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Michael Katon Michael Katon is the heaviest practitioner of true American roadhouse rock ’n’ roll and blues working today.
His sound is raw, mean and spirited, combining lowdown blues and boogie with the
amped-up approach of the highest energy rock ’n’ roll band you’d care to name.
Katon’s guitar playing is informed with the nastiest and tastiest tones imaginable with torrential slide work
and astonishing string bending capabilities. His relentless energy and dedication
to pouring every ounce of soul into the music is perhaps best described by an astounded fellow guitarist who said,
”Katon won’t stop beating on a guitar until he’s squeezed every last thing he can possibly get out of it.
That guitar is glad to go back in the case at the end of the night, believe me.” |
Armed with a wall of Super Reverbs with a Strat plugged into ‘em that was
soaked in sweat and beer with the bridge rusted into place, he was playing with the kind of fervor that only a musician,
a true road dog, can put into it.
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sharing international music festival stages with the likes of ZZ TOP and Iggy Pop to blues fests with Junior Wells and Son Seals, or an intimate late night jam with Buddy Guy. No matter what the setting, Katon finds his true audience. As the 80s moved into the next decade and then the 21st century, one Michael Katon album flowed after another, all of them preaching his roadhouse manifest; ‘Proud To Be Loud’, ‘Get On The Boogie Train’, ‘Rip It Hard’, ‘Rub’, ‘Bustin’ Up The Joint’, ‘The Rage Called Rock ’n’ Roll’ and ‘Bad Machine’ are all part and parcel of a musician whose raw, wild and inflammatory style is all of one piece. Michael Katon invites you to fire up your ‘Bad Machine’ and get ready to ride to the roadhouse; the party’s just starting. Cub Koda
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Michael Katon BIOGRAPHY: This acclaimed blues rock guitarist/vocalist grew up in Ypsilanti, Michigan, USA, and his musical family background soon inspired him to take up the guitar. Katon began playing with local bands in clubs and roadhouse bars around Detroit from the age of 15, and spent 20 years paying his dues in classic blues fashion, working with a succession of blues and jazz bands. |
Subsequently based in Hell, Michigan, he released his solo debut, Boogie All Over Your Head, on his own Wild Ass label, with Swedish label Garageland picking up Katon in Europe. The straight forward R&B boogie style, gravelly vocals and stylish blues guitar of Proud To Be Loud endeared Katon to both the blues and heavy metal crowds, and live shows with Ed Phelps (guitar, harmonica), Jon Eppinga (drums) and Gary Rasmussen (bass) proved to be wild affairs, particularly due to the guitarist's penchant for four- and five-hour sets. |
Blues label Provogue were suitably
impressed, offering Katon a European contract. Katon gave up drinking to
concentrate on his guitar playing, resulting in the harder, more focused
Get On The Boogie Train, and while his lyrics retained their customary humor, he also produced a fine slice of urban blues in 'Cadillac Assembly
Line', a lament for Detroit's declining motor industry. Rip It Hard
continued in the traditional blues-boogie vein, and while, like many blues men, major commercial success evades
Katon, he remains a respected
guitarist in the field |
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