Harvey Mandel (born
March 11, 1945, in Detroit, Michigan, United States) is an American
guitarist known for his innovative approach to electric guitar playing. A
professional at twenty, he played with Charlie Musselwhite, Canned
Heat, The Rolling Stones, and John Mayall before starting a solo career.
Mandel is one of the first rock guitarists to use two-handed fretboard tapping. Mandel was born in Detroit, Michigan but grew up in Morton Grove, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago.
His
first record was the album Stand Back! Here Comes Charley Musselwhite's
Southside Band in 1966 with Charlie Musselwhite. Described in 1997's
Legends of Rock Guitar as a "legendary" album, it was influential in
bridging the gap between blues and rock and roll, with Mandel's
"relentless fuzztone, feedback-edged solos, and unusual syncopated
phrasing."[3] He relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area, performing
often at a club called The Matrix, where local favorites like Jerry
Garcia or Elvin Bishop would sit in and jam. He then met up with
pioneering San Francisco disc jockey and producer Abe 'Voco' Kesh (Abe
Keshishian), who signed Mandel to Philips Records and produced his first solo album, Cristo Redentor in 1968. Mandel
recorded with Barry Goldberg on a bootleg from Cherry Records and
recorded with Graham Bond. He cut two more solo LPs for Philips,
Righteous (1969) and Games Guitars Play (1970), followed by three more
solo albums for the independent record label Janus in the early 1970s,
which included Baby Batter.
01. Righteous
02. Jive Samba
03. Love Of Life
04. Poontang
05. Just A Hair More
06. Summer Sequence
07. Short's Stuff
08. Boo-Bee-Doo
09. Campus Blues
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