PRESS KIT

Go For the Throat   A CD by Paul Filipowicz Blues guitar, vocals, songwriter, harmonica, producer


Paul Filipowicz Press Kit

Awards | Radio and Magazine Charts and "Best of" Lists |

Notable | Stage Plot | Press | Quotes

Awards

  • Chicago Blues Hall of Fame

  • Master Guitarist: 2015

  • Big City Blues Magazine Awards

  • World's Best Dressed Blues Performer, Male: 2013 & 2015

  • Madison Area Musicians Awards
     
  • Best Blues Album, Chinatown : 2005  

  • Best Blues Artist, Paul Filipowicz: 2005

  • Blues Song "Guitar Jones" 2006

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Radio and Magazine Charts and "Best of" Lists

  • Living Blues Magazine #24
     
  • Midnight at the Nairobi Room 2001#17
     
  • Chinatown 2004 #7

  • Chickenwire, 2008 WORT

  • FM Top 20 New Blues Releases #2

  • Unfiltered August 2018

  • Real Blues Magazine Top 100 Soul and Blues Chart 32 months

  • Chickenwire: 2008

  • 2010 Real Blues Magazine

  • Top 20 Best Texas New Releases #7

  • "Never Had It So Good with Clyde Stubbelfield," 1998 #14

  • "What have You Done For Me Lately," 1999

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Notable

  • Legendary Rhythm and Blues Cruise - Celebrity Jam Host: 2015

Stage plot

Paul Filipowicz Stage plot
Click on image to enlarge

Control "P" to print

Press

Paul on the Front Porch
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Whether it's at the Badger Bowl in Madison, an American Legion beer tent in Lake Mills or Buddy Guy's Legends inChicago, the blues guitarist, who makes his home just east of the Crawsh River in Jeerson County, goes into each show hoping to knock his fans off their feet and leave them gasping for air. The Wisconsin State Journal


If they're still standing at what should have been the end of the set list, it's a signal to Filipowicz to crank out another hard-driving tune on one of his worn Fender guitars.

But there is a softer side to the 66-year-old Chicago native who has lived in Wisconsin for the past 50 years and who was inducted into the Chicago Blues Hall of Fame last fall. Filipowicz takes a few moments during each show to remember those who have inuenced his music, a genre he discovered when he was 14 years old standing outside a club on the Windy City's south side.

The names include Walter "Lefty Dizz" Williams, Jimmy Dawkins, Chester "Howlin' Wolf" Burnett, Magic Sam, B.B. King and Muddy Waters.

"I don't take myself seriously but I take the music seriously," Filipowicz said last week while seated on the front porch of his 1908 farmhouse. "I feel that the old guys had a hand in getting me into the Chicago Blues Hall of Fame... and when I say their names they're in the room once again. So I try to do that."

Filipowicz is among the headliners at Atwood Fest on Sunday and will hit the Alchemy Cafe Stage at the corner of Atwood Avenue and Winnebago Streets at 2:15 p.m. He will follow the Katie Scullin Band that plays at 12:15 and precedes The Family Business, a rock band out of Monroe (4 p.m.) and Jane Lee Hooker (5:45 p.m.), a female blues band from New York that has been influenced by many of the same artists that have left their mark on Filipowicz.

Christine Johnson, president of the Madison Blues Society, will introduce Filipowicz and has seen the guitarist on several occasions, most recently July 22 at the Knuckle Down Saloon, 2513 Seiferth Road, a prime destination for all things blues. The club, opened by Chris Kalmbach in 2010, is where just over a year ago Filipowicz recorded his latest live album "Roughneck Blues" for Big Jake Records.

"He's just real high energy and just gives it his all at every performance," said Johnson, who has been with MBS for four years. "He's just one of those guys that from the rst note to the last note he just puts it all out there. He has lots of respect for the music and brings his own technique and voice to the blues genre."

Filipowicz is salt-of-the-earth.

He's been playing the blues for more than 40 years but at the same time has worked full-time in construction and roong to pay the bills. Bad knees and elbows forced him to retire from the work this year but he's still building a cabin near Tomahawk using timber harvested from his 70-acre property.

When he's back home and not playing his guitars, he likely has a wrench in hand. He's restoring a 1949 Ford pick- up truck with duel carburetors on a at head eight-cylinder engine and a 1948 Ford Super Deluxe four-door car with suicide doors - where the hinges are at the rear of the door. There's also a 1965 Mercury Comet and a 1950 Ford pickup in the yard. He uses a 2002 Toyota Sienna mini-van with more than 140,000 miles on the odometer to haul his gear to shows around the Midwest. It included shows Friday and Saturday at Riverfront Mary's in Sturgeon Bay.

"I've been wrenching all my life," Filipowicz said, as he showed o his vehicles and a garage packed with tools, engines and other parts. "I'm a Ford guy." His construction and car work stand in contrast to his stage presence where he wears suits from Mitchell Street Men's Wear in Milwaukee, cu links, Stacy Adams shoes in red, black, white or blue, and a fedora. In 2013, he was named best-dressed male by Big City Rhythm & Blues magazine and has Madison Area Music Awards for best blues album in 2005 and best blues song in 2006.

He learned to wrench from his father who worked full time making sausage for Armour & Co. in Chicago but on the weekends worked on cars. When Filipowicz was a sophomore in high school, his father took a job at Jones Dairy Farm in Fort Atkinson and moved the family to Wisconsin.

His father also played the harmonica and trumpet, his mother taught piano, his two sisters played piano and they all sang in church. Filipowicz gravitated to the guitar when he was about 7 years old. After graduating from Fort Atkinson High School in 1968, he attended UW-Whitewater for ve semesters before getting into construction work and moving to Denver. He returned to Wisconsin in 1974 and formed a band. His rst paid gig was in 1971 when Filipowicz played harmonica at the Mint Lounge at Humboldt and North avenues in Milwaukee.

He doesn't read music, learned by ear and plays his guitars without a pick. "I knew it was the way to feel the guitar. It gives you a dierent tone," Filipowicz said. "Music is a feeling and I try and transfer the feeling that I felt. When I'd go and see Otis Rush or Fenton Robinson or Jimmy Dawkins, I wouldn't sit there and look at their hands. I would just close my eyes and go with them. It would just elevate you to the moon."

His guitars, all Fenders, include a 1973 Stratocaster he purchased in 1981; a 1973 Telecaster and a 1963 Jaguar that he bought in 1973 for $100 after his 1957 Stratocaster was stolen.

Filipowicz has played with Ken Saydek and Mighty Joe Young and opened for Hound-Dog Taylor several times when he came to Madison for shows at the Church Key. He was inuenced by and friends with Luther Allison, who died in 1997 in Madison, and was a regular at Luther's Blues, a club on University Avenue near the UW-Madison campus from 2000 to 2005. He counts drummer Clyde Stubbleeld as a mentor and friend.

"As long as Clyde Stubbleeld is still around the world's a better place, I'll tell you that," Filipowicz said. "He's one of the greatest human beings I've ever met and he influenced my music tremendously by being in my band and being my friend."

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Quotes

Publications

"Filipowicz has an elemental vitality to his guitar playing that is lacking in many better known guitar slingers."Downbeat

"If Robert Johnson lost his battle with the devil you get the feeling that Paul might be a tougher opponent George P. Seedorff Big City Blues Magazine

"Paul captures the ragged intensity of Hound Dog Taylor one minute and the dexterous beauty of Magic Sam the next." Steven Sharp Living Blues Magazine

There is no room for wimps here this is dirty, steaming hot Chicago blues served up to any listener brave enough to jump on the ride. Break those filters off your smokes there is no way to protect yourself from inhaling this great stuff! Blues Blast

"Such raw grinding playing I haven't heard in a long time. This captures the spirit of Hound Dog Taylor, ZZ Top, Johnny Winter and Buddy Guy but doesn't sound like any of them." Bmansbluesreport.com "It doesn't get any more Chicago than this

Paul Filipowicz plays straight up 'Unfiltered' electric blues, that's the way he likes it and so will you. Big City Rhythm and Blues Magazine

"Filipowicz's finger- picked guitar solos come with raw emotion in every crystal clear note." Tim Holek, Living Blues
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Paul plays with the bitter intensity of Big Jack Johnson, Frank Frost and Albert Collins. A must hear!" Andre Hobus, Soul Bag Magazine, France

"Tough Texas Roadhouse Blues at its lowdown best... Filipowicz is the Real Deal. This man has to be heard!"Real Blues Magazine

"Filipowicz specializes in greasy low down blues investing every ounce of emotion into his music." Blues Revue

"There is simply no one else like Filipowicz in the blues. Eclectic, unorthodox, balls to the walls but tasteful guitar that pays tribute to the masters."Living Blues Personalities

"You can play my club anytime!" Buddy Guy, at Legends, Chicago IL.

Your writing is good and to the point. I like it very much." Jimmy Dawkins
(Chicago Blues Guitar Legend)

You're a bluesman , and every time you take the stage you got to prove it!" Luther Allison 7 Time Handy Award winner

"Paul brings a fresh and fierce approach and considerable song writing chops to bare on a gritty program, adding some heat to the flame he's helping to keep alive Dick Shurman Delmark Records

"I like the intensity of your playing, your raw tone, your "go for it" attitude as a player and I'm a very tough sell! Bruce Iglauer Alligator Records

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