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In 1992, Scaggs married Dominique Gioia. [28] In 1996, they moved to Napa Valley and planted 2.2 acres of Grenache, Mourvedre, Syrah, and Counoise grapes. [29] In 2000 they made their first wine, and in 2006 Scaggs Vineyard was certified organic. [30] In 2016, Scaggs sold his plot to Newfound Wines. [31]
The Guardian wrote that "Dig sounds convincingly 21st century, but at heart it's the latest chapter in Scaggs's long-standing enthusiasm for rhythm and blues." [6] The Independent determined that "Scaggs is the American equivalent of Robert Palmer, an elegant R&B stylist with consummate blues and soul chops, whose career has been occasionally wrong-footed by the vagaries of musical fashion ...
The Dukes of September was an American supergroup, formed in 2010 featuring Donald Fagen, Michael McDonald and Boz Scaggs.The project was a resurrection of the previous New York Rock and Soul Revue, which featured the same three musicians and played a combination of hits from the members' respective careers as well as a wide variety of covers.
Down Two Then Left is the eighth album by singer Boz Scaggs, released in 1977. It peaked at No. 11 on the Billboard 200 . [ 5 ] This album is notable for having the first appearance of Steve Lukather on a Boz Scaggs album.
Silk Degrees is the seventh studio album by American musician Boz Scaggs, released on February 28, 1976, by Columbia Records.The album peaked at No. 2 and spent 115 weeks on the Billboard 200.
Out of the Blues is the nineteenth studio album by American singer-songwriter Boz Scaggs. [2] The album, a mixture of vintage classics and four original compositions by close friend Jack "Applejack" Walroth, is the last in a trilogy that began with 2013's Memphis and continued with 2015's A Fool to Care. [3]
Producer – Boz Scaggs; Executive Producer – Harry Duncan; Recorded by Michael Rodriguez and Elliot Scheiner; Assistant Engineers – Skip Curley and Bob Levy; Recorded at Meac Studio, Skywalker Sound (Marin County, CA) and Royal Recording Studio (Memphis, TN).
Scaggs recalled: " 'Lido Shuffle was a song that I'd been banging around. I...took the idea of the shuffle [from] a song that Fats Domino did called 'The Fat Man' that had a kind of driving shuffle beat that I used to play on the piano, and I just started kind of singing along with it. Then I showed it to [David] Paich and he helped me fill it out.