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Soulful blues-influenced guitarist, storyteller, and songwriter

San Francisco singer/songwriter/guitarist
Jeffrey Whitmore Halford was born in Dallas, Texas, and grew up
in the early 1960s listening to Roger Miller on a $2 transistor
radio. In 1963, the year JFK was shot, his parents, Colin and Effie
Lou, headed west with their two young sons to Los Angeles in their
’59 El Dorado.
By the time Halford turned 18, he had moved
10 times between LA and San Francisco—his dad in search of
that proverbial better job and better life. He criss-crossed the
state, living in, among others, Torrance, Berkeley, West L.A., Westchester,
and San Mateo and weaned on the musical maelstrom of LA radio in
the ‘60s and ‘70s. Flat broke at times and battling
the bottle, Halford’s parents had low points—evictions,
Christmas trees crafted from fishing poles, hangers, and telephone
books, and car crashes, with his mom demonstrating a propensity
for totaling his dad’s favorite cars—and better times,
when the family listened to music and read. Surrounded by the albums
of Ray Charles, Dave Brubeck, Johnny Cash, Joni Mitchell, Elvis,
and Buffalo Springfield, Halford soaked up the best of American
music. His mom’s favorites were Dylan Thomas and Walt Whitman,
while Halford’s were Raymond Carver and Pablo Neruda. Books
and music were the family’s salvation.
In high school, Halford ditched classes and
came only to take the tests. According to school records, he had
the worst attendance of any graduating student. He decided to add
trouble w/the law to his resume. Then came a guitar from his dad,
and things started to turn.
After high school, Halford enrolled in architecture
school in San Francisco. While walking along Market Street, he watched
a legendary street band—Jimmy Ventilator and Harry Spider—playing
Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck Berry, Robert Johnson, and the Ventures.
Halford convinced them that he should join the band. For more than
a year, he cut his guitar chops on the street, playing to crowds
in Chinatown and Union Square until the police closed them down.
His street gig led him to play with Oakland blues greats Sonny Lane,
Mississippi Johnny Waters, and JJ Malone in clubs throughout that
city. He also formed his own roots rockabilly band, “The Snappers,”
playing for students at U.C. Berkeley, serving as the house band
at Ruthie’s Inn in Berkeley, and performing with the Blasters,
Chris Isaak, and the Beat Farmers. Music was Halford’s salvation.
Based in San Francisco over the last 15 years,
he’s been touring the country with his band, the Healers.
They’ve played shows with some of the most acclaimed artists
and songwriters, including Taj Mahal, Los Lobos, Etta James, The
Radiators, Robert Earl Keen, John Hammond, Augie Meyers, Dave Alvin,
Guy Clark, and Chuck Prophet, among others. His newest and fifth
CD, “Railbirds,” is the follow-up to the critically
acclaimed “Hunkpapa.” His original roots rock ‘n
roll songs etch a uniquely American, and specifically California,
landscape. The reviews for “Hunkpapa” encapsulate what
makes Halford so distinctive and compelling:
“Halford’s songs can serve as
sagas of America that can stand for all time.”
John N. Lomax
Houston Press
“Halford is probably one of the finest
slabs of roots rock and country fried blues and soul you’ll
hear in this or any other year. Halford is the total package: an
engaging singer with razor-sharp guitar chops who writes catchy
songs loaded with storied lyrics—it’s almost frightening
how good this guy is.”
Bill Frost
Salt Lake City Weekly
“This is great rootsy rock music. Halford’s
slide playing is raucous, raw, and foreboding. His poetry transcends
the run-of-the-mill lyrics.”
No Depression Magazine
“I am here to place Jeffrey Halford
up on the pedestal with such figures as John Fogerty, Randy Newman,
Alejandro Escovedo, and John Prine—and Bob Dylan—in
the pantheon of great American singer-songwriters.”
Buddy Siegal
OC Weekly/ Los Angeles
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San Francisco
Oakland
San Jose
Monterey
Sacramento
Napa
Sonoma
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