Louie Shelton and the founding members of Toto didn’t think the song had “a chance in hell” of succeeding. A DJ proved them ...
The breezy hit became one of classic rock’s defining driving songs after emerging from a legendary musical collaboration.
The hit song was recorded by multiple artists.
When the COVID-19 shutdown hit more than two years ago, longtime Bay Area musician Boz Scaggs thought it might be an opportune time to write some songs. “I worked on some odds and ends,” Scaggs said. ...
"Some people are genuinely confused, almost angry in a way, at my nonchalance at saying I had other things to do," Scaggs shrugged in a 1994 interview with Mojo. "They say, 'How do you just walk off ...
Ohio-born, Texas-bred singer and songwriter Boz Scaggs began his musical life as a bandmate of friend Steve Miller in the early '60s. After a stalled start to a solo career in 1965 with an album ...
The “accidental” 1976 smash hit created by a virtuoso rock group and the most recorded guitarist in history ...
Born William Royce Scaggs, the musician was given the nickname Bosley, which was eventually shortened to Boz, while attending a private school in Dallas during the 1950s. At the same school, Scaggs ...
Boz Scaggs had been waiting a long time for a big record. One that would take the singer/guitarist’s career to the next level with sales, hit singles, gigging in larger concert venues, and put him and ...
If Boz Scaggs has discovered the fountain of youth, he’s keeping quiet about it. But the veteran musician is approaching his career with the infectious enthusiasm of a young musician delighted by all ...
Over the phone, Boz Scaggs sounds very much like the native Texan he is. Which is a surprise – not only because Scaggs has lived in and around San Francisco for the last 35 of his 59 years, but also ...
Chances are you have never heard the Boz Scaggs song “Harbor Lights” the way it is being played at Jazz Alley, where Scaggs is drawing sold-crowds in a rare local club date through Sunday night.