Toronzo Cannon - The Chicago Way
  • Chickens Comin’ Home To Roost (Featured APD Showcase Track)
  • The Pain Around Me
  • Bad Contract
  • COMMENTARY: Bad Contract
  • Walk It Off
  • COMMENTARY: Walk It Off
  • Fine Seasoned Woman
  • Jealous Love
  • Midlife Crisis
  • Strength To Survive
  • When Will You Tell Him About Me?
  • Mrs. From Mississippi
  • COMMENTARY: Mrs. From Mississippi
  • I Am
  • COMMENTARY: The Chicago Way
  • COMMENTARY: Being on Alligator Records
  • COMMENTARY: Musicians Starting Out
  • COMMENTARY: Best Moment of Career
  • COMMENTARY: Who I'd Like To Work With
  • COMMENTARY: My Influences
  • GENERIC: Check Out This New Track
  • GENERIC: Hey Blues Fans...One Of My Faves
  • GENERIC: Keep It Here For More Great Blues
  • GENERIC: Welcome Back To The Show. Here's A New One
  • STORY: A Memorable Show
  • Chickens Comin’ Home To Roost (Featured APD Showcase Track)
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (05:16) [12.05 MB]
  • The Pain Around Me
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (04:46) [10.9 MB]
  • Bad Contract
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (03:51) [8.8 MB]
  • COMMENTARY: Bad Contract
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:12) [485.82 KB]
  • Walk It Off
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (05:55) [13.55 MB]
  • COMMENTARY: Walk It Off
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:11) [432.76 KB]
  • Fine Seasoned Woman
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (03:30) [8 MB]
  • Jealous Love
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (04:28) [10.22 MB]
  • Midlife Crisis
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (04:10) [9.53 MB]
  • Strength To Survive
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (05:29) [12.55 MB]
  • When Will You Tell Him About Me?
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (04:30) [10.29 MB]
  • Mrs. From Mississippi
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (04:19) [9.88 MB]
  • COMMENTARY: Mrs. From Mississippi
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:12) [470.54 KB]
  • I Am
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (05:26) [12.43 MB]
  • COMMENTARY: The Chicago Way
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:14) [540.93 KB]
  • COMMENTARY: Being on Alligator Records
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:29) [1.11 MB]
  • COMMENTARY: Musicians Starting Out
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:23) [910.33 KB]
  • COMMENTARY: Best Moment of Career
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:16) [633.78 KB]
  • COMMENTARY: Who I'd Like To Work With
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:15) [582.78 KB]
  • COMMENTARY: My Influences
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:12) [455.18 KB]
  • GENERIC: Check Out This New Track
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:08) [321.55 KB]
  • GENERIC: Hey Blues Fans...One Of My Faves
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:09) [366.47 KB]
  • GENERIC: Keep It Here For More Great Blues
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:04) [162.32 KB]
  • GENERIC: Welcome Back To The Show. Here's A New One
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:06) [232.78 KB]
  • STORY: A Memorable Show
    Genre: Blues
    MP3 (00:31) [1.2 MB]
Biography
Radio Contact:
Tim Kolleth
radio@allig.com

Click here to go to The Alligator Records Main Page


Click here for APD's Global Radio Showcase Volume3

BIOGRAPHY
Throughout the history of Chicago blues, the intensely competitive local club scene has served as a proving ground, where only the best musicians rise to the top. Iconic blues artists from Muddy Waters to Howlin' Wolf to Koko Taylor to Hound Dog Taylor to Luther Allison all paid their dues in the Chicago blues bars before making their mark on the world. The same holds true today, as newcomers look to living legends like Buddy Guy, Eddy Clearwater and Lil' Ed Williams for inspiration in taking their music from Chicago to fans across the globe. Now, Chicago-born-and-raised blues guitarist /vocalist/ songwriter Toronzo Cannon is ready to write his own story as he claims his place as one of the city's most popular and innovative blues musicians.

Cannon's unofficial launch from local hero to national star took place on June 13, 2015 at the world-renowned Chicago Blues Festival, where he performed as a festival headliner for the massive crowd. After announcing that he had just signed with Alligator Records, he delivered a riveting set, instantly earning tens of thousands of new fans. Of the performance, The Chicago Tribune said, "Cannon made the most of his opportunity as a festival headliner to win over a new audience."

The Chicago Way is the Alligator debut by the electrifying Windy City bluesman, produced by Cannon along with label president Bruce Iglauer. The album, featuring nothing but Cannon originals, is powered by his blistering guitar and soul-baring vocals. His songwriting is inspired by his deep, homegrown Chicago roots, his years observing the public while working as a city bus driver on the West Side, and his own battles and triumphs. From searing blues anthems to swinging shuffles to soulful ballads to roof-raising rockers, the songs tell timeless stories of common experiences in uncommon ways. "I've never worked harder on my writing," Cannon says. "I challenged myself at every step, writing each song to connect with someone in my audience. I try to write songs that will be both up-to-the-minute and timeless." He writes about shared experiences with a keen eye for detail. "Blues is truth-telling music," he says, "and I want my audience to relate to my stories." As a singer, his impassioned vocals add muscle and personality to his already potent songs. With The Chicago Way, Cannon knows more and more people will be hearing his message: the future of Chicago blues is in good hands.


According to Cannon, "To be from Chicago and be signed to Alligator is unreal. To be part of Alligator's history...I'm at a loss for words." Iglauer is equally excited to have Cannon join the Alligator family, saying, "I've watched Toronzo grow as a singer, player and songwriter over the last ten years. He's now become a major blues talent, using the Chicago blues tradition as a launching pad to create his own unique, contemporary vision. His music comes right from the heart of the city."

Cannon was born in Chicago on February 14, 1968, and grew up in the shadows of the notoriously tough Robert Taylor Homes. Theresa's Lounge, one of the city's most famous South Side blues clubs, was nearby. As a child, Cannon would stand on the sidewalk outside the door, soaking up the live blues pouring out while trying to sneak a glance inside at larger-than-life bluesmen like Junior Wells and Buddy Guy. He also heard plenty of blues growing up in his grandfather's home, and listened to soul, R&B and contemporary rock on the radio. Cannon bought his first guitar at age 22, and his natural talent enabled him to quickly master the instrument. Although his initial focus was reggae, he found himself increasingly drawn to the blues. "It was dormant in me. But when I started playing the blues, I found my voice and the blues came pouring out." He absorbed sounds, styles and licks from Buddy Guy, Albert Collins, Hound Dog Taylor, B.B. King, Albert King, Freddie King, Al Green, Jimi Hendrix, J.B. Hutto, Lil' Ed and others. Although influenced by many, Cannon’s biting, singing guitar sound is all his own.

From 1996 through 2002, Cannon played as a sideman for Tommy McCracken, Wayne Baker Brooks, L.V. Banks and Joanna Connor. But he was determined to prove himself. In 2001, while continuing to work as a hired-gun guitarist, he formed his own band, The Cannonball Express. By 2003, he was working exclusively as a band leader. Cannon's first three albums — 2007's My Woman (self-released), 2011's Leaving Mood (Delmark) and 2013's Blues Music Award-nominated John The Conqueror Root (Delmark) — document his rise from promising up-and-comer to star-in-the-making.

Toronzo Cannon has become one of Chicago's most recognized and most popular bluesmen through the sheer force of his music, his songs, his live charisma, and maybe most impressively, his passion for what he is doing. He's played the Chicago Blues Festival on nine separate occasions, either as a sideman, a special guest, a band leader or, most recently, as a main stage headliner. When he's home, Cannon drives a Chicago Transit Authority bus by day and performs by night. Using every vacation day and day off and working four ten-hour shifts a week, Cannon arranges his schedule to gig out of town as much as possible. He's performed in a number of U.S. and European cities and continues to build his audience one roof-raising show at a time. It isn't easy, but, like all of the Chicago greats who have come before him, blues is his calling. "I am proud to be part of a movement," he says, anxious to hit the road and bring his music to new fans in new places. "I'm proud to be standing on the shoulders of every great Chicago blues musician who came before me."

With The Chicago Way and a tour schedule that will take him coast to coast and around the globe, it's only a matter of time until the rest of the world figures out what his hometown already knows: Toronzo Cannon is the real deal. He's battled his way to the top of the ultra-competitive Windy City blues scene, has already played multiple tours of Europe and delivered roof-raising performances around the U.S.A. He's earned his place through charismatic talent, long hours, hard work, and his burning desire to succeed. That's his way, that's the only way he knows. That's the Chicago way.

ORIGINAL LINER NOTES
The Chicago Way. In the hard-edged City of Big Shoulders, nothing comes easy. You have to fight to succeed, whether it’s a battle to get out of poverty, a battle to find and hold a job, a battle to build a new business, a battle to expose political corruption, or a battle to become a musical icon. An aspiring blues musician in Chicago is battling against the toughest competition in the world. Chicago has more live blues clubs than any other city, and hosts the world’s largest blues festival. In the city that made Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Little Walter, Koko Taylor, Buddy Guy, James Cotton, Junior Wells, Son Seals and Lil’ Ed into blues icons, the bar for the best in blues is set very high. You have to deliver every night—intensity, energy, instrumental and vocal chops, and, above all, honesty and soulfulness. If you don’t deliver, someone else is waiting to steal your gig!

Over the last few years, Toronzo Cannon has emerged from this competition as Chicago’s next heavyweight champion of the blues. He’s paid his dues the old-fashioned way—first playing free at the Monday night jams and then earning his way to sideman gigs while sharpening his guitar chops and vocals. Fifteen years ago, he put together the first incarnation of his band, The Cannonball Express, while still gigging as a sideman. Playing for next to nothing, he steadily won an audience, fan by fan, with each searing lick and soulful vocal, until he could fill the city’s largest blues clubs. Last year, his status as hometown hero was confirmed when he lit up the largest stage at the Chicago Blues Festival, his supercharged playing and singing earning standing ovations from the crowd of tens of thousands.

Toronzo grew up on the tough South Side, raised by his grandparents in the shadow of the Robert Taylor Homes, the city’s notoriously dangerous high-rise public housing project. Only a few blocks away was the famed Theresa’s Lounge, where Toronzo, too young to get in, first heard live blues pulsing through the walls and out the door of the basement club. The sounds of Junior Wells, Buddy Guy, James Cotton and Magic Slim permeated his young ears.

But by the time he acquired his first guitar, at the age of 22, Toronzo had found a new musical fascination—reggae. He began trying to master reggae guitar, but soon he started sitting in at the city’s blues jams and found his musical home. “It was dormant in me. But when I started playing the blues, I found my voice and the blues came pouring out.” Toronzo immersed himself in the blues, influenced by everyone from Jimi Hendrix and Albert King to Buddy Guy and J.B. Hutto.

As Toronzo began leading his own bands in 2001, he started honing his songwriting. “I love the classic blues songs,” he says, “but I wanted to make my own statements for today’s listeners. I try to write songs that will be both up-to-the-minute and timeless.” As a songwriter, he sings about shared experiences with a keen eye for detail. “Blues is truth-telling music,” he explains, “and I want my audience to relate to my stories.” His Alligator debut is 100% Toronzo originals, songs inspired by his Chicago upbringing, his years observing the public while working as a city bus driver on the West Side, and his own battles and triumphs. His serious side is expressed in songs like The Pain Around Me, Jealous Love and Strength To Survive, while his slice-of-life humor and clever wordplay sparks Bad Contract, Midlife Crisis, Mrs. From Mississippi and his much-requested signature song, Walk It Off. In preparing to record this album, Toronzo wrote and rewrote his songs, crafting each word, groove and riff. This is a man who takes his songwriting very seriously, as seriously as he takes his firebrand guitar playing and straight-from-the-soul singing.

Toronzo Cannon has battled his way to the top of the ultra-competitive Windy City blues scene. He’s cut three previous albums (including two for the legendary Delmark label), earned multiple tours of Europe and delivered blistering performances around the U.S.A. Now, with this new album, Toronzo has taken a giant step forward, proving himself to be one of the most electrifying and original bluesmen of his generation. And he’s done it the hard way—The Chicago Way.

Bruce Iglauer, Proud Co-Producer





38
  • Members:
    TORONZO CANNON: Vocals, Lead Guitar, Rhythm Guitar, Background Vocals; BROTHER JOHN KATTKE: Hammond B-3 Organ, Piano, Keyboards; PETE GALANIS: Electric and Acoustic Rhythm Guitar; LARRY WILLIAMS: Bass; MELVIN “POOKIE STIX” CARLISLE: Drums
  • Sounds Like:
    Buddy Guy, Muddy Waters, Joe Bonamassa, B. B. King
  • Influences:
    Junior Wells, Buddy Guy, Albert Collins, Hound Dog Taylor, B.B. King, Albert King, Freddie King, Al Green, Jimi Hendrix, J.B. Hutto
  • AirPlay Direct Member Since:
    01/04/16
  • Profile Last Updated:
    05/15/24 16:42:39

"Radio Creds" are votes awarded to artists by radio programmers who have downloaded their music and have been impressed with the artist's professionalism and the audience's response to the new music. Creds help artists advance through the AirPlay Direct community.


Only radio accounts may add a Radio Cred. One week after the track has been downloaded the radio account member will receive an email requesting a Cred for each artist they've downloaded.