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Awards and Recognition |
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2006 Blues Music Award Nominee
2005 Beale Street Entertainer of the Year
2004
Listed in Top 20 Memphis Flyer regional music poll
2003
NARAS Memphis Premier Player Award for outstanding harmonica
player honored jointly with Blind Mississippi Morris
2002
NARAS Memphis Premier Player Award for outstanding harmonica
player 1999
Endorsed by Hohner
1993
West Tennessee Bluegrass Harmonica Champion |
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Billy Gibson first
picked up the harmonica at a very young age. “It was cheap and I could
easily make sounds with it.” After high school, Gibson’s
desire for learning and improving as a musician took him to Clarksdale,
Mississippi, where he played with blues guitarist Johnnie Billington
and drummer Bobby Little in Billington’s group The Midnighters. “Johnnie
and Bobby taught me how to make it in this business,” Gibson
recalls.
Like many before him, Gibson eventually left Mississippi for
Memphis. “Beale Street was my university of blues,” recalls
Gibson, referring to the lessons learned as a Beale Street
performer. “For a young musician, all you have to do
is look and listen and you can learn so much.”
Gibson’s talent and commitment have not gone unrecognized.
He received an endorsement from Hohner, his harmonica of choice
in 1999. He has made guest appearances on national recording
artists’ CDs including Deborah Coleman’s Soft Place
To Fall (Blind Pig 2000) and Michael Burks’ I Smell Smoke
(Alligator 2003). Around the same time, Gibson received a BA
in music from the University of Memphis.
Gibson’s career has been a constant progression and
immersion into many genres of music, with blues being the foundation
and primary inspiration of his artistic endeavors.
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