Reggie Sears

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Reggie Sears
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Reggie Sears in 2010
Born Reginald W. Sears
(1991-04-12) April 12, 1991 (age 33)
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, United States[1]
Nationality American
Other names <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Reggie "King" Sears[2]
  • Reggie "Goku" Sears[3]
Ethnicity Multiracial
Height 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Musical career
Genres Soul, pop, neo soul, R&B, funk, psychedelic soul, blues, southern soul, jazz, rock, reggae
Occupation(s) Musician, guitarist, singer, songwriter, record producer, composer, arranger, singer-songwriter
Instruments Guitar, vocals, bass guitar, keyboards, piano, drums, percussion
Years active 2002–present
Labels Redd Dawg Records
Associated acts Solomon Burke, Black Zack, Fruteland Jackson, The Soul Generals, David Hudson, Jerome Towers, Dust Da Rapper, Blowfly, Fred Bolton, Timmy Thomas
Website www.reggiesears.com
Notable instruments
Fender Buddy Guy Stratocaster, Fender Hot Rod Deville, Squier Affinity Strat, Dean Markley K20 Amplifier

Reggie Sears is an American recording artist, vocalist, multi-instrumentalist musician and record producer, and a former child prodigy guitarist[4][5][6] known for his songs "Dirty Dancer", "Dip My Dipper", and "You Betrayed Me."[2]

Early life

File:Reggie12Solomon.jpg
Reggie Sears live onstage with his "godfather" Solomon Burke

Born in 1991 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida,[7] Sears is the son of an African-American/Native American mother and a Caucasian father and was raised in a lower-income area in Fort Lauderdale's inner-city.[2]

Sears was inspired to sing & play guitar after receiving a copy of Phil Thornalley's Swamp album at age 4. He asked for a guitar at age 5 and the following Christmas he received one but his interest soon shifted to drums and he began playing drums after his parents bought him a drum set when he was 8. Inspired by Blues artists, notably Buddy Guy, B.B. King, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Lightnin' Hopkins as well as the Soul, Rock and Funk music his parents would play,[2] he got started after his father purchased for him a Lonnie Mack CD[8] and he began taking guitar seriously at age 11 after a cousin turned him onto Jimi Hendrix. At age 12 Sears asked his dad to take him to an open-mic at a local club and Sears began gaining recognition as a young Blues guitarist. Sears began sitting in with local bands and soon began appearing with revered Blues artists such as legendary Blues guitarist Hubert Sumlin, Blues star Ronnie Baker Brooks (once referring to Sears as a "young Rico Suave"),[4] Blues legend Guitar Shorty, Bob Margolin, Chris Beard, Ana Popovic, Michael Burks, G. Love and Special Sauce, Fruteland Jackson, Lil' Ed Williams, Charlie Musselwhite, Bobby Rush, Inner Circle, Henry Gray, John Primer, Jimmy "Bo" Horne, Pinetop Perkins, backed up The Temptations,[9] and even appeared with Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Solomon Burke who dubbed Sears "the future [of Soul and Blues]" & referred to him as "godson". Within a few months he was playing professionally. [10][11] In early 2004 Sears assembled a band of veteran musicians and he began booking shows at local clubs & festivals on the weekends and developed a loyal fan base and attracted the attention of several independent labels.[10]

Career

Debut album: Transitions

File:Reggie Sears Fort Pierce live.jpg
Reggie Sears live at age 14

Sears' national debut album Transitions, a Jazz-Rock influenced collection of classic & obscure Blues covers was released in September 2005.[12] Sears enrolled in virtual school so that he could play music full-time. He began touring in support of "Transitions" which led to appearances at notable venues such as Sarasota Blues Festival in Sarasota, FL;[13] Skippers Smokehouse in Tampa, FL[14] and slowly built his way to headlining or co-headlining appearances at House of Blues in Orlando, FL,[15] on The Waterfront in Rockford, Illinois,[4] and Cultural Fest in Las Vegas. His 2nd CD "Blues Power" was released in fall of 2006. Looking to expand his musical horizons, Sears taught himself how to play over 20 instruments and learned the technical side of music production.[2]

Southern Soul, Florida Style

File:Reggie Sears live in 2006.jpg
Reggie Sears at age 15 on tour in 2006

In late 2006 Sears moved to the Southern Soul genre with the release of his 3rd CD "Southern Soul, Florida Style," a collection of Blues and Southern Soul songs that gained little exposure or radio play despite the lead single "Back That Thang Up" finding its way on some radio playlists and club reports. Sears slowly built a strong fan base in the Southern Soul market by tirelessly touring the south's "Chitlin circuit" of rural juke joints, ghetto bars, and blues festivals. Despite his often suggestive lyrics and racy concert performances which was deemed too explicit for commercial audiences, he became an underground success across the South and audiences, especially female ones, flocked to see Sears in concert.[2] His 4th CD quietly dropped in summer 2007 with the lead single "Dip My Dipper" faring well. In 2007 he served as musical director & lead guitarist for Miami Soul singer David Hudson as well as guitarist/bassist and musical director for The Soul Generals while recording his 5th CD, his would-be major label debut "Sweet Thang" which was ultimately shelved in 2009 and remains unreleased. By the end of the year Sears went on hiatus from music at age 16 after personal problems arose. After a bout of depression and an attempted suicide, he turned his life over to God and began to do shows again, editing the lyrics to many of his songs and considerably cleaning up his stage show.[2] The next few years went by with a few singles and some sporadic tour dates on the Chittlin' Circuit. In 2010 Sears won a Soul Patrol "best of" in the Slow Jam category for his digital-single "You Betrayed Me".[16] In November of that year he released his most successful single to date "Dirty Dancer" which fared well on the Southern Soul charts, hitting number one in several markets.[17] Sears was nominated for Soul Blues Music Award for "Best New Artist".[18]

So Many Roads

Sears began to embrace the Neo-Soul and Urban Adult Contemporary Rhythm and Blues (R&B) sound with the release of the low-profile single "Can't Get You Out of My System" in early 2011. By this time Sears had devoted much of his time to church. Nothing else was heard from him until early 2012 when he released "With Every Beat of My Heart."[19] Sears continued writing and recording new songs and performing locally but dedicated most of his time to preaching while also doing session work[2] appearing as the featured guitarist on Anakarenn's debut album as well as production work on Black Zack's "Southern Soul Radio" album, and producing and mentoring local artists. In 2015 he toured as a bassist for Blowfly and played keyboards and guitar on his final album "77 Rusty Trombones."[20] Later that year he began working with Soul legend Timmy Thomas as a multi-instrumentalist and opening act.[21] Sears is currently in production on a new CD titled "So Many Roads".[19]

Gear

In the studio Sears uses a plethora of guitars, amps and effects. He plays a Gibson B.B. King Lucille Signature ES-335, an assortment of Squier Stratocasters, an Epiphone Les Paul, Epiphone SG, and a few Harmony electric guitars however, he most notably is known for playing the Fender Buddy Guy Stratocaster, a guitar he has owned since he was 12 years old. He plays through an amp chain of a Fender Hot Rod Deville, Marshall JCM 2000 and a Dean Markley K-20 amp to get his signature sound.[22]

Discography

  • Transitions (2005)[23]
  • Blues Power (2006)
  • Southern Soul, Florida Style (2006)
  • Get Up on It (2007)
  • Sweet Thang (2009) (unreleased)
  • So Many Roads (TBA)

Singles

  • "Mellow Down Easy"(2005)
  • "Crosscut Saw" (2005)
  • "I Had My Chance" (2005)
  • "Show Me What You're Working With" (2006)
  • "Back That Thang Up" (2007)
  • "Sweet Thang" (2007)
  • "Dip My Dipper" (2007)
  • "She Made A Freak Out of Me"(2007)
  • "You Caught Me with My Drawers Off" (2008)
  • "Bounce That Booty"(2009)
  • "Prisoner of Love"(2009)
  • "I Can't Find A Love"(2009)
  • "Bigg Poppa"(2010)
  • "You Betrayed Me" (2010)
  • "Dirty Dancer" (2010)
  • "Can't Get You Out of My System"(2011)
  • "With Every Beat of My Heart" (2012)

References

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External links