Child prodigy status is sometimes difficult to overcome upon reaching maturity. Not so for
-- he's far bigger (in more ways than one) on the contemporary blues circuit than he was at the precocious age of six, when he scored a national R&B hit with the
Little
Lucky Peterson was lucky to be born into a musical family. His dad,
James Peterson, owned the Governor's Inn, a popular Buffalo, New York blues nightclub that booked the biggies:
Jimmy Reed,
Muddy Waters,
Bill Doggett. The latter's mighty Hammond B-3 organ fascinated the four-and-a-half-year-old lad, and soon
Peterson was on his way under
Dixon's tutelage. "1-2-3-4" got
Peterson on
The Tonight Show and
The Ed Sullivan Show, but he didn't rest on his laurels -- he was doubling on guitar at age eight, and at 17, he signed on as Little Milton's keyboardist for three years.
A three-year stint with
Bobby Bland preceded
Peterson's solo career launch, which took off when he struck up a musical relationship with Florida-based producer
Bob Greenlee. Two
Greenlee-produced albums for Alligator, 1989's
Lucky Strikes! and the following year's
Triple Play, remain a pair of his finest recorded offerings. Extensive session work behind everyone from
Etta James to
Kenny Neal to
Otis Rush also commenced during this period.
In 1992,
Peterson's first Verve label album,
I'm Ready, found him boldly mixing contemporary rock and soul into his simmering blues stew. More high-energy Verve sets followed, making it clear that
Peterson's career was in full swing (meanwhile, his father fashioned his own career as a bluesman with albums for Ichiban and Waldoxy and remained an active player in Florida until his death in 2010).
Lucky made his debut for new label Blue Thumb with a self-titled effort released in 1999, and
Double Dealin' followed in early 2001. The new millennium found
Peterson recording a number of well-received albums for various labels, including Black Midnight Sun (2003, Dreyfus), the father-and-son James and
Lucky Peterson duo album If You Can't Fix It (2004, JSP), Heart of Pain (2010, JSP), You Can Always Turn Around (2010, Dreyfus), and Every Second a Fool Is Born (2011, JSP).
–
Bill Dahl, Rovi