⬇️ SKEETER BRANDON ⬇️
(6CD)
BIOGRAPHY
Keyboardist, singer, and songwriter Skeeter Brandon was born in 1949 and
raised in Goldsboro, NC. He and his band, Highway 61, made a name for
themselves as a touring act up and down the East Coast and nearby in the
1980s and '90s. He began singing in the church as a six-year-old and began
playing piano at age nine.
Blind since early childhood, he was sent to the Governor Morehead School for the Blind in Raleigh, NC.
He had some success as a teenager leading his own band around Raleigh and Goldsboro, NC, where he was raised. Through his youth, Brandon sang and played keyboards, trumpet, and drums. He later specialized by sticking mostly to keyboards and vocals.
After playing trumpet through most of the 1960s with bands that were doing classic R&B covers by Sam & Dave, Otis Redding, and Wilson Pickett, he formed the Soul Stars Band. They became so popular they were the house band for the Playboy Club in Goldsboro.
Blind since early childhood, he was sent to the Governor Morehead School for the Blind in Raleigh, NC.
He had some success as a teenager leading his own band around Raleigh and Goldsboro, NC, where he was raised. Through his youth, Brandon sang and played keyboards, trumpet, and drums. He later specialized by sticking mostly to keyboards and vocals.
After playing trumpet through most of the 1960s with bands that were doing classic R&B covers by Sam & Dave, Otis Redding, and Wilson Pickett, he formed the Soul Stars Band. They became so popular they were the house band for the Playboy Club in Goldsboro.
He caught his first big break with Clarence Carter, who hired him for his
band in 1970 when Carter was playing at the Playboy Club in Goldsboro.
Brandon toured the world with Carter and his band before joining the
Chi-Lites in 1973. By the mid-'70s, he felt he was ready to record and tour
under his own name and went to Muscle Shoals Studios in Alabama with
producer Charles Johnson. He recorded a single, "Kept on Smiling" b/w "24
Hour Love Man" for Hit Man records.
It sold well enough around the south that Atlantic Records became
interested and re-released it on Atlantic in 1975. This led to a tour with
Stax Records singer William Bell, and Brandon came home to Goldsboro in
1974. After some time touring in the late '70s, Brandon returned to
Goldsboro again to be closer to his family and stick closer to home. He
plied his craft in the local gospel scene, recording with two North Carolina
gospel groups, Slim and the Supreme Angels and Willis Pittman and the Burden
Lifters in the early '80s.
Brandon and Highway 61 released several solid albums in the '90s when they
were at the height of their tours in support of them: Hi-Test Blues, I'm a
Man of My Word, and License to Thrill. These albums included the same band
that accompanied Brandon on his festival and club tours; Armand Lencheck on
guitar and vocals; bassist Chris Grant, and drummer Wes Johnson. Guests on
Hi-Test Blues (1993) include Mark Wenner of the Nighthawks, Ann Rabson of
Saffire -- The Uppity Blues Women, and Steady Rollin' Bob
Margolin.
Lenchek's background includes working with Lightning Bug Rhodes since 1989,
touring with Nappy Brown and sitting in regularly with the likes of Eddy
Clearwater, Bob Margolin, and Tom Principato. Aside from Brandon, Lenchek
has recorded on albums by Rev. Billy C. Wirtz, Buddy Skipper, Bob Margolin,
and David Nelson and the Prowlers.
Brandon's backing band was the former Lightning Bug Rhodes Blues Band.
After Rhodes passed unexpectedly, the band regrouped mentally and
spiritually and began accompanying Brandon at clubs in the Charlotte, NC
area. His recordings for New Moon Music led to subsequent tours around the
U.S.Brandon passed away in March 2008. He had stopped performing in the
Charlotte area just four months before that in December 2007.

