Whittington began playing guitar as an eight-year-old after raiding his sister's record collection, which included the latest items by the Beatles, Rolling Stones, and John Mayall's Bluesbreakers with Eric Clapton. After high school, he played the clubs in Dallas and Fort Worth regularly and became versatile enough to play anything from pure Texas swing styled after Bob Wills or Don Walser to rock & roll and the gutbucket classic R&B of Bill Doggett.
But Whittington's major passion remained the blues, and appropriately, after six years on the road with Mayall, he finally released the aforementioned debut album, Buddy Whittington, on Blues Boulevard in 2009. Aside from finding his own singing voice, he also found his songwriting voice, as well he should after touring all over the U.S., Europe, and Canada with Mayall. He includes originals like Young Dumb, Pay the Band, and Stevie Rave On, the latter his tribute to the late Stevie Ray Vaughan, who was killed in a tragic helicopter accident in the summer or 1990. His instrumental Greenwood pays homage to Peter Green of Fleetwood Mac fame, and he even dabbles in the somewhat risky area of humor-filled blues with his tune Second Banana. As long as blues clubs and festivals remain healthy around the U.S., Whittington and his distinctive style of Texas roadhouse blues will always be in demand. ~ Richard J. Skelly, Rovi