Katana VentraIP

Marcia Ball

Marcia Ball (born March 20, 1949)[1] is an American blues singer and pianist raised in Vinton, Louisiana.[1]

Marcia Ball

(1949-03-20) March 20, 1949
Orange, Texas, U.S.

  • Piano
  • vocals

1970–present

Ball was described in USA Today as "a sensation, saucy singer and superb pianist... where Texas stomp-rock and Louisiana blues-swamp meet."[2] The Boston Globe described her music as "an irresistible celebratory blend of rollicking, two-fisted New Orleans piano, Louisiana swamp rock and smoldering Texas blues from a contemporary storyteller."[3]

Career[edit]

Ball was born in Orange, Texas, into a musical family. Her grandmother and aunt both played piano music of their time and Ball started piano lessons when she started school,[4] and showed an early interest in New Orleans style piano playing, as exemplified by Fats Domino, Professor Longhair, and James Booker. She has named Irma Thomas, the New Orleans vocalist, as her chief vocal inspiration. Ball studied English at Louisiana State University in the 1960s while playing in a band called Gum.[1] In 1970, at age 21, she started a progressive country band called Freda and the Firedogs in Austin, Texas, and began her solo career in 1974.[5]


Ball's piano style includes elements of zydeco, swamp blues, Louisiana blues, and boogie woogie.[6] She began her recording career as a solo artist with Rounder Records in the 1980s and early 1990s.[5] In 2001, she joined the Chicago-based Alligator Records. Her Rounder album, Sing It!, which featured vocalists Irma Thomas and Tracy Nelson, released in January 1998 was nominated for a Grammy Award and a Blues Music Award for "Best Contemporary Blues Album." Ball received the 1998 Blues Music Award for "Contemporary Female Vocalist of the Year" and "Best Blues Instrumentalist-Keyboards."[7]


She was awarded "Contemporary Blues Album of the Year" for her albums Presumed Innocent (2002) and So Many Rivers (2004). The same year she also won "Contemporary Blues Artist of the Year-Female." She won the "Best Blues Instrumentalist-Keyboards" again in 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2009. The BMA for Keyboards has since been renamed the Pinetop Perkins Piano Player Award and Ball has won it in 2012 and 2015. Her 2003 Alligator release, So Many Rivers, was nominated for a Grammy as were Live! Down The Road (2005) and Peace, Love & BBQ (2008). She was inducted into the Austin Music Hall of Fame in 2018.[8]


Ball has continued to work with Irma Thomas. In 2006, the two contributed a duet ("Look Up") on the New Orleans Social Club release, Sing Me Back Home (Burgundy Records/Honey Darling Records). In 2007, the two contributed another duet ("I Can't Get New Orleans Off My Mind") to Goin' Home: A Tribute to Fats Domino (Vanguard Records). She continues to play at nightclubs, particularly in Austin and New Orleans, and performs at music festivals in North America and overseas.[1]


In May 2015, Ball won the 'Pinetop Perkins Piano Player' award at the Blues Music Awards ceremony.[9] She won the same award in 2019.[10]


On October 25, 2018, Ball was inducted into the Austin City Limits Hall of Fame, where she first appeared during their inaugural season in 1976.[11]

1972: Freda and the Firedogs

1978: Circuit Queen ()

Capitol

1984: (Rounder)

Soulful Dress

1985: (Rounder)

Hot Tamale Baby

1989: (Rounder)

Gatorhythms

1990: Dreams Come True () (with Lou Ann Barton and Angela Strehli)

Antone's

1994: (Rounder)

Blue House

1997: (Rounder)

Let Me Play With Your Poodle

1998: Sing It! (Rounder) (with and Irma Thomas)

Tracy Nelson

2001: (Alligator Records)

Presumed Innocent

2003: (Alligator)

So Many Rivers

2004: Live at Waterloo Records (Alligator)

2005: Live! Down The Road (Alligator)

2007: JazzFest Live (MunckMusic\Munck)

2008: (Alligator)

Peace, Love & BBQ

2011: Roadside Attractions (Alligator)

2014: The Tattooed Lady & The Alligator Man (Alligator)

2018: Shine Bright (Alligator)

2003: , episode Piano Blues directed by Clint Eastwood

The Blues

2006:

New Orleans Music in Exile

– 1984

San Francisco Blues Festival

– 1986

Austin Aqua Fest

– 1996

Long Beach Blues Festival

Rhythm And Roots Festival () – 2000, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2015, 2017

Charlestown, Rhode Island

– 2002

Thursday at the Square

– 2002

Monterey Jazz Festival

– 2004

Austin City Limits Music Festival

– 2005

National Folk Festival (USA)

(Portland, Oregon) – 2007

Waterfront Blues Festival

– 2004, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2014, 2015, 2018

New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival

(Helena, Arkansas) – 2010

Arkansas Blues and Heritage Festival

Crescent City Blues and BBQ Festival (New Orleans, Louisiana) – 2011

– 2013

Chicago Blues Festival

Edmonton Blues Festival - 2018

List of blues musicians

List of boogie woogie musicians

List of Louisiana blues musicians

List of Swamp blues musicians

List of people from Texas

List of Austinites

Music of Austin

Official Marcia Ball website

at IMDb

Marcia Ball

Marcia Ball at Facebook

Fan site

interview: Shearer, Harry (May 8, 2005). "le Show". HarryShearer.com. Archived from the original on May 30, 2008. Retrieved January 5, 2009.

Le Show