Walt Richardson is an American singer-songwriter and guitarist born in Fort Walton Beach, Florida to parents, Walter Harold Richardson Sr. and mother, Helen Virginia Richardson (née Robinson). He is the eldest of eight children.
He is a celebrated music veteran in the Tempe, Arizona area where his humanitarium contributions to the music community and music in schools (with an emphasis on cultural diversity), have been recognized with numerous awards.
Walter Harold Richardson II was born at Eglin Air Force Base in Fort Walton Beach, Florida on January 21, 1954, where his father, Chief Master Sergeant, Walter Harold Richardson, was stationed in the Air Force. Richardson Sr. was one of the first 1,000 African-Americans to integrate the Air Force and was later recognized in 2010 as one of the original Tuskegee Airmen. He served in Vietnam and was a recipient of the Congressional Gold Medal.
Richardson's father was an entertainer in the Tuskegee Airman singing group, Operation Happiness, composed of pilots, which entertained troops. He also performed with Bob Hope in USO shows and encouraged Walt to learn to play the piano. As a first communion gift, Walt's parents bought him a piano and he took several years of piano lessons. He bought himself a guitar from Spiegel's catalog from money earned by mowing lawns, when he was ten years old, and soon put together a mock band with his sisters as go-go dancers.
Richardson's early musical influences were The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, Cat Stevens, Bob Dylan, Creedence Clearwater, Sly and The Family Stone, Bob Marley, and Stevie Wonder.
During his high school years in the Philippines, Richardson put together his first band Counterclockwise Predicament. It was made up mostly of military kids performing at high school events.
His family moved back to the US in the early 1970s settling back in Florida where Richardson attended Pensacola College. He continued honing in on his skills on the guitar and writing songs. After graduating he was accepted at Arizona State University.
Richardson began performing at local open-mic's and as a street performer while attending Arizona State University. In the mid-seventies he met Aziz Chadley who introduced him to the Reggae sound and soon they put together the band Driftwood (Ronnie Scott, Rudy Chavez, Calvin Lewis, Vinnie I, Aziz Chadley) with Richardson being the main songwriter as well as performing reggae cover songs.
Playing at the original Chuy's in Tempe, in the mid-eighties, Driftwood would hold jam sessions on stage, eventually rebuilding the band and naming it Morning Star (Kurt Moorehead, Spider, Hannes Kvaran, Felix Sainz, Emilio Santiago, Aziz Chadley, Plato T Jones). The band toured extensively in the US and in three-to-eight week tours during the summer and fall, as a part of the Miller Band Network in 1991 and 1992 including international festivals where they shared the stage with artists such as Carlos Santana, Ziggy Marley and the Melody Makers, Third World, Steel Pulse, Burning Spear, and more. Morning Star released three albums, Morning Star, Double Bridge, and Another Way. Due to the band members having different goals, the band split up in 1997 and Richardson took some time off.
Richardson then began focusing on performing as a solo artist and with various musicians in the Walt Richardson band and Walt Richardson and Friends. He performs regularly in the Phoenix, Arizona area with an emphasis on performing in Tempe, Arizona.
With his belief that music is a means of healing for humanity, Richardson reached out to the City of Tempe to create festivals raising money for nonprofit organizations. This idea soon became the TV show Songwriter's Showcase at Tempe Center for the Arts, which Richardson hosts. The show airs on PBS affiliate KAET and Tempe Channel 11.
Richardson hosts the weekly world music program, My World of Music on Radio Phoenix, a nationally syndicated radio station providing an eclectic programming mix featuring independent news, culture and music content curated by local, regional, national and international producers.
Richardson is an avid supporter of the music community, performing live music and being interviewed by his alma mater, Arizona State University PBS television station's, KAET on numerous occasions speaking about topics involving the history of the music scene in Phoenix and Tempe, Arizona.
On Richardson's 60th birthday he was inducted into Arizona's Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame at Tempe Center for the Arts.
Richardson became the first inductee into Mill Avenue's new Walk of Music, a tribute to the many contributors to the Valley scene ‘who have made a true difference in the culture of music,’ noted Tempe Councilman Joel Navarro. The gold plaque honoring Richardson was installed on November 7, 2014 at Fourth Street and Mill Avenue on the southwest corner of Tempe, Arizona's, Tempe's Music Walk, which now includes such artists as The Gin Blossoms, Hans Olson, and the Mill Avenue nightclub Long Wongs.
Richardson was awarded the Tempe Human Relations Commission Award in the 'Individual Adult' category at the 21st Annual MLK (Martin Luther King) Diversity Awards Breakfast on January 14, 2019. The Tempe Human Relations Commission advises the mayor and city council and assists city departments on ways to eliminate prejudice and discrimination.
For his contribution to the music community and raising awareness on cultural diversity in Tempe, Arizona, The City of Tempe declared January 18, 2014 to be Walt Richardson Day.
As a child of a military father, Richardson attended many schools both nationally and internationally beginning with elementary school in Japan and graduating high school at Clark Air Base in the Philippines in 1972. Richardson's family moved back to Florida in 1972 where he earned his associate degree at Pensacola State College in 1974 and then moved to Tempe, Arizona to attend Arizona State University where he earned his bachelor's degree in 1976.
Complete article available at this page.
This post have 0 komentar
EmoticonEmoticon