Dr. John
Biography
Although he didn't become widely known until the 1970s, Dr. John had been active in the music industry since the late '50s, when the teenager was still known as Mac Rebennack. A formidable boogie and blues pianist with a lovable growl of a voice, his most enduring achievements have fused New Orleans R&B, rock, and Mardi Gras craziness to come up with his own brand of "voodoo" music. He's also quite accomplished and enjoyable when sticking to purely traditional forms of blues and R&B. On record, he veers between the two approaches, making for an inconsistent and frequently frustrating legacy that often makes the listener feel as if the "Night Tripper" (as he's nicknamed himself) has been underachieving.
In the late '50s, Rebennack gained prominence in the New Orleans R&B scene as a session keyboardist and guitarist, contributing to records by Professor Longhair, Frankie Ford, and Joe Tex. He also did some overlooked singles of his own, and by the '60s had expanded into production and arranging. After a gun accident damaged his hand in the early '60s, he gave up the guitar to concentrate on keyboards exclusively. Skirting trouble with the law and drugs, he left the increasingly unwelcome environs of New Orleans in the mid-'60s for Los Angeles, where he found session work with the help of fellow New Orleans expatriate Harold Battiste.
Selected Discography

Voodoo Hex
2008

Trader John's Crawfish Soiree
2007

Dr. John Plays Mac Rebennack: The Legendary Sessions Vol. 2
2006

Mercernary
2006

What Goes Around (Comes Around)
2006

The Best Of The Parlophone Years
2005

Live At Montreux 1995
2005

N'Awlinz: Dis, Dat Or D'Udda
2004

Afterglow
1995

Television
1994

Going Back To New Orleans
1992

In A Sentimental Mood
1989

Desitively Bonnaroo
1974

In The Right Place
1973

Dr. John's Gumbo
1972

Gris-Gris
1968
