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Robben Ford

Robben Lee Ford (born December 16, 1951)[1] is an American blues, jazz, and rock guitarist.[2] He was a member of the L.A. Express and Yellowjackets and has collaborated with Miles Davis, Joni Mitchell, George Harrison, Larry Carlton, Rick Springfield, Little Feat, and Kiss. He was named one of the "100 Greatest Guitarists of the 20th Century" by Musician magazine.[3]

Robben Ford

Robben Lee Ford

(1951-12-16) December 16, 1951
Woodlake, California, U.S.

Guitarist

1969–present

Early life[edit]

Robben Ford was born in Woodlake, California,[1] and raised in Ukiah, California. He began playing the saxophone at age 10 and the guitar at age 14. Robben and two of his brothers (Patrick and Mark) created the Charles Ford Blues Band in honor of and named after their father.[4] A fourth brother died in the Vietnam conflict.

Equipment[edit]

Guitars[edit]

Ford considers his first good electric a Guild Starfire III with a single Florentine (sharp) cutaway. He used a Gibson L-5 when he played with Charlie Musselwhite and the Ford Band, although he never thought it was a great guitar. While playing with Jimmy Witherspoon, Ford traded the L-5 plus $200 for a 1964 Gibson Super 400CES (which he sold in 1986). When Ford began playing with the L.A. Express and Joni Mitchell, he used a 1958 Gibson dot-neck ES-335.


After Ford's Talk to Your Daughter album was released in 1988, Robben used a Robben Ford Signature model guitar created in a collaboration with Dan Smith of Fender and produced in Japan between 1987 and 1993. That guitar was based on the Fender Master Series Esprit Ultra that was produced from 1983 to 1986 in Japan. In 1987, new management at Fender authorized the first production of the Robben Ford Signature guitar. In 1994, production of the guitar moved from Japan to the Fender Custom Shop. Three models were produced: Ultra FM (with a carved maple top), Ultra SP (with a carved spruce top), and the Elite FM (with a carved flame maple top). The guitar line continued to be produced until 2002 when it was discontinued by Fender.


Sometimes he plays a vintage 1960 Fender Telecaster, Gibson Les Pauls,[12] or a 1963 Gibson SG.[13] Ford also owns other guitars including a 1966 Epiphone Riviera (with the original Bigsby tremolo removed and replaced with a stop tailpiece).

(LA International, 1976)

Schizophonic

Live Jimmy Witherspoon & Robben Ford (LAX, 1977)

(Elektra, 1979)

The Inside Story

Standing on the Outside (Lakeside, 1983)

(Warner Bros., 1988)

Talk to Your Daughter

Minor Elegance with (MGI, 1989)

Joe Diorio

Robben Ford & the Blue Line (Stretch, 1992)

Live at the Notodden Blues Festival with Jimmy Witherspoon (Blue Rock'it, 1992)

(Stretch, 1993)

Mystic Mile

Handful of Blues (Stretch, 1995)

Ain't Nothin' New About the Blues with Jimmy Witherspoon (AIM, 1995)

(ITM, 1997)

Blues Connotation

The Authorized Bootleg (Blue Thumb, 1997)

Discovering the Blues (Avenue, 1997)

(Blue Thumb, 1997)

Tiger Walk

(Avenue, 1999)

Sunrise

Supernatural (GRP, 1999)

A Tribute to Paul Butterfield (Blue Rock'it, 2001)

Blue Moon (Concord, 2002)

Keep On Running (Concord, 2003)

(Concord, 2007)

Truth

(Concord, 2009)

Soul on Ten

Bullet with Renegade Creation (Blues Bureau, 2012)

Bringing It Back Home (Provogue, 2013)

A Day in Nashville (Provogue, 2014)

(Provogue, 2015)

Into the Sun

Purple House (Ear Music, 2018)

The Sun Room with (Ear Music, 2019)

Bill Evans

Common Ground with Bill Evans (13J Productions, 2020)

Pure (Ear Music, 2021)

Robben Ford and the Blue Line: In Concert (Recorded April 7, 1993)

Robben Ford: New Morning - The Paris Concert (Recorded May 2001)

Playing the Blues (2002)

The Blues and Beyond (2002)

Back to the Blues (2004)

Autour Du Blues: Larry Carlton and Robben Ford (2006)

The Robben Ford Clinic: The Art of Blues Rhythm (2007)

Robben Ford: In Concert: Revisited (2008)

The Robben Ford Clinic: The Art of Blues Solos (2009)

Robben Ford Trio: New Morning the Paris Concert: Revisited (2009)

Official website