The Rocklopedia Fakebandica now has a podcast.
Listen now!

Difference between revisions of "Marvin Pontiac"

From Rocklopedia Fakebandica
Jump to navigationJump to search
m
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 11: Line 11:
 
*https://www.discogs.com/artist/993646-Marvin-Pontiac
 
*https://www.discogs.com/artist/993646-Marvin-Pontiac
 
*https://riotfest.org/2018/04/john-lurie-marvin-pontiac-reissue/
 
*https://riotfest.org/2018/04/john-lurie-marvin-pontiac-reissue/
*https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQIaCd9ywyE&list=PLkFdsbeb3snzlxmUhqZGvPdu48-jAcA3C
+
*https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQIaCd9ywyE
  
{{#ev:youtube|qQIaCd9ywyE&list=PLkFdsbeb3snzlxmUhqZGvPdu48-jAcA3C}}
+
{{#ev:youtube|qQIaCd9ywyE}}
  
 
[[Category:1999|Pontiac, Marvin]]
 
[[Category:1999|Pontiac, Marvin]]
 
[[Category:Albums|Pontiac, Marvin]]
 
[[Category:Albums|Pontiac, Marvin]]
 
[[Category:Blues|Pontiac, Marvin]]
 
[[Category:Blues|Pontiac, Marvin]]
 +
[[Category:Hoaxes|Pontiac, Marvin]]

Latest revision as of 05:57, 30 January 2019

Outsider blues musician invented by artist, actor, composer, podcaster John Lurie for the 1999 album The Legendary Marvin Pontiac* ‎– Greatest Hits. He followed it up in 2017 with another release, Marvin Pontiac: The Asylum Tapes.

Lurie wrote Pontiac as a hipster's musical archaeological wet dream: outsider, person of color, troubled genius, went insane, never heard of but yet left a bunch of recorded material.

He was born in Mali in 1932, and killed by a bus in Detroit in 1977.

Real musicians on the album include: John Medeski, Billy Martin, G. Calvin Weston, Marc Ribot, and Tony Scherr. Lurie is a real saxophonist with band The Lounge Lizards.

External Links