Gary Allen Wiggins, known as "Detroit" Gary Wiggins (November 10, 1952 – November 22, 2020)[1] was an American musician.
Biography
Born in Inkster, Michigan, United States, while he was still an infant his family moved to the west side of Detroit, on Oregon Street, where he was raised. His late mother, Ruth Russell Wiggins (1920-1999), reared him in the church where he began to perform on the saxophone with Brother Lawhorn in 1962. He attended Northwestern High School until 1970, and played in a jazz band while attending community college.[2][3]
At age 14,[citation needed] he played in Bobo Jenkins Blues Band,[4] in Detroit. Wiggins made his first recorded release "That Good Old Funky Feeling" on 45rpm at the age of 17 with his band, The Impacs.[3]
The Impacs were a backing band for several of the Detroit R&B vocal groups such as the Dramatics. After touring with the Dramatics and performing in such places as the Apollo in Harlem, the T.P. Warner Theater in Washington D.C. and tours through Panama, and the eastern coast of North America, he headed west and camped in California for five years. During this time he performed with musicians such as Eddie Shaw, Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson, Johnny Heartsman, Roy Brown,[5]Big Mama Thornton,[3][6] and many other musicians on the West Coast music scene.[7]
He joined the Ray Charles show in Germany twice, and went to Japan. In Osnabrueck, Germany, Rannenberg and Wiggins founded the Pink Piano Jam Sessions[24] (where Arnett Cobb's last performance was recorded)[16] and, after moving to Berlin, he continued inviting international stars to the Berlin Blues Café.[25]
Wiggins played in the A-Trane[26] International Jazz Club Berlin - that announced him as "one of the most important american Saxophonists living in Europe",[27] – for more than 20 years, as well as Europe's oldest jazz club in Paris Le Caveau de las Huchette.[28][29]
Wiggins won the Berlin Jazz & Blues Award in 2002 and the German Preis der Deutschen Schallplattenkritik 1994 for Acoustic Soul, as well as appearing on the Gong Show in 1977 with Rick Murphy and David Winans as The Show Bizz Kids.[3] In his latter years he started acrylic painting and undertook several art projects.[36]
Wiggins died on November 22, 2020n in Bissingen an der Teck, South Germany, at the age of 68.[1]
Discography
Introducing The International Blues Duo To The World (1984)
The International Blues Duo Meets Blues Wire - Truly International (1987 / 2014)
Bobby McFerrin feat. Detroit Gary Wiggins: Bobby's Thing and Lady Fair (1988)
The International Blues Duo Featuring Katie Webster (1989)
Time For Saxin’ (1990)
Detroit Gary Wiggins & C.C. the Boogieman: Acoustic Soul (1992)
I Got Up (1996)
Fabrice Eulry & Detroit Gary Wiggins: Paris Jook (1996)
Ballads in a Diplomatic Lounge (2004)
Zeitlos (2005)
Saxin’ the Blues (2011)
As a side-person
Lefty Dizz & Shock Treatment: Live in Chicago (1982/2008)
Klaus Lage: Schweissperlen (1985)
Johnny Heartsman: Sacramento (1987)
Roy Gaines: Going Home to See Mama (1987)
Angela Brown: Live (1993)
The Gospel Messengers: Lean on Me (1996)
EB Davis: Fool for the Ladies (1996) with Big Jay Mc Neely
Siggy Davis: Live (2013)
Jimmie Smith: Timemension (1983)
The Cat - several albums
Errol Dixon: Mr. Boogie Woogie
Robert Covington: The Golden Voice of Robert Covington (1987)
The Dramatics: What You See is What You Get (1972)