Wayne Sharp & SharpShooter Band

Blues Southern Rock Blues Gulfport, MS United States

About Wayne Sharp & SharpShooter Band

Keyboard wiz Wayne Sharp was born on the Louisiana bayous, south of New Orleans, in the small town of Houma. His love of music starts with his mother but it was his older sister Dianna who f ...

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Members

  • Wayne Sharp - -Hammond B3 Organ, Piano, Vocals
  • Sean Sharp - -Drums, Percussions
  • Grayson Sharp - -Guitar, Vocals
  • Seadon Faulkner - -Bass Guitar

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Press

Take what you know about Wayne Sharp: his tenure alongside guitar virtuoso Michael Burks, his career with Jaimoe and Lamar Williams of The Allman Bros and his current project touring with his sons as Wayne Sharp & The Sharpshooter Band, and that is everything you hear lovingly concentrated into his album “Living With The Blues.” The album has all the moody grittiness that initially drew fans to the Michael Burks’ sound, only this time it is unequivocally Sharp’s own vision. It’s a vision that embodies an unparalleled maturity and musical wisdom that few of today’s artists can ever hope to achieve. To refine his ambition even further, he enlisted the talent of the acclaimed Jimmy Hall, who is about to embark on a world tour alongside Jeff Beck and who is known most notably as the founder, lead singer and harmonica player for Wet Willie. Second only to family, you can tell that music is Sharp’s core passion and you can hear that in every note and syllable. Though Sharp’s precision on his old Hammond B3 organ is the heartbeat of the album, it is his voice, deep and slightly rough around the edges, that directs the bittersweet heartbreak in many of the tracks, especially evident in “Runnin’ Out Of Time” and his cover of “A Whiter Shade Of Pale.” His first cover off the album, originally written by Willie Dixon and made a hit by Koko Taylor, “Wang Dang Doodle,” breathes fresh life into the original with the "Legendary Jackie Avery”(Writer, Prod / Otis Redding / Wilson Pickett / Allman Bros.) sharing the lead vocal, this will surely have you dancing “all night long." The last song on the album “Empty Promises” is a Michael Burks composition and serves as tribute to Burks’ soul and legacy. It is a heartfelt rendition that once again highlights heavy emotions that pair perfectly alongside each organ chord progression and guitar riff. It is hard not to get lost in the instrumentals that escalate to a soul wrenching crescendo that refuses to let go until the final notes ring in with profound resolution. If you have fallen in love with the album, it would be an injustice not to see his live performance with his sons by his side because there are some experiences that words simply cannot convey. Despite a long hard road through the music biz and the untimely death of Michael Burks, Sharp sees his efforts validated in performing alongside his sons, and it is that family chemistry that really earn Wayne Sharp & The Sharpshooter Band’s spot as one of the best blues bands on the circuit today. Wayne Sharp & The Sharpshooter Band will set off on another US tour this spring with their first date set for March 14.

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