Spencer is scheduled for two free public performances:
- Tuesday September 9, 7:00 p.m.–River Music Experience, 2nd & Main Streets, Davenport IA
- Wednesday September 10, 7:00 p.m.–Co-op Records, 3727 Avenue of the Cities, Moline IL
Please check our website at www.mvbs.org for updates on Spencer's public performances.
Spencer Bohren was born and raised in Wyoming, where he sang in a family choir that performed in churches, schools, and nursing homes. He acquired his first guitar at the age of 14, and
began his personal study of the blues by listening intently to all the music he could get his hands on and integrating it into his guitar playing. In 1968 this study became even more focused when he played in a duo called Eagle Ridin' Papa, named after a Big Bill Broonzy song and featuring the music of the Mississippi Sheiks, Bo Carter, Robert Johnson, Skip James, Snooks Eaglin, and dozens of other legendary blues musicians. Soon thereafter, Spencer moved to Denver, where he played with and learned from such blues legends as Bukka White and the Reverend Gary Davis.
Spencer moved to New Orleans in 1975, where he began performing regularly in popular clubs such as Tipitina's and the Absinthe Bar. Often he was paired with legends Professor Longhair, Earl King, Clifton Chenier, or James Booker. In 1983 Spencer began a seven-year tour all over the U.S. with his family in an Airstream trailer towed by his 1955 Chevrolet Bel Air. He later toured extensively in Europe and Japan. In 1997 Spencer returned to New Orleans, which he considers his spiritual home. His first recording came out in 1984, and since then he's released numerous albums.
In 1997, Spencer developed Down the Dirt Road Blues, his award-winning history of American music, which he has presented to thousands of students of all ages, as well as concert audiences in America and Europe. Spencer fell upon the approach of using a single melody and letting that song transform and migrate in a possible and probable historical context to illustrate the way blues has informed American music for three centuries. The result is based on a song first recorded by Charley Patton in the late 1920s and easily adaptable to a variety of American musical styles, from Delta blues to Memphis jug band, Appalachia to Nashville, Chicago to rock & roll, Beatlemania, and the British invasion. It follows the journey of a single song's journey from 16th Century Africa through America's culture and history up through the Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan. Down the Dirt Road Blues not only follows the song, it also is a commentary on the relationship between American history and music. Spencer talks about slavery, the Great Migration, racial integration through music in Memphis, the impact of radio on the cross-cultural spread of music, payola and its influence on popular music, and geographical styles and rhythms.
Down the Dirt Road Blues is performed on a variety of vintage instruments to add authenticity to the various versions of the song. Spencer Bohren's soulful vocals carry the listener to the exact time and place of each rendition. Listeners of all ages find themselves mesmerized with the story, curious to hear where the song travels next.
Spencer Bohren's residency this September is made possible by major support from the Riverboat Development Authority. Additional support is provided by Alcoa, The Lodge, River Music Experience, and KALA radio.