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Popa Chubby

Popa Chubby (Theodore Joseph Horowitz, born 31. March 1960 in New York) is a New York blues singer and guitar player. His angry and aggressive style of blues is influenced heavily by Willie Dixon. Like Jerry Lewis, he is more popular in France than the U.S. Popa Chubby is a true native son of the Big Apple. He was born in the Bronx and grew up in a neighborhood made famous by Robert De Niro in the movie A Bronx Tale. His parents owned a candy store on the corner of 181st Street and Arthur Avenue. His early memories of hearing the juke box playing the hits of early sixties soul and R&B – and the neighborhood teens flocking around it – made a lasting impression on him. To this day the musical influence of Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Aretha Franklin and Marvin Gaye are ever present in Popa's music. At the tender age of 8 he picked up the drums and became consumed in playing "Wipeout" (much to the dismay of his mother and neighbors). His parents were huge fans of jazz and R&B and had a vast collection of 78's and LPs. Popa would spend hours scratching them up by playing the sections he liked over and over again. When he was seven, his father took him to see an oldies show at Madison Square Garden. Up close to the stage he watched the headliner duck walk across the stage playing his Gibson 335 like a ringin' a bell!! Chuck Berry became Popa's idol. The untimely death of his father when he was nine left Ted living with his old-school Italian grandparents. His love affair with the drums was put on indefinite hold. The 70's came and Popa began to hear the blues rock that was everywhere. Johnny Winter, Foghat, Led Zeppelin and The Rolling Stones were on the radio and in the record stores and Popa, being a loner, found solace in listening to these records over and over on a beat up record player bought at a yard sale for a dollar. At age fourteen he picked up his first guitar and never put it down. His fingers bled from trying to pick out the blues licks he heard second hand from the rockers who played them. In the late 70's Punk Rock hit the scene, and Popa answered a classified ad in the Village Voice for a guitarist.

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93

Recording

Popa Chubby - Back to New York City (2011)

Popa Chubby - Back to New York City (2011)

Source: Something Else!

This is a script-flipped blues rock, with a plugged-in emphasis on the rock part. Back to New York City, in many ways, is as loud as it is brash—a thundering restatement of Popa Chubby's outsized persona and even outer-sized personality. But peel away the scalding licks, and the stomping rhythms, and the braying vocals, and you find—like a beautiful wildflower pushing up through the cracks in a city sidewalk—these moments of touching, real-world lyricism. Chubby embraces the contraditions: “People look ...

143

Recording

Popa Chubby - Stealing the Devil's Guitar (2006)

Popa Chubby - Stealing the Devil's Guitar (2006)

Source: Something Else!

By Derrick Lord It has long been the first trap any musician must jump once they hit it big. A successful record means a lot of people hear your music and from that point on you have a decision to make: Do you stick with the tried and true formula and give the less discerning fans out there what they want (more of the same old thing) or do you scratch the itch most artists have and experiment, expand and ...

174

Performance / Tour

Popa Chubby at the Pavilion at the Lycian Center, Kings Highway, Sugar Loaf, NY Saturday, April 14, 20078:00 PM

Popa Chubby at the Pavilion at the Lycian Center, Kings Highway, Sugar Loaf, NY Saturday, April 14, 20078:00 PM

Source: Jim Eigo, Jazz Promo Services

POPA CHUBBY Saturday, April 14, 2007 8:00 pm At The Pavilion at the Lycian Center, Kings Highway, Sugar Loaf, NY Popa Chubby's music, forged in the toughness that is New York City, takes blues to the cutting edge, where it high fives its contemporary cousins rock, rap, and hip hop. With his razor sharp, biting guitar, vocals from the gut, and songwriting prowess, Popa Chubby artfully combines the elemental force of the blues with ...

Concerts

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