Hugh Pool

Hugh Pool
Birth name Hugh Eustis Pool
Born March 17, 1964
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Genres Americana, roots rock, folk, blues, country
Occupation(s) Musician, songwriter, film scorer, sound engineer, instructor, music producer
Instruments Guitar, Vocals, Slide Guitar, Lap Steel, Harmonica, Banjo, Ukelele, Mandolin, Electric guitar
Years active 1983–present
Labels Red Tug Records
Associated acts Mulebone, Hugh Pool Band
Website Hugh Pool

Hugh Pool (born Hugh Eustis Potts Pool, March 17, 1964, Mars, Pennsylvania) is an American musician,[1] songwriter, and producer who plays guitar in a unique style that melds traditional Delta blues, country music and classic and psychedelic rock and roll. His instrument of choice is a National Steel Triolian, a resonator guitar somewhat like a Dobro, played with a spark plug wrench through an Ibanez TS-9 overdrive pedal and a Dunlop Dyna comp compressor. He also plays Harmonica, Banjo, Lap Steel, Mandolin, sings and plays standard electric guitars.

Biography

Inspired by the album Will the Circle Be Unbroken, Neil Young, Deep Purple, Bob Dylan, The Allman Brothers and Creedence Clearwater Revival, Pool started playing the guitar at the age of 15 . At the age of 20, Hugh moved to New York City and began performing in the city's subway system. During this time he frequented The Sun Mountain Cafe, The Speakeasy and Matt Uminov Guitars, where he befriended and played with Chris Whitley and John Campbell, until their respective and untimely deaths.

Pool has shared the stage with such luminaries as Vassar Clements, Patti Smith, Government Mule, Levon Helm, Leslie West, Johnny Winter, Dave Edmunds, John Mayall, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Canned Heat and more.

He has also performed on the Emeril Lagassi Show, The Mitch Albom Show, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, The City (in which he had a recurring roll), and a cameo in the short-lived CBS 2006 television series, Love Monkey. His original songs have been used for television, movies, award-winning documentaries (Don't Shut Me Out) and an off Broadway play (Orphans) starring Mark Consuelos.

Hugh is also a noted recordist who has been featured in Tape Op, and Mix magazine. He records and produces bands at his Brooklyn, NY studio, Excello Recording. Here he has worked with Taj Mahal, Debbie Harry, Michael Pitt, The National Kiki & Herb, Michael Brecker, Radio 4, Joseph Arthur, Susan McKeown, Marah, Sophie Auster, Matt Smith, Larry Campbell, Tony Garnier in addition to a host of others.

Recordings

In 1988 Hugh met Professor Washboard and with keyboardist Brian Mitchell formed a country blues trio called The Catfish. Over the next 5 years The Catfish busked the streets of Northern Europe, did 4 Scandinavian tours and released 3 albums. Yowzah and Delta Delight were recorded on a 4 track cassette machine in Brian Mitchell's apartment and the 3rd, Blackjack, was recorded at Rocking Chair studio in Memphis Tennessee. These 3 releases were sold only in Europe.

His first recording as a leader, Spirits Treat Me Gently, was tracked in 1993 At Duplex Sound in the Tribeca section of Manhattan and released on Pool's own label, Red Tug Records. A second recording, Live at the Rodeo Bar, followed in 2001 with James Wormworth on drums and Whynot Jansveld on bass.

He is a founding member with John Ragusa of the blues group Mulebone, who's releases include Mulebone (recorded in 2001 at Pool's apartment), New Morning in 2010 (recorded at Excello Recording), and Bluesville Sessions in 2011 (recorded at Sirus/XM Radio in Washington DC)

In 2010, while continuing to tour and write with both Mulebone and The Hugh Pool Band, Hugh scored a feature length film (The Jonestown Defense) and recorded and mixed a forthcoming DVD project for the band Pagoda.

Discography

For album credits, click here

The Catfish

Hugh Pool Band

Studio Albums

Live Albums

Mulebone

Film & TV

Compilations

Filmography

List of television credits
Year Title Role Notes
1995 The City Actor Spike
2006 Love Monkey Actor as Himself

References

  1. "POP AND JAZZ GUIDE". The New York Times. 4 January 2002. p. 33. Retrieved 21 September 2011.

External links