marc benno BIOGRAPHY:
For over 40 years, Marc Benno has been giving blues, rock and pop an unmistakable Texas flavor. A singer/songwriter who plays the guitar and piano, Benno is also a behind-the scenes force, helping some of rock and blues’ greatest talents sound even better. The list of legends he’s worked with includes The Doors, Eric Clapton, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Bill Wyman, Georgie Fame Rita Coolidge, Eddie Murphy and Leon Russell. Born in Dallas, Benno grew up immersed in popular music – his father managed the Texas State Fair’s Music Hall garden. Backstage, Benno met stars like Sam Cooke, Laverne Baker,Frankie Avalon, Paul Anka, the Drifters and Lloyd Price. But, the first album Benno remembers hearing was Lightnin in New York, by the legendary Lightnin Hopkins(rural-blues guitarist who lived in Houston.) Still in his early teens, Benno started his own regionally successful pop/R&B group, and in the mid-1960s headed to Los Angeles to further his career, a move he says put him “in the right place at the right time.” His blues background made him sought after by rock groups looking for some rootsy authenticity. One day, he was tapped to play on an album by the psychedelic rock greats The Doors. The sessions were for the classic L.A. Woman (1971), the group’s last LP before Jim Morrison’s death. “I didn’t know who they were,” Benno recalls. “But they needed someone who could play a bluesy, Texas guitar.”
He also recorded a pair of albums with Leon Russell as the Asylum Choir. Benno fondly remembers crashing in Russell’s closet, where a plethora of musicians would
hang out and jam. One of them was Eric Clapton, who played guitar on two tracks from Benno’s 1979 album Lost in Austin: “Last Train” and “Chasin Rainbows.”
“Clapton was a down-to-earth guy,” Benno says of the man nicknamed “God” by his fans. “Even though he’s from England, he reminds me of someone from Texas, so down to earth and humble and into the blues.”
With his career on the rise, Benno struck a deal with A&M Records in 1970 to launch a solo career. Within a few years, Marc Benno & The Nightcrawlers were primed to become the Next Big Thing, opening for Humble Pie and The J. Geils Band, and getting star treatment on tour. One of the Nightcrawlers was a young guitarist named Stevie Vaughan (he’d start using Ray later). “He didn’t sing - he’d just play the hell out of the guitar,” Benno remembers with pride.
However, the label had grown bearish on the prospects for blues-based rock. The multi-talented Benno could have easily shifted into a pop career, but he was committed to becoming an even better blues guitarist. During 1974-75, his childhood influences came full circle when he joined Lightnin Hopkins’ band as 2nd guitar player. Benno attests to Hopkins’ colorful personality. “He was dead serious about music, because he was the real thing. You had better know how to play the blues to be around him.” “One time, he fired the bass player on stage... Another
time, Benno went to get his boss a beer only to receive an odd reprimand: “Don’t you ever open my beer,” Hopkins told him. “Go get me another beer and don’t
open it.” Hopkins went on to claim that country bluesman Blind Lemon Jefferson (1893-1929) had been killed by poisoned beer, a story that is hard to confirm, but true if Lightnin said it. Benno adds that his time with Hopkins was essential in making him an authentic blues player. Benno’s career got an unexpected boost in 1985, when his song “Rock & Roll Me Again” was recorded by The System for the Beverly Hills Cop soundtrack. Even better, the album won the Grammy for Best Composition for a Motion Picture.
But the partying lifestyle and the long hours away from home were catching up with him, and during the late 1980s and early 1990s he was burned out – not even interested in music. Finally, his friends helped him get back on track. He realized he didn’t have to be high to do his job.
Since moving to San Antonio in 2000, Benno has been working hard again, writing songs, jamming with local musicians, and even finding time to get a psychology degree, a big step for a guy who had dedicated 100 percent of his professional efforts towards music since he was 13.
Having lived through all the things that make one a great blues player, Benno can view his career with perspective and insight. But his creative fire and ambition remain undimmed.
Live, Benno can do an uptempo R&B set, but he can also do pop, jazz and country. He’s tough to categorize and is reaching out to audiences that don’t just want the same thing over and over again.
His philosophy: “The more you can diversify, the more interest you have in living.” -- Doug Shannon

• Marc Benno brings to the stage not only his formidable vocal talents, which include a keen and perceptive realization of the lyric content of the piece being performed but also such a relaxed and mature style of singing and playing guitar that the listener immediately becomes captivated and enchanted with the easy professionalism with which he imbues his chosen material. Moreover, he's great to watch. You know he knows what he's doing. He has a wonderful sense of time...and humor, which he shares with his audiences, but not the ultra-hip, exclusive brand, of which the average person is outside. Benno's real...and for real. One can't help but enjoy a Marc Benno performance. He's been out of the public eye for much too long, but thankfully, he's interested in returning...we need him. This rare breed of a seasoned and confident, talented and sensitive performer is not in abundance these days. -- Steve LaVere (Music Historian/Robert Johnson Estate)