John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers
John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers were a pioneering English blues band, led by singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist John Mayall, OBE. Mayall used the band name between 1963 and '67 then dropped it for some fifteen years, but in 1982 a 'Return of the Bluesbreakers' was announced and the name began to be re-used. The name became generic without a clear distinction which recordings could be credited just to the leader or to leader and his band. The Bluesbreakers have included luminaries such as: * Eric Clapton (April-August 1965, November 1965-July 1966) and Jack Bruce, who both left to form Cream, * Peter Green, who had replaced Clapton, played until August 1967, when he departed with Mick Fleetwood and then also enticed Bluesbreaker John McVie a few weeks later to form Fleetwood Mac * Mick Taylor (August 1967-July 1969) who later joined The Rolling Stones, and reunion tours in 1982-83 and 2004, * Harvey Mandel, Walter Trout, Larry Taylor (later in Canned Heat), * Don "Sugarcane" Harris, Randy Resnick, Aynsley Dunbar, Dick Heckstall-Smith, Andy Fraser (Free), Chris Mercer, Henry Lowther, Johnny Almond and Jon Mark (later of Mark-Almond). ...show more
John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers were a pioneering English blues band, led by singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist John Mayall, OBE. Mayall used the band name between 1963 and '67 then dropped it for some fifteen years, but in 1982 a 'Return of the Bluesbreakers' was announced and the name began to be re-used. The name became generic without a clear distinction which recordings could be credited just to the leader or to leader and his band. The Bluesbreakers have included luminaries such as: * Eric Clapton (April-August 1965, November 1965-July 1966) and Jack Bruce, who both left to form Cream, * Peter Green, who had replaced Clapton, played until August 1967, when he departed with Mick Fleetwood and then also enticed Bluesbreaker John McVie a few weeks later to form Fleetwood Mac * Mick Taylor (August 1967-July 1969) who later joined The Rolling Stones, and reunion tours in 1982-83 and 2004, * Harvey Mandel, Walter Trout, Larry Taylor (later in Canned Heat), * Don "Sugarcane" Harris, Randy Resnick, Aynsley Dunbar, Dick Heckstall-Smith, Andy Fraser (Free), Chris Mercer, Henry Lowther, Johnny Almond and Jon Mark (later of Mark-Almond).
The Bluesbreakers were formed in January 1963 and became an ever-evolving lineup of more than 100 different combinations of musicians performing under that name. Eric Clapton joined in 1965 just a few months after the release of their first album. Clapton brought the blues influences to the forefront of the group, as he had left The Yardbirds in order to play the blues. The group lost their record contract with Decca that year, which also saw the release of a single called "I'm Your Witchdoctor" (produced by Jimmy Page), followed by a return to Decca in 1966.
The album Bluesbreakers with Eric Clapton (also known as The Beano Album because Clapton is shown on the cover photo reading a copy of the comic) was released later that year; it reached the Top Ten in the UK. Clapton and Jack Bruce left the group that year to form Cream. Clapton was replaced by Peter Green for A Hard Road, after which he left to form Fleetwood Mac. Finally, in 1969, the third Bluesbreaker-guitarist departed when Mick Taylor joined the Rolling Stones. ...show less
Albums & Singles by John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers

The Blues Breaker EP - [The Dave Cash Collection]

Howlin' At The Moon

John Lee Boogie

So Many Roads

Tough

Live At The BBC

Diary Of A Band Vol 1 & 2

Lost & Found: John Mayall

In The Palace Of The King

John Mayall's John Lee Boogie

The Power Of The Blues CD1

The Power Of The Blues CD2

Plays John Mayall (Live At Klooks Kleek)

The Power Of The Blues

Bluesbreakers With Eric Clapton - Deluxe Edition

Blues Forever
Playlists Containing Tracks by John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers

Merv of the Funks

Blues

The Best In Blues

The Bluest Blues: Fat Daddy's Groove Bag vs. …

They call it the Blues

The Friday Rock Show

Nova tunes

The Ultimate Hard Rock Playlist

LAZY SUNDAY

Rolling Stone 500 Greatest Albums Of All Time

Allstar Blues Review

Blues: Very Best of The Blues Ever (Top60)

Broken Heart Blues Club

Rolling Stone Top 500 All Time Albums!

Nothing But The Blues

Beach/lake/pool

BLUES AND ROCK&ROLL

psychedelia blues music

Feel-good

Blues

Southern Rock

Oldies

Work

BLUES ESSENTIALS

Best of the sixties (IMHO)

Essential Electric Blues

Rock N Roll on DLMES335 ™ = Chicago, Illino…

Blues

Best Of Rock

Best bass lines

Blues For You

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