Floyd Dixon Passes Away
In Orange, CA At Age 77
(ORANGE, CA)—Robert Auerbach, founder/CEO of HighJohn Records, LLC is saddened to
announce that Floyd Dixon, the blues pianist generally credited with starting the
jump blues scene on the West coast, has died of cancer at age 77 in Orange, CA at
Chapman Hospital. Born in Marshall, TX on February 8, 1929, Floyd toured extensively
with the likes of Ray Charles, Ruth Brown and Charles Brown in the late 40s and
early 50s. He scored a series of hit records in the 50s with “Telephone Blues”,
“Call Operator 210” and “Hey Bartender”, the latter enjoying wide exposure with
the release of the 1980 hit film, “The Blues Brothers.”
In recent years, Floyd enjoyed
a career resurgence that began with his winning the prestigious W.C. Handy Award
for Comeback Album Of The Year in 1997 for Wake Up And Live. He was “re-discovered”
by Robert Auerbach, founder/CEO of HighJohn Records, LLC, who signed him to the
label to cut his 2005 disc, Fine! Fine! Thing! The album put Floyd back in the spotlight,
gaining him front covers of Living Blues and Southland Blues Magazine. He had been
performing around the country in 2006 and was scheduled to open the Long Beach Blues
Festival during Labor Day weekend. He’d just recorded concerts in Phoenix (6/1&2)
with fellow piano legends Pinetop Perkins and Henry Gray for a CD/DVD set entitled
Floyd Dixon’s Desert Piano Summit, which will be released later this year by HighJohn.
“We join with Floyd’s family and his many fans around the world in mourning and
celebrating a man who made giving his life’s mission. His generosity of spirit cannot
be overstated and we feel fortunate to have had the privilege of knowing and working
with him,” said Auerbach.
A public memorial service will be held at Grace Chapel
on the grounds of Inglewood Cemetery (720 E. Florence Ave.) on Monday, July 31 from
1-3 PM.