King Solomon Hicks To play his debut London Show 100 Club, London – Tuesday 7th June

King Solomon Hicks To play his debut London Show 100 Club, London – Tuesday 7th June

6th May 2022 0 By Jon Deaux

Harlem-born rising jazz-blues star King Solomon Hicks will be playing a special show at Londonā€™s iconic 100 Club on Tuesday 7th June. Support will come from Toby Lee.Ā  Tickets are available HERE
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Hicks will be playing songs from his latest album HARLEM, which was released in March 2020 via Provogue/Mascot Label Group ā€“ home to George Benson, Joe Bonamassa, Robert Cray, Beth Hart, Kenny Wayne Shepherd and more. Watch the lyric video for ā€œIā€™d Rather be Blindā€

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Hicks won the 2021 Blues Foundation Award for ā€˜Best Emerging Artist Albumā€™ and has picked up support from the BBC Radio 2 blues show as well as plaudits from the likes of Classic Rock magazine who said ā€œ[Hicks] has Harlem under his fingernails and the touch of a natural-born bluesman. His fresh, clipped guitar style and vintage holler suggest an anachronistic soul man.ā€œ Ā It was Guitar Techniques ā€˜Album of the Monthā€™ upon release praises him saying, ā€œHarlem is a very strong album and Hicks really is one to watch out for,ā€ whilst Powerplay magazine Ā proclaimedā€œ Harlem is an album that showcases his extraordinary talents.ā€ Ā He has also picked up support from Blues Matters, Blues in Britain and more.
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He has recently wowed audiences in the US with a run of shows including supporting artists such as Joe Louis Walker, Samantha Fish and Shemekia Copeland.
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He grew up in Harlem “around a lot of great musicians,” he says. The city has been synonymous with vibrancy, art and music ever since the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and 1930s. Ā Music runs through the veins of the city, so there was no doubt that the young Hicks, who was only 6 years old when he started playing the guitar, was going to absorb those surroundings. By 13 he was on the stage at the Cotton Club, four times a week, as lead guitarist in the clubsā€™ 17 piece band and was already playing in legendary venues such as St. Nickā€™s in Sugar Hill and the iconic Lenox Lounge which Malcolm X had been a patron, and had seen the likes of Miles Davis and John Coltrane grace the stage.
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His full debut, ā€˜HARLEMā€™ is produced by multiple Grammy Award winner Kirk Yano (Miles Davis, Public Enemy,Ā Mariah Carey), and showcases Hicks as a writer, player and interpreter. Originals such as the roadhouse ready ā€˜421 South Main,ā€™ the gospel shuffle of ā€˜Have Mercy on Meā€™ and the aching instrumental ā€˜Riverside Drive,ā€™ he rubs musical elbows with staples such as “ā€™Everyday I Sing the Bluesā€™ and ā€˜It’s Alright,ā€™ a Latin-tinged take on Blood, Sweat & Tears’ ā€˜I Love You More Than You Will Ever Know,ā€™ a funked-up romp through Gary Wright’s ā€˜Love is Aliveā€™Ā and a searing rendition of Sonny Boy Williamson’s ā€˜Help Meā€™ that closes the album.

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