Nick Gravenites

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Born In Chicago 00:00 Tools
Gypsy Good Time 00:00 Tools
Blues On A Westside 00:00 Tools
Killing My Love 00:00 Tools
Hard Thing 00:00 Tools
It's About Time 00:00 Tools
Moon Tune 00:00 Tools
Holy Moly 00:00 Tools
My Labors 00:00 Tools
Carmelita Skiffle - Live 00:00 Tools
Throw Your Dog A Bone 00:00 Tools
As Good As You've Been To This World 00:00 Tools
Wintry Country Side 00:00 Tools
It Takes Time 00:00 Tools
Since the Gas Station Left Town 00:00 Tools
I'm a bluesman 00:00 Tools
Junkyard In Malibu 00:00 Tools
Forty Days & Forty Nights 00:00 Tools
Buried Alive In The Blues 00:00 Tools
Bye Bye 00:00 Tools
Down In the Bottom 00:00 Tools
My Party 00:00 Tools
Blues In The Bottle 00:00 Tools
The Sister Song 00:00 Tools
Dekalb Blues 00:00 Tools
Southside 00:00 Tools
Funky News 00:00 Tools
Blues Back Off 00:00 Tools
I'M A DANCING FOOL 00:00 Tools
Walkin' Blues 00:00 Tools
WHO'S OUT THERE 00:00 Tools
Six Weeks In Reno 00:00 Tools
Four Floors or Forty 00:00 Tools
Coming Home, Baby 00:00 Tools
Nobody's Fault But Mine 00:00 Tools
Get Together 00:00 Tools
Blues In My Bottle 00:00 Tools
Kill My Brain 00:00 Tools
I'm Gone 00:00 Tools
Pride Of Man 00:00 Tools
You Can't Hurt Me 00:00 Tools
Walk-In Box 00:00 Tools
Carmelita Skiffle (Live) 00:00 Tools
Highway One 00:00 Tools
Trust Me 00:00 Tools
Blue Highway 00:00 Tools
Bad Luck Baby 00:00 Tools
Big Bad Etta 00:00 Tools
Key To the Highway 00:00 Tools
Goin' Down Slow 00:00 Tools
Bad Talking Blues 00:00 Tools
I'll Pull The Trigger 00:00 Tools
Your Heart's In the Wrong Place 00:00 Tools
Livin' In the Right-Hand World 00:00 Tools
Ran Out Of West 00:00 Tools
Good Night Irene 00:00 Tools
Small Walk-In Box 00:00 Tools
Killing My Love (feat. Michael Bloomfield) 00:00 Tools
Drinkin' Wine 00:00 Tools
Didn't You Used To Be Somebody 00:00 Tools
Signs Of Life 00:00 Tools
Wintry Countryside 00:00 Tools
There's No Heaven 00:00 Tools
Anna 00:00 Tools
Left Handed Soul 00:00 Tools
Death Of Muddy Waters 00:00 Tools
Hot Rods And Cool Women 00:00 Tools
Walkin' Blues (Live) 00:00 Tools
Gypsy Good Time (feat. Michael Bloomfield) 00:00 Tools
Hollywood Woman (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
Blues on a Westside (feat. Michael Bloomfield) 00:00 Tools
Hollywood Woman 00:00 Tools
Can't Hurt Me No More 00:00 Tools
It Takes Time - Live 00:00 Tools
It Takes Time (feat. Michael Bloomfield) 00:00 Tools
Blues On a Westside - Live 00:00 Tools
Moon Tune (feat. Michael Bloomfield) 00:00 Tools
Anna (Live) 00:00 Tools
Rattlecan Man 00:00 Tools
Small 00:00 Tools
Rattlecan Man (Bonus Track) 00:00 Tools
Holy Moly (feat. Michael Bloomfield) 00:00 Tools
Born in Chicago (Live) 00:00 Tools
Funky News (Live) 00:00 Tools
Throw Your Dog a Bone (feat. Michael Bloomfield) 00:00 Tools
My Labors (feat. Michael Bloomfield) 00:00 Tools
Small (Live) 00:00 Tools
Carmelita Skiffle 00:00 Tools
Work Me Lord 00:00 Tools
As Good as You've Been to This World (feat. Michael Bloomfield) 00:00 Tools
Get Together (Live) 00:00 Tools
Can't Hurt Me No More (Live) 00:00 Tools
Wintry Country Side (feat. Michael Bloomfield) 00:00 Tools
It's About Time (feat. Michael Bloomfield) 00:00 Tools
Four Floors or Forty (Live) 00:00 Tools
Dekalb Blues (Live 1973-04-22) 00:00 Tools
Gypsy Good Time (Live 1973-04-22) 00:00 Tools
Weird Old Crazy World (Live 1973-04-22) 00:00 Tools
Left Hand Soul (Live 1973-04-22) 00:00 Tools
Buried Alive in the Blues [Live] 00:00 Tools
Carmelita Skiffle [Live] 00:00 Tools
You're Hearts In The Wrong Place 00:00 Tools
Swing With It 00:00 Tools
Born In Chicago (Live 1973-04-22) 00:00 Tools
Country Mechanic (Live 1973-04-22) 00:00 Tools
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Nicholas George Gravenites (born October 2, 1938 in Chicago, Illinois), known as Nick "The Greek" Gravenites and Gravy, is a blues, rock and folk singer–songwriter and is best known for his work with Janis Joplin and several other greats of the 1960s and 1970s. Nick currently resides in Sebastopol, California. According to author and pop music critic Joel Selvin, Nick Gravenites is "the original San Francisco connection for the Chicago crowd." Gravenites is credited as a "musical handyman" helping such San Francisco bands as Quicksilver Messenger Service and Janis Joplin's first solo group. Nick wrote Janis's song "Buried Alive In The Blues", but she died the night before her scheduled time in the studio and the song appeared as an instrumental on her album. He was also a songwriter for the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, which consisted of Elvin Bishop, Paul Butterfield, and Michael Bloomfield, then formed The Electric Flag with Butterfield guitarist Mike Bloomfield. Nick is also responsible for writing the score for The Trip. Nick still performs live in northern California; his regular shows include a bar in Occidental and several venues in downtown San Francisco. Nick also worked extensively with John Cipollina after producing the first Quicksilver Messenger Service album. Nick and John formed the Nick Gravenites–John Cipollina Band which toured a lot in Europe. Nick was inducted to the Blues Hall Of Fame in 2003 for his song "Born In Chicago". Nick grew up on the south side of Chicago hanging out in the mid-50's with a coterie of misfit white kids - Elvin Bishop,biopic1 Paul Butterfield, Michael Bloomfield - who went on to form that protean powerhouse of watershed white blues, The Paul Butterfield Blues Band. Learning their lessons first-hand from the south side greats - Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy, Howlin' Wolf, Jimmy Reed, Otis Rush - Gravenites & Co. burst open the seams of the scene with a feverish intensity and undeniable authenticity, redefining the blues with as much impact as the introduction of electric instrumentation had 15 years earlier. From the late 50's through the mid 60's, Gravenites gravitated between Chicago and San Francisco, establishing himself in the Bay Area in 1965. In addition to authoring the classic "Born In Chicago" and the groundbreaking "East West" for Butterfield, Gravenites scribed hits for Janis Joplin and has his songs recorded by Big Brother and the Holding Company, Michael Bloomfield, the Electric Flag of which Gravenites was a founding member, Pure Prairie League, Tracy Nelson, Roy Buchanan, Jimmy Witherspoon as well as blues giants Howlin' Wolf, Otis Rush, and James Cotton. He has a couple of solo albums and has scored and played on the soundtracks for "The Trip", "Medium Cool", and "Steelyard Blues". He has appeared on some 40 albums as singer, songwriter, guitarist, and producer. Other Bands: He formed the short lived Blue Gravy and joined Big Brother And The Holding Company early in 1969 staying until early 1972. He was involved with the Taj Mahal-Mike Bloomfield live album, and again in 1973 with Steelyard Blues. He also formed the Nick Gravenites Blues Band in 1978 and that year he joined Huey Lewis' Monday Nite Live sessions which disbanded by the end of that year. Nick also worked a lot with John Cipollina, a connection that started with Nick producing the first Quicksilver Messenger album. Later they built the Nick Gravenites-John Cipollina Band which toured a lot in Europe and their record label Line being based in Germany. One of the band's drummers was former Clover drummer Marcus David who later recorded his solo album Greatest Hits on Line Records in 1980. Nick Gravenites himself recorded Bluestar which was also released on Line in 1980 with John Cipollina on guitar, Huey Lewis on harp who, at that time, was an in-demand session player who, after Clover's demise, played harp also on albums by Phil Lynott, Nick Lowe, Dave Edmunds and City Boy. The album Monkey Medicine was recorded in Germany after Nick and John finished their European tour. Under very primitive conditions they recorded this album in Hamburg accompanied by Marcus David on drums and Al Staehely on bass/vocals. In late 1984 Gravenites was again a member of one of John Cipollina's many projects, Thunder and Lightning, in San Francisco. During the last few years Gravenites regularly played the psychedelic blues in a small club called the Bodega Bay Grange, Marin County, joined by Doug Kilmer on bass, Mark Adams, harp, and Roy Blumenfeld on drums. The German Taxim label released one of these 1994 concerts on CD in 1996. 1999 saw the release of yet another Gravenites' solo album on which Huey Lewis plays harmonica again. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.