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Lightnin Malcolm
At age 30, singer, guitarists,
songwriter, and wild live performer Steve “Lightnin” Malcolm has over 16 years
stage experience. Born in rural Missouri, Malcolm enjoyed the freedom of country
life, quickly learning to entertain himself and others around him. Growing up in
a little village called Burgess MO. in a country house next to the KCS Railroad
that ran from Kansas City to New Orleans, the train has always been a theme in
Malcolm’s music, as well as the inspiration for the steady, insistent bass
rhythms of rural dance music. “I remember I was 7 or 8, and
the grown folks was parked out on the road listening to music and carryin’ on.
They put on a tape called “Muddy Waters Greatest Hits,” and when I heard that
voice shootin’ out of that speaker, I was shocked. I fell in love with it, and I
promised myself then and there that if I grew up to be a man, I was gonna try to
do that!” “See, it was them ole
jukejoints and honkytonks in them days, and there wasn’t too much law out on
them country places, and if you could see over the bar, you could get what you
wanted. I was lucky, the times done changed, most young players nowadays, he
wont be able to get away with that.” Around the same time he began
visiting the North Mississippi region and immediately identified with the blues
scene and the legends still living there. Malcolm fell under the spell of the
North Mississippi hill country blues being performed by legends Junior
Kimbrough, R.L. Burnside, and Otha Turner at Kimbrough’s world famous juke joint
outside Holly Springs, Miss. Over the years Malcolm has made friends and worked
with blues greats such as Cedell Davis, Jessie Mae Hemphill, Robert Belfour,
Otha Turner, T Model Ford, as well as Kimbrough and Burnside and their family
bands to name a few. Malcolm, along with other younger cohorts from the area
such as the North Mississippi Allstars, Jimbo Mathus, Kenny Brown, Kenny and
David Kimbrough Jr, and Cedric and Gary Burnside have continued to spread the
North Mississippi hill country sound to the rest of the world. The sound traces back to the
local ante-bellum fife and drum cadences, linked directly to the West African
Dance customs that managed to survive in the backwoods of Panola, Tate, Desoto,
and Marshall counties in Mississippi after slavery. When transformed onto
electric guitars and drums, this music becomes a churning, droning, hypnotic
exercise of sex and mayhem, with magical statements shouted over repeated riffs.
The result is riveting dance music, first made famous by Mississippi Fred
McDowell, and in later years by Junior Kimbrough, Jessie Mae Hemphill, T Model
Ford, and especially R.L. Burnside. Malcolm has been solidly
building his reputation as one of the 2nd generations leading purveyors of the
hill country blues through magnetic live performances at clubs, concerts,
college campuses, and festivals across the country. He performs with the great
drummers from the area or solo as a one man band, playing slashing guitar and
rocking drum patterns with his feet simultaneously. In 2001 Malcolm went out to the
West Coast on tour and fell in love with California’s beautiful Bay Area. He
ended up staying out there almost 3 years, playing up and down the coast. In the summer of 2004, Malcolm
moved back to Mississippi. The first thing he did was made a new record with
Kenny Kimbrough and Gary Burnside as his backing band. The album, “Juke Joint
Dance Party” which features band tracks as well as his one man band sound, was
recorded in Clarksdale, at Jimbo Mathus’ studio, and came out on Knockdown South
Records. Upon returning, Malcolm lived
for a while out at R.L. Burnsides home, rehearsing with Cedric and Gary out on
the porch everyday, playing in the juke joints in Holly Springs and Oxford and
crashing on the couch in the living room. This sound can be heard on the new
record Cedric and Gary recorded with Malcolm on bass guitar. Just before New Years 2005,
Mathus approached Malcolm about helping him with a big New Years Eve show that
was being broadcast live worldwide on NPR radio. Even with no rehearsal,
Malcolm’s guitar playing with Jimbo’s trio was so in sync, Jimbo asked him to
join the Knockdown South band full time. In May, Malcolm went on a
successful European tour, headlining festivals as a one-man band and on drums
with hill country blues legend Robert Belfour. He also has a brand new album
“Songs Heard Around the World,” containing his most diverse range of styles yet,
finished.
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