'Doyle Bramhall II' (born
24 December,
1968) is a guitarist and vocalist in his band
Smokestack and is also the second guitarist in
Eric Clapton's band.
Biography
Doyle Bramhall II is a songwriter, guitarist, and vocalist. He was born in
Austin, Texas and is the son of singer, songwriter and drummer
Doyle Bramhall, who had grown up as a close friend of
Stevie Ray Vaughan and
Jimmie Vaughan. At age 16, Doyle Bramhall II toured with
Jimmie Vaughan's band,
The Fabulous Thunderbirds, as second guitarist. Shortly thereafter, he formed Arc Angels with
Charlie Sexton and the rhythm section of
Stevie Ray Vaughan's band, Double Trouble (
Tommy Shannon and
Chris "Whipper" Layton on bass and drums respectively). Some of Doyle's influences include,
Johnny "Guitar" Watson,
Donny Hathaway,
Freddie King,
Albert King,
Jimmie Vaughan,
Stevie Ray Vaughan,
Sly & the Family Stone,
Lightnin' Hopkins, and
Curtis Mayfield.
In 1992 Doyle formed
Arc Angels with
Charlie Sexton and Stevie Ray Vaughan's outstanding rhythm section of bassist
Tommy Shannon and drummer
Chris Layton (also know as Double Trouble). Doyle and Sexton were only able to work together for one album but it was well received, with several songs receiving heavy rock radio airplay. They went their own ways after the album but have gotten back together and have been playing shows as Arc Angels again in 2006 and 2007.
Doyle released his self-titled debut album on the Geffen label in 1996 with backing support from
Wendy and Lisa. In later interviews, he stated his intent with that album to establish himself as more than just a guitar player. He was later signed to
RCA, and released his second album ''Jellycream'' in 1999. He appeared on
Austin City Limits in an episode shared with
Robert Cray that fall. The ''Jellycream'' album found its way into the hands of
Eric Clapton, who took an interest in his music and attempted to learn "Marry You" and "I Wanna Be" for their inclusion in a collaborative album he was working on with
B.B. King, released in 2000 as ''
Riding With The King''. Doyle also formed a new band, "Doyle Bramhall II & Smokestack," and recorded a new album produced by
Benmont Tench of
Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers fame. Released in 2001, ''Welcome'' marked a renewed focus on guitar.
Doyle's recording relationship with Clapton continued to flourish, and he wrote "Superman Inside" for and played guitar on Eric's 2001 solo album, ''
Reptile''. He and Smokestack opened for Clapton on his 2001 world tour, and Doyle occasionally joined Eric on stage. By 2004, he was Clapton's second guitarist after
Andy Fairweather-Low backed out of the tour. The 2004 tour was Clapton's effort at channeling his hero
Robert Johnson and Doyle later admitted that he had never listened to Robert Johnson until getting the gig as Clapton's second guitarist. Doyle also appears with Eric in the 2004 CD/DVD release ''
Sessions for Robert J''.
Doyle also played guitar on the 1999-2002
In the Flesh tour (captured on the ''
In the Flesh Live'' album) by former
Pink Floyd bassist
Roger Waters. Previous to that, Doyle also played a much lower key role backing his wife
Susannah Melvoin's (who also toured with Waters during the In the Flesh tour as a backing singer) twin sister
Wendy Melvoin for her band Girl Bros., and more recently with
Wendy and Lisa in the groups Pacifico and Funk Sway. Doyle and the latter group - with co-lead vocals by
Erykah Badu - is featured in the music documentary
Before the Music Dies.
As a session guitarist, he has worked with both
Sheryl Crow and
Susan Tedeschi. He also toured with Eric Clapton as part of his 2006/2007 world tour along with slide guitarist
Derek Trucks and he performed at the 2007
Crossroads Guitar Festival at Chicago's Toyota Park.
Of his songwriting, Doyle has said that although the blues is one of his favorite genres, he finds that most of his attempts at bluesy songwriting end up sounding "corny," and his songs always tend to have more of a rock feel.
Doyle almost usually plays the
Fender Stratocaster and occasionally uses some Gibson guitars, either playing on left-handed models or right-handed models upside-down. Doyle plays guitar left-handed but his guitars are strung as if to be played by a right handed player. In other words, the low E string is at the bottom of his guitar, and the high string at the top.
External links
★
Doyle Bramhall II's Official Site
★
Doyle Bramhall II Profile on MySpace
★
Fan Site Containing Complete Discography & Photo Gallery