Bob Brozman

Bob Brozman

Bob Brozman (May 2007)
Background information
Born March 8, 1954 (1954-03-08) (age 57)
New York, United States
Genres Blues, country blues, electric blues, folk, gypsy jazz, calypso, ragtime, Hawaiian and Caribbean music
Occupations Musician, guitarist, ethnomusicologist, linguist, anthropologist
Instruments Guitar, slide guitar
Website http://www.bobbrozman.com

Bob Brozman (born March 8, 1954, New York, United States) is an American guitarist and ethnomusicologist.

He has performed in a number of styles such as Gypsy jazz, calypso, Blues, ragtime, Hawaiian and Caribbean music. Brozman has also collaborated with musicians from diverse cultural backgrounds such as India, Africa, Japan, Papua New Guinea and Reunion Island. He has been called "an instrumental wizard" and "a walking archive of 20th Century American music." Brozman maintains a steady schedule throughout the year, touring constantly throughout North America, Europe, Australia, Asia, and Africa. He has recorded numerous albums and has won the Guitar Player Readers' Poll three times in the best blues, best world and best slide guitarist categories. In 1999, Brozman and Woody Mann founded International Guitar Seminars, which hosts over 120 students annually at sites in California, New York, and Canada. From 2000 to 2005 his collaborations have landed in the European Top 10 for World Music five times.

He was formerly an Adjunct Professor at the Department of Contemporary Music Studies at Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.

Brozman is well known for his use of National resonator instruments from the 1920s and 1930s, as well as National Resophonic resonator instruments. He also uses Weissenborn style hollow neck acoustic steel guitars. Among his National instruments is a baritone version of the tricone guitar, which was designed in conjunction with him in the mid to late 1990s. This instrument is now part of National's actual range of products.

Discography

References

External links