all he wanted was to make his living as a musician.

During the early 1970's, he recorded and toured with a rock band called Frijid Pink. That was probably the highlight of his career. He said the band traveled the world and performed in big venues. That ended, though, and he moved to Sarasota in 1977. During the hard times, he worked day jobs to survive, but he never gave up on his music. He did construction for a while, and poured concrete. For a time, he worked 14-hour days selling real estate and still played in a band at night. For the past 14 years, though, his music career has gone well enough to pay the bills without any help from a day job. All in all, he has no complaints.

"It's not like a regular job where you really have to work hard," he said. "What more could you ask for, to get paid to play? It's something you can do all your life." And that's just what he plans to do. "Look at B.B. King," he said. "The guy is 71 and he's playing 300 dates a year, so I can't see anybody being too old to play music."
Art Levy - Staff Writer - Sarasota Herald Tribune (Aug 10, 1997)