June Yamagishi

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June Yamagishi

June Yamagishi at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, 2004
Background information
Birth name Junshi Yamagishi
Born (1953-06-06) June 6, 1953
Origin Ise City, Mie Prefecture, Japan
Genres R&B, blues, jazz
Occupations musician
Instruments guitar
Years active 1970-present
Associated acts The West Road Blues Band
So Bad Revue
Chickenshack
Band of Pleasure
The Wild Magnolias
Papa Grows Funk
Johnny Vidacovich Trio

June Yamagishi (山岸 潤史, born Junshi Yamagishi, June 6, 1953, Ise City, Mie Prefecture, Japan)[1][2] is a Japanese guitarist based in New Orleans, Louisiana. He is the guitarist for bands Papa Grows Funk and the Wild Magnolias.

History

He has been active in the Japanese blues and jazz scene since the early 1970s. In 1972, he formed the West Road Blues Band in Kyoto along with vocalist Takashi "Hotoke" Nagai, guitarist Shinji Shiotsugu, bassist Tadashi Kobori, and drummer Teruo Matsumoto. The band soon became one of the main acts in then thriving blues scene in the Kansai region.

In 1975, Yamagishi went on to join a soul band named So Bad Revue, and in 1979, he released the first album under his name titled Really?!.[1]

During the 1980s, he played with bands Myx and Chickenshack (a Japanese band different from the British one) and in the 1990s, he formed the Band of Pleasure with guitarist David T. Walker and drummer James Gadson and released three albums before they disbanded.

In 1995, Yamagishi left his well-established career behind in Japan to live in New Orleans where he still lives today. Since he found his home in the Crescent City, he has played with musicians including Earl King, Henry Butler, Davell Crawford, Marva Wright, George Porter, Jr. among many others aside from the two groups he has been a member of.

In 2007, he reunited with West Road Blues Band guitarist Shinji Shiotsugu to record Together Again - Blues in New Orleans. It was an all blues album recorded in New Orleans, with support from the local musicians including John Gros and Marva Wright.

In 2011, he appeared on the HBO series Treme, in the episode "Santa Claus, Do You Ever Get The Blues". He auditioned for the band The Soul Apostles, and after playing "Fire on The Bayou" and "Love and Happiness" was successfully employed. On June 7, 2012, he played the Melting Point in Athens, Georgia, along with Martha Reeves (of Martha and the Vandellas), Randall Bramblett, and a host of other musicians celebrating the 60th birthday of famed keyboard artist Ike Stubblefield.

Discography

Solo

  • 1979: Really?! (Flying Dog)
  • 1981: All the Same (Invitation)
  • 1988: Give This Love (Try M)
  • 1993: Jack of the Blues (BMG Victor)
  • 1994: Smokin' Hole (BMG Victor)
  • 2007: Together Again - Blues in New Orleans (Victor Entertainment), with Shinji Shiotsugu

West Road Blues Band

  • 1973: Live In Magazine No.1/2 (Chu Chu Record)
  • 1975: Blues Power (Bourbon)
  • 1975: Live in Kyoto (Bourbon)
  • 1984: Junction (Invitation)
  • 1995: Live in New York (Zain)[3]

Chickenshack

  • 1986: Chickenshack I (Meldac)
  • 1986: Chickenshack II (Meldac)
  • 1986: Urban Square (original soundtrack) (Meldac)
  • 1987: Loving Power (Meldac)
  • 1987: Chickenshack III (Meldac)
  • 1988: Chickenshack IV (Meldac)
  • 1989: Chickenshack V (Meldac)
  • 1990: Loving Power II (Meldac)
  • 1990: Chickenshack VI (Meldac)[4]

Band of Pleasure

  • 1992: Live at Kirin Plaza
  • 1994: Band of Pleasure
  • 1995: A Tiny Step

[5]

The Wild Magnolias

  • 1996: 1313 Hoodoo Street (AIM)
  • 1999: Life Is a Carnival (Metro Blue)
  • 2002: 30 Years & Still Wild (AIM)[6]

Papa Grows Funk

  • 2001: Doin It'
  • 2003: Shakin'
  • 2006: Live at the Leaf
  • 2007: Mr. Patterson's Hat
  • 2012: Needle in the Groove[7]

References

External links

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