Bernard Allison
By All Music Guide
By All Music Guide

Bernard counts among his influences icons like Albert King, Muddy Waters and Freddie King, and later, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Johnny Winter.
Allison began accompanying his famous father to blues festivals in the early 1970s. There, he was introduced to a whos-who of Chicago blues stars: Muddy Waters, Hound Dog Taylor and Albert King, among others. When he was seven or eight, he began having aspirations of becoming a guitar slinger like his father. Allisons father was more than just a casual record collector, and so Bernard benefited from his father and brothers collections of classic lues and gospel.
After graduating from high school, Allison began playing with Koko Taylor in her touring band. He stayed with Taylors band until 1985, when he left to hustle up his own gigs as Bernard Allison and Back Talk. Allison spent a lot of time in Canada with his first band, and later rejoined Taylor and her Blues Machine for another two years in the late 1980s.
After joining his father in Europe for a live recording, Bernard was asked to join Luthers touring band and become his European bandleader. Allisons father helped his son along with the finer points of showmanship for several years until he was good enough to lead his own trio or quartet. At Christmas, 1989, while both were living together in Paris, the elder Allison arranged to give his son the most precious gift for budding musicians: studio time to record his first album. Allisons debut, Next Generation, was recorded for Mondo Records using musicians from his dads band. His other foreign-label releases include Hang On, No Mercy, and Funkifino.
In December 1996, Allison was contacted by Cannonball Records founder Ron Levy. Allison was home in Chicago visiting family at Christmas, and hadnt brought any of his guitars or other equipment with him. Levy wanted something based in traditional electric blues, with a few bones for newer fans of the idiom who have jumped on the lues bandwagon since 1990. Allison released his stunning U.S. debut, Keepin the Blues Alive in early 1997, receiving a great deal of critical acclaim. On his successful tour of clubs around the U.S. in the latter half of 1997, Allison was joined by drummer Ray Killer Allison (no relation) and Buddy Guy bassist Greg Rzab, among others. Times Are Changing followed a year later. In mid-2000, Across the Water was released. Based in Paris full-time, he has the comfort and security that the multitude of lues clubs and festivals around Europe can provide.


























