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Adolphus Bell
Active Touring Artists, Electric Blues
“I got the advantage over a lot of artists. I got my whole band by myself.” - Adolphus Bell
Feet flying, eyes flashing, hands on the guitar and song coming from the heart, that’s the Adolphus Bell One-Man Band.
Born: June 5, 1944, Birmingham, Alabama
Repertoire Summary: One Man Band, original Blues, Spirited
Current Location: Birmingham, AL
“I got the advantage over a lot of artists. I got my whole band by myself.” - Adolphus Bell
Feet flying, eyes flashing, hands on the guitar and song coming from the heart, that’s the Adolphus Bell One-Man Band.
Born: June 5, 1944, Birmingham, Alabama
Repertoire Summary: One Man Band, original Blues, Spirited
Current Location: Birmingham, AL
More about Adolphus:
Back in the 1960s, Pittsburgh, PA was a prosperous steel town with a wild night scene. You could go out to a club and hear jazz and blues just about every night of the week. One of the groups working the circuit was Adolphus Bell and the Upstarts. “I had five pieces – trombone, trumpet, drums, bass and me on the guitar and singing. My band opened a show for Bobby Blue Bland,” Adolphus recalls. “Money was circulating.”
The problem with a 5-man band is that you have to be sure that all five guys show up. Adolphus was getting discouraged, but, just before she died, his Mom planted some important words in his head. “Don’t give up because your band don’t do right,” she told him. “If you have to play your guitar play by yourself.”
“I was sitting in my room one day after she passed on,” Adolphus explains, “I got my guitar and I was playing and both my feet was going with the music. And it was like something hit me: go put some drums on them feet! I went down to a pawn shop and got me a bass drum and a high hat and came back up to that room. I started playing and the first song I played it scared me it sounded so good.”
Adolphus stayed in that room for a week and when he came out a new kind of one-man band had been born. No more penny whistles and snare drums, this was a full-throated blues sound. Adolphus played the clubs in Pittsburgh, moved his “band” to Atlanta, and set up to hit the road. “I played the numbers and hit the lottery for about five hundred bucks.” Adolphus remembers, “and I bought me a old cheap station wagon for about two fifty. I loaded my equipment and my clothes and each town I got to I was the talk of the town.”
When he wasn’t on the road Adolphus played in the Atlanta Underground – just down the platform from Mudcat (Danny Dudeck) and Music Maker’s artist Beverly Guitar Watkins. Adolphus was such a hit that his pay in tips could be seven or eight hundred a week. He also got involved in the Civil Rights movement, using his one-man band to draw out the crowd. When the police arrested Adolphus for playing without a permit, word got out in the press. The judge tossed the case out of the court room and the mayor issued orders to the police to stay at least 500 feet from any of Adolphus Bell’s shows. The 500 foot marker gives you just some idea of the size of the crowds he can pull.
As the years went by, the old station wagon became a van and Adolphus Bell traveled the south. He was on the highway in 2004 when Music Maker Relief Foundation’s Tim Duffy saw the van heading in the opposite direction. He couldn’t jump the highway to catch with the van, but Duffy asked around until Mudcat said he had tracked down a phone number. Duffy dialed that number and invited Adolphus to come down to the King Biscuit Blues Festival in Helena, Arkansas. “I couldn’t believe it,” Adolphus says. “I hadn’t even signed up with him and he fronted me half the money before I even got there. Now I’ve been to Turkey, Australia, Switzerland, France, Argentina, Costa Rica. . . I don’t care how many people try to stop you. The good Lord’s got something for you, then you’re going to get it. That’s the way I feel. That’s what happened.”
-Written by Susan Simone
Career Highlights
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25th Annual Roots of American Music Festival
In 2008, Bell performed alongside fellow Music Maker Blues Revue artists at the 25th Annual Roots of American Music Festival, held at the Lincoln Center in New York.
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Bell Peforms at European Music Festival
Adolphus Bell made his European debut at the Cognac Blues Passion Festival in Poitou-Charentes, France. One of the most highly regarded blues festival in Europe, the international event features over 120 concerts at five venues.
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Congressional Blues Festival
In 2007, Bell headlined Washington D.C.‘s prestigious Congressional Blues Festival.





