For Immediate Release:
Blues Legend MIGHTY JOE YOUNG Passes Away At Age Seventy-One
Born: September 23, 1927 Shreveport, Louisiana
Died: March 24, 1999 Chicago, Illinois
We sadly send news that American blues icon, MIGHTY JOE YOUNG, passed away on March 25, 1999 in Chicago, Illinois. Young was in the hospital since February. He passed away from phenomena after complications from a spinal operation he hoped would restore his ability to play guitar again. He was 71.
Mighty Joe Young was one of the first blues artists to break through on the North Side of Chicago in the very early 1970s, playing to packed clubs and becoming one of the premier and best-known touring blues artists on the festival and university circuits. Between tours in 1986 he had taken his band into the studio on his own money and started to lay down tracks to finally do a recording - his way. But after recording only three numbers he shelved the project when in the fall of 1986 he decided to have surgery on a pinched nerve in his neck. After the surgery he suffered complications and didn't heal from the operation until after a year after the operation. It took a year of rehab before he regained his balance for walking, but he never fully recovered the sensation in his fingers to play guitar. As a result he made only rare appearances over the last decade. His greatest hope was to regain his ability to play guitar as he did before his first operation.
Joe Young was still mighty in his seventieth year. His regular work-outs at the health club helped maintain his barrel-chested former boxer's physique. Always a strong family man, he has made his recovery surrounded by children and grandchildren. He made appearances again as a singer and was on the schedule for the 1997 Chicago Blues Festival.
Born September 23, 1927 in Shreveport, Louisiana, Young also lived for a time in Milwaukee and Los Angeles, where in the late 40s he was an amateur boxer. He began playing in the early 1950s, working clubs in Milwaukee and then back in his native Louisiana where in 1955 he first recorded for the tiny Jiffy label.
The next year he came to Chicago where he worked with Joe Little and his Heart Breakers, Jimmy Rogers, Billy Boy Arnold and Otis Rush. He eventually recorded a few more singles for Atomic H, Fire (where in 1961 he was given the "Mighty" moniker), Webcor, Celtex and U.S.A. and appeared on disc with blues titans Magic Sam (on both Delmark LPs), Willie Dixon, Albert King, Jimmy Dawkins, Tyrone Davis (including his hit "Can I Change My Mind") and Koko Taylor (on Chess and Alligator). In 1969, his sensational appearance with Koko at Chicago's first Grant Park Blues Festival was an enormous boost to both of their careers. In typically humble fashion Joe Young plays down his role as one of the first to bring blues to North Side clubs, but back when blues was new to young, white audiences, he was a huge draw at Alice's Revisited, Minstrels, Biddy Mulligan's and Wise Fools where he played 12 straight New Year's Eve engagements. His memorable appearances at the Ann Arbor Festivals in the early '70s solidified his hold on the festival and university circuits, and by the mid-1980s Young's successful career had taken him all over North America and Europe.
Mighty Joe Young will be remembered for his pioneering work as one of the first Chicago singer/guitarists to meld soul and blues in tight, fresh, horn-laden arrangements. His music will continue to spark memories of powerful good-times, nightclubs jam-packed to the rafters, and Chicago-style soul-blues. Young is survived by his son, Joe Young, Jr., and other family members.
A Visitacion will be held Saturday, April 3rd, from 10am - 11am
Gatling's Funeral Home, 10133 S. Halsted, Chicago, Illinois, 60628
Phone: 773-881-4111
The Memorial Service will be held Saturday, April 3rd, from 11am - 12:30pm
Gatling's Funeral Home, 10133 S. Halsted, Chicago, Illinois, 60628
Phone: 773-881-4111
* Flowers can be sent to:
Joseph Young c/o Gatling's Funeral Home
10133 S. Halsted, Chicago, Illinois, 60628
Phone: 773-881-4111
(Please send flowers to the funeral home from 2pm April 2 up until 11am April 3rd)
AmericanLegends Music Organization - "ALMO"
"Promoting the Heritage, Art, Culture & Music of the Americas"
E-Mail: ALMO@AmericanLegends.org
Web-Site: http://www.AmericanLegends.org