Author Topic: R.I.P. Bugs Henderson  (Read 3567 times)

Offline TNRabbit

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R.I.P. Bugs Henderson
« on: March 14, 2012, 02:21:33 PM »
Another sad day for Music fans.
 
 
 Texas Blues Guitarist Bugs Henderson, R.I.P.
 
 We're sad to have to report on the passing of Texas blues guitarist Bugs Henderson. Henderson died on Thursday, March 8, 2012 after a short fight with cancer; he was 68 years old.
 
 Born in California but raised in Tyler, Texas, the young Buddy Henderson first picked up a guitar at the age of six, and would fall in love with music. By the time he was a teen, Henderson was working in a record store and sneaking out of the house at night to catch live music in local clubs. He formed his first band, the Sensors, at the age of 16, and later partnered with his friend Ronnie Weiss in the band Mouse and the Traps. They scored a minor hit in 1966 with the song "Public Execution," which would later be immortalized in Lenny Kaye's Nuggets collection of garage-rock singles. It was while playing with Mouse and the Traps that Henderson picked up his nickname of "Bugs."
 
 By the end of the 1960s, Henderson was playing music full-time as the house guitarist at Robin Hood Studios in Tyler, performing on demos by country and rock acts. The blues had become his first love, however, and encouraged by his mentor - legendary blues guitarist Freddie King - Henderson moved to Dallas, Texas and formed the Bugs Henderson Group. The band would perform frequently at the notorious Dallas club The Cellar, and released their debut album At Last in 1978. Henderson would go on to release better than a dozen albums over the next three decades, his most recent being 2009's Vienna Calling with his current band the Shuffle Kings.
 
 Henderson's enormous six-string talents, and his inspired musical mix of blues, rock, jazz, and funk soon vaulted him from club dates to high-profile gigs opening for acts like the Allman Brothers Band, Leon Russell, B.B. King, Eric Clapton, and Ted Nugent, among others. The guitarist made a conscious decision early in his career, however, to put family first, music second, and his career third, and he toured and recorded infrequently through the years. While remaining fairly obscure in the U.S. Henderson was nevertheless a popular festival draw overseas, and although never driven to pursue stardom, he was content to play the music he loved and spend time with his family.
 By Reverend Keith A. Gordon
 Bugs Henderson - Hit The Bricks
TNRabbit


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