Robben Ford has had a diverse career. He taught himself guitar when he was 13 and considered his first influence to be
Mike Bloomfield. At 18 he moved to San Francisco to form
the Charles Ford Band (named after his father, who was also a guitarist) and was soon hired to play with Charlie Musselwhite for nine months. In 1971,
the Charles Ford Blues Band was re-formed and recorded for Arhoolie in early 1972.
Ford played with
Jimmy Witherspoon (1972-1973),
the L.A. Express with
Tom Scott (1974),
George Harrison, and
Joni Mitchell. In 1977 he was a founding member of
the Yellowjackets, which he stayed with until 1983, simultaneously having a solo career and working as a session guitarist. In 1986,
Ford toured with
Miles Davis and had two separate periods (1985 and 1987) with
Sadao Watanabe, but he really seemed to find himself in 1992 when he returned to his roots: the blues.
Ford formed a new group,
the Blue Line, and subsequently recorded a couple of blues-rock dates for Stretch that are among the finest of his career. In 1999, he released
Sunrise on Rhino and
Supernatural on Blue Thumb.
Ford signed to the Concord Jazz label in 2002 and released
Blue Moon that same year, followed by
Keep on Running in 2003 and
Truth in 2007. That same year, he was a billed special guest on Larry Carlton's Live in Tokyo. He followed this with the predominantly live Soul on Ten in 2009. In 2013,
Ford began his label association with Provogue, and issued the studio album Bringing It Back Home, comprised mostly of blues and R&B covers played by an all-star band.
–
Scott Yanow, Rovi