4 Thornfield Terrace
Selkirk
Scottish Borders
TD7 4DU
Tel:
+44 01750-720538
Mobiles:
+44 07791-765956
+44 07890-103844


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Premier live acoustic music
venue in the Scottish Borders

 


TAM WHITE

It is with great sadness that we announce that Tam White passed away on Monday 21st June 2010.  
Sincere condolences to his family.

If there's one man who can prove that you don't need to come from Chicago, Memphis or the Mississippi Delta to sing the blues, it's Scottish blues supremo Tam White. In an illustrious career spanning over four decades, Tam White has established himself as a troubadour in the truest sense of the word, acclaimed in mainland Europe as one of the great European blues singers and in his own country, Scotland, as a national treasure. In England blues legend Alexis Korner hailed him as " the greatest undiscovered blues talent of our time".

Since his early fame with the Boston Dexters in the 1960's (and as the first man to sing live on Top of the Pops) Tam has packed concert halls and clubs throughout the world, performing solo or with his big band, Tam White's Groove Connection, or his smaller outfit, The Shoestring Band. Over the years Tam has played with and guested for John Mayall's Blues Breakers, Long John Baldry, Brian Auger, James Taylor, Van Morrison, Rev Al Green, B.B. King, Mose Allison to name but a few.

Tam was the voice behind Robbie Coltrane's Big Jazza in the highly successful BAFTA award-winning BBC TV series, Tutti Frutti. In his other profession as an actor he played a major role as Clan Chief MacGregor in Mel Gibson's 'Braveheart', and acted in 'Man Dancin' with an accompanying CD of the same name. Tam's 60th birthday celebrations at the Queens Hall in Edinburgh were a testimony to Scotland's greatest blues singer, a performer at the height of his powers. The critics appear to agree: 'The Crossing', his collaboration with pianist Brian Kellock, received the kind of notice that most performers can only dream about and Tam's recent appearance fronting the Scottish National Jazz Orchestra brought the house down.

Now available for solo gigs, Tam White is the U.K. godfather of blues, but if truth be told Tam's talent covers a far wider spectrum of colour than that of blue. His idiosyncratic style reveals a potent mixture of power & sensibility few artists achieve in their lifetime. He is equally in his element with such songs as Gil Scott-Heron's 'Home Is Where The Hatred Is', John Hiatt's 'This Is The Way We Make A Broken Heart', the traditional Scottish ballad 'The Water Is Wide' and his own superior original material. His repertoire is drawn from experience and his personal appearances are a master class in how to lift, move and involve an audience. In the words of the man himself "It's just in my nature to perform, man, I have to do it. I like the message in the music I play. Music is communication."

Contact us if you would like to book Tam White.


"The greatest undiscovered blues talent of our time."
ALEXIS KORNER
"Superb melodies, vacuum-tight arrangements, awesome musicianship."
SCOTSMAN
"One of the best blues singers in Europe."
METTMAN BLUES FESTIVAL
"This high calibre music deserves the widest audience."
FOLK ROOTS
"When Tam sings, it's a party ... he's an entertainer, but one whose art creates moods. His audiences leave happy, but thoughtful too."
THE SCOTSMAN
"Tam's real talent lies in his ability to connect with his audience in such an honest, down-to-earth way, that you're drawn in, hook, line and sinker. From the moment he hit the stage... it's the real deal."
STORNOWAY GAZETTE
"Tam is habitually described as a blues singer, and while he has that in his locker beyond any argument, it is far from alone there - rock, R+B, funk, country and jazz all play a part in the totality of his style."
THE LIST