We are currently migrating our data. We expect the process to take 24 to 48 hours before everything is back to normal.

Last updated: 11 hours ago

As the big-voiced frontman of <a href="spotify:artist:5dr7fkIRO4K14g7U8SCue5">the Blasters</a> during the early '80s, singer/guitarist Phil Alvin spearheaded the underground's new embrace of American music traditions ranging from blues to rockabilly to country, predating the roots rock movement that bloomed in the years to follow. Born March 6, 1953, in Los Angeles, Alvin and his younger brother <a href="spotify:artist:1QSEKTN8PPjVzniAkpJ90p">Dave</a> were raised on the music of <a href="spotify:artist:43ZHCT0cAZBISjO8DG9PnE">Elvis Presley</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:6nPKmEbQmR8jGZEm7ArOFX">T-Bone Walker</a>, and <a href="spotify:artist:1DTgcOxytJHD8p17mhSgd7">Big Joe Turner</a>; together they formed <a href="spotify:artist:5dr7fkIRO4K14g7U8SCue5">the Blasters</a> in 1979, borrowing the name from <a href="spotify:artist:58CohJpaPmE4H0fXEAnt4i">Jimmy McCracklin's Blues Blasters</a>.

Their debut LP, 1980's American Music, created a major buzz among insiders for its gritty, rootsy sound, and their self-titled 1981 follow-up even cracked the Top 40. However, <a href="spotify:artist:1QSEKTN8PPjVzniAkpJ90p">Dave Alvin</a> left <a href="spotify:artist:5dr7fkIRO4K14g7U8SCue5">the Blasters</a> in 1985, and Phil returned to grad school to pursue his master's degree in mathematics and artificial intelligence. (He later earned his Ph.D. from UCLA.) Alvin resurfaced in 1986 with his solo debut, Un "Sung" Stories, which featured cameos by everyone from <a href="spotify:artist:5V5vvh5MgM7vDuPp4lJYkh">Sun Ra & His Arkestra</a> to <a href="spotify:artist:6F6lawSnwGWWgdXFN7LXO7">the Dirty Dozen Brass Band</a>; he reconvened <a href="spotify:artist:5dr7fkIRO4K14g7U8SCue5">the Blasters</a> a short time later, and the group continued with a revolving lineup into the following decade. A second solo effort, County Fair 2000, appeared in 1994, and featured members of the Alvin side project the Faultline Syncopators, a traditional jazz combo. After years of live work with a variety of different guitarists, <a href="spotify:artist:5dr7fkIRO4K14g7U8SCue5">the Blasters</a> struck a deal with <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Private+Music%22">Private Music</a> to cut new material, but for a variety of reasons, the 1997 album At Home was never released.

In 2002, <a href="spotify:artist:1QSEKTN8PPjVzniAkpJ90p">Dave</a> and Phil Alvin reunited the 1980 edition of <a href="spotify:artist:5dr7fkIRO4K14g7U8SCue5">the Blasters</a> for a handful of shows, which stretched into several months of touring due to demand from their fans; the reunion produced two live albums, Trouble Bound and The Blasters Live: Going Home. In 2004, Phil Alvin finally released a new <a href="spotify:artist:5dr7fkIRO4K14g7U8SCue5">Blasters</a> album, 4-11-44, which featured Phil on lead vocals, Keith Wyatt on guitar, John Bazz on bass, and Jerry Angel on drums. While <a href="spotify:artist:5dr7fkIRO4K14g7U8SCue5">the Blasters</a> were still Phil's band, he and his brother <a href="spotify:artist:1QSEKTN8PPjVzniAkpJ90p">Dave</a> briefly reunited in the studio to sing a duet on "What's Up with Your Brother?," a track on <a href="spotify:artist:1QSEKTN8PPjVzniAkpJ90p">Dave</a>'s 2011 album Eleven Eleven. Bill Bateman replaced Jerry Angel on drums for the next <a href="spotify:artist:5dr7fkIRO4K14g7U8SCue5">Blasters</a> release, 2012's Fun on a Saturday Night, but a European tour in support of the release was scuttled when Phil, who had been fighting a viral infection with antibiotics months earlier, was hospitalized in Spain when he suffered severe breathing difficulties. He fully recovered following an emergency tracheotomy, and in 2013 Phil and <a href="spotify:artist:1QSEKTN8PPjVzniAkpJ90p">Dave</a> began work on their first album together since <a href="spotify:artist:1QSEKTN8PPjVzniAkpJ90p">Dave</a> left <a href="spotify:artist:5dr7fkIRO4K14g7U8SCue5">the Blasters</a>. A spirited tribute to one of their greatest influences, Common Ground: Dave & Phil Alvin Play & Sing the Songs of Big Bill Broonzy was released in the summer of 2014. The Alvin brothers supported Common Ground with a concert tour, and in 2015 <a href="spotify:artist:1QSEKTN8PPjVzniAkpJ90p">Dave</a> and Phil returned with a lively set of electric blues, Lost Time. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi

Monthly Listeners

4,427

Followers

1,248

Top Cities

60 listeners
59 listeners
50 listeners
48 listeners
47 listeners