Albert Collins
1932 – 1993 (61)

Albert Collins didn't use a pick. He played a Telecaster with his thumb and fingers, capoed way up the neck, and got a tone so sharp, so cold, so clean that they called him the Iceman. Frosty is instrumental blues perfection -- a Telecaster cutting through the mix like a shard of ice.

He was a cousin of Lightnin' Hopkins, but he forged his own path -- from Houston blues clubs to Alligator Records in Chicago, where he became one of the label's biggest stars. His live shows were legendary: Albert walking through the crowd with a hundred-foot guitar cord, the Telecaster still screaming, the audience parting around him like he was Moses with a Fender amp.

He won a Grammy, collaborated with Robert Cray and Johnny Copeland on the album Showdown!, and mentored a generation of blues guitarists. The Iceman played his last show in 1993, dying of cancer at 61. The Telecaster with the capo on the seventh fret is in a museum now. The tone is still cold enough to freeze a room.

Albert Collins played a Telecaster with his thumb, capoed way up the neck, and got a tone so cold they called him the Iceman. Frosty. Walked through the crowd with a hundred-foot cord.

Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

Albert Collins

1932 – 1993 (61)

Albert Collins didn't use a pick. He played a Telecaster with his thumb and fingers, capoed way up the neck, and got a tone so sharp, so cold, so clean that they called him the Iceman. Frosty is instrumental blues perfection -- a Telecaster cutting through the mix like a shard of ice.

He was a cousin of Lightnin' Hopkins, but he forged his own path -- from Houston blues clubs to Alligator Records in Chicago, where he became one of the label's biggest stars. His live shows were legendary: Albert walking through the crowd with a hundred-foot guitar cord, the Telecaster still screaming, the audience parting around him like he was Moses with a Fender amp.

He won a Grammy, collaborated with Robert Cray and Johnny Copeland on the album Showdown!, and mentored a generation of blues guitarists. The Iceman played his last show in 1993, dying of cancer at 61. The Telecaster with the capo on the seventh fret is in a museum now. The tone is still cold enough to freeze a room.

Albert Collins played a Telecaster with his thumb, capoed way up the neck, and got a tone so cold they called him the Iceman. Frosty. Walked through the crowd with a hundred-foot cord.

Frostbite (1980) Frostbite (1980)
The Cool Sound of Albert Collins (1965)
Love Can Be Found Anywhere (Even in a Guitar) (1968)
Trash Talkin' (1969)
Truckin’ With Albert Collins (1969)
The Compleat Albert Collins (1970)
There’s Gotta Be a Change (1971)
Ice Pickin’ (1978)
Frostbite (1980)
Showdown! (1985)
Cold Snap (1986)
Iceman (1991)
Live Has Many Faces (2006)
Funky Blues LIve 1973 (2014)
bluestexas blues
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Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

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