Παρασκευή, 17 Μαΐου 2024, 04:49:29

ΑΛΛΕΣ ΒΙΟΓΡΑΦΙΕΣ

O "Σπύρος Σούκης"


SOUKIS Σπύρος Σούκης

Rockin..Blues With Greek Soul

Soukis Blues are spiced with funky grooves, shuffle beats and rock elements enlivened with European style and the freshness of Mediterranean breezes. Spiros Soukis, a native of Athens, Greece, began his love affair with the blues filtered through the British Invasion and guitar masters Peter Green, Eric Clapton, Robin Trower and Jeff Beck. In time he learned about American slingers like Jimi Hendrix, Johnny Winter, Duane Allman and Harvey Mandel. Reading liner notes and credits led him to discover the original men behind the music--Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, Robert Johnson, etc. In the early ’80s, Soukis started to perform and tour with Greek rock legend, Pavlos Sidiroupolos. He studied guitar, piano and harmonica and eventually earned a degree in Music Theory and Harmony from the Athens Conservatory. Soukis moved to Stockholm in the mid ’80s where he performed live, taught guitar and earned a degree in Musicology from Stockholm University. Back in Athens in the early ’90s he formed the band, That’s Why, which performed widely, recorded regularly and toured extensively. That’s Why was the opener for a diverse group of musicians ranging from The Pixies to Peter Green himself. The self-produced "Fota Tou Iliggou" (Lights of Vertigo), that Soukis released in July, 1996, received overwhelmingly positive reviews and was voted ’CD of the Month.’ Reissued in September, 2000, many of its songs can be found in various compilations. The U.S. Congress declared 2003 ’Year of the Blues,’ so Soukis arrived to live in New York City--from where he released "Transblues,” a CD recorded in both Athens and his newly-adopted home. The recording consists of eight original songs Soukis wrote and on which he sings and plays guitar; two smokin’ blues covers captured live in the heart of Manhattan round out this auspicious American debut. Soukis regularly performs throughout the tri-state area of New York, Connecticut and New Jersey in clubs, concerts, music festivals and private events. He plays often at Scotland Yard in Hoboken, NJ—a premier blues venue where the top musicians in the region appear—and B.B. King’s Lucille’s in Manhattan. A regularly featured guest on radio shows dedicated to the blues, Soukis has performed on “Antique Blues,” WPKN-FM, in Bridgeport, Connecticut and Montauk, New York; and "Something Inside Me," WKCR-FM, at Columbia University in Manhattan.