Snooks Eaglin

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of steel guitarists, their friends and families

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Mike Perlowin RIP
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Snooks Eaglin

Post by Mike Perlowin RIP »

I still have an album he made 50 years ago, that I bought when I was a teenager.
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R&B, jazz guitarist Snooks Eaglin dies at age 72 By STACEY PLAISANCE –

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — R&B singer and guitarist Snooks Eaglin, a local legend who counted platinum-selling rockers among his fans, died Wednesday. He was 72.

The blind musician died of a heart attack at Ochsner Medical Center in New Orleans after falling ill and being hospitalized last week, said John Blancher, a close family friend. Eaglin was diagnosed with prostate cancer last year, said Blancher.

Eaglin, known for picking strings with his thumb nail — played and recorded with a host of New Orleans giants, including Professor Longhair, the Wild Magnolias and pianist Allan Toussaint.

Musicians, including Eric Clapton, Paul McCartney, Robert Plant and Bonnie Raitt, would seek Eaglin out to watch him perform, Blancher said.

But New Orleans musicians knew him best.

Toussaint was 13 when he formed a band with Eaglin called the Flamingos.

"He played with a certain finger style that was highly unusual," said Toussaint, now 71. "He was unlimited on the guitar. Folks would assume, 'I can do this or I can do that,' but Snooks wouldn't. There was nothing he couldn't do. It was extraordinary."

Eaglin was slated to perform this year at New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, where he was a popular yearly draw. Quint Davis, the event's producer, said the musician's death leaves behind a hole that not only cannot be filled in the festival but also in the city's music community.

"His death is like losing a Dizzy Gillespie, a Professor Longhair, a Johnny Adams or a Gatemouth Brown," Davis said. "He's one of those unique giants of New Orleans music."

Blind from the time he was a young child, Eaglin was a self-taught musician who learned to play the guitar by listening to the radio. Playing the guitar with his thumb nail allowed him to play very fast, Davis said.

One of Eaglin's most well-known songs was "Funky Malaguena," a Latin song that he played with an unconventional funk and blues spin, Davis said.

Because he could play with almost anyone, Eaglin is on 50 years worth of New Orleans recordings, from early folk to R&B and jazz, Davis said. "He played a six-string, a 12-string. He could play anything with strings on it."

"A lot of cats tried to copy him, the way he attacked the strings, but they couldn't," said jazz bassist Peter "Chuck" Badie, who played with Eaglin in the 1960s at clubs on Rampart Street, which for decades was the epicenter of the city's bustling black entertainment district.

Eaglin's survivors include his wife of more than 30 years, Dorothea "Dee" Eaglin, and a daughter.
Please visit my web site and Soundcloud page and listen to the music posted there.
http://www.mikeperlowin.com http://soundcloud.com/mike-perlowin
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Dave Mudgett
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Post by Dave Mudgett »

So sorry to hear this. I was just writing about him on the blues thread the other day. He was incomparable, and could play anything.

RIP, Snooks.
Steve Alcott
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Post by Steve Alcott »

I've been a Snooks fan for a lot of years. He was one of those rare musicians who was completely open to all kinds of music and unafraid to incorporate it all into his vocabulary. He was a unique guitarist as well.