>From the San Francisco Chronicle...

Harmonica maestro Norton Buffalo dies at 58
Joel Selvin, Chronicle Senior Pop Music Correspondent
Monday, November 2, 2009

(11-01) 21:11 PST PARADISE (BUTTE COUNTY) -- Norton Buffalo, harmonica
virtuoso, one-of-a-kind performer and consummate accompanist to the
stars, died Friday night from cancer in Feather River Hospital, near
his home in Paradise (Butte County). He was 58.

Mr. Buffalo, who appeared on more than 180 albums and spent 33 years
as a member of the Steve Miller Band, was diagnosed with cancer in
September. His life will be celebrated Jan. 23 at the Fox Theater in
Oakland in a benefit concert starring the Steve Miller Band and the
Doobie Brothers, with special guests Huey Lewis, George Thorogood,
Charlie Musselwhite and Bonnie Raitt.

"He was the antithesis of East Coast cynical," said Raitt, who spent
Sunday morning watching Buffalo videos on YouTube. "He was always in
funny mode without being too gooey about it. He's been that guy all
this time. In one guy, you got all the hope and optimism of the '70s."

Mr. Buffalo played on the Grammy-winning Doobie Brothers album "Minute
by Minute," and the recent children's music CD by Kenny Loggins. With
Bette Midler, he played in the band and acted in the film "The Rose."
He collaborated on tours and a series of recordings for more than 20
years with blues guitarist Roy Rogers. One of their songs, "Ain't No
Bread in the Breadbox," was a cornerstone in the '90s live repertoire
of the Jerry Garcia Band.

"Norton Buffalo was a character and a half," Rogers said. "He had a
sense of humor. He liked to have a good time, and the joy of his
playing came out."

Miller said: "He was a complete original. He worked with all kinds of
people. He did tons and tons of projects. Everybody who worked with
him loved him, really enjoyed working with him."

Mr. Buffalo joined the Steve Miller Band in 1976 at the beginning of
the "Fly Like an Eagle" tour and has remained a constant presence in
Miller's music ever since. Miller invariably introduced Mr. Buffalo to
concert audiences as "my partner in harmony."

"He had way more music in him than I could use," Miller said. "I just
had more work for him than everybody else."

Mr. Buffalo's own recordings include his 1977 Capitol Records release,
"Lovin' in the Valley of the Moon," an album that maintains a strong
cult following, and a 2000 blues-based release, "King of the Highway."
He recently released a joint CD with Hawaiian slack key guitarist
George Kahumoku Jr. He was a virtuosic and technically accomplished
chromatic harmonica player who could play anything - blues, rock, pop,
country, folk, show tunes.

Born in Oakland and raised in Richmond, Mr. Buffalo was raised in a
musical family. His father played harmonica, and his mother sang in
'40s San Francisco nightclubs. His great-uncle, Herbert Stothart, was
a Hollywood soundtrack composer who won an Academy Award for his work
on "The Wizard of Oz."

"His harp could become the valley of the moon, Krakatoa, a storm out
at sea, then the sweetest sound this side of heaven," said Grateful
Dead drummer Mickey Hart, who played with Mr. Buffalo in a project
called High Noon in the '70s and '80s.

Mr. Buffalo joined one of the final editions of Commander Cody and his
Lost Planet Airmen on a 1976 European tour, before returning to the
Bay Area and forming the Norton Buffalo Stampede, a band that
headlined Bay Area clubs for several years. In between tours with
Miller and Rogers, Mr. Buffalo had been appearing recently with the
Norton Buffalo Trio with his third wife, Lisa Flores.

He is survived by his wife; children, Aisah of Lake Tahoe and Elias of
Sonoma; stepchildren, Sierra Ruelas of Sonoma and Bo Winterburn of San
Diego; father, Ken Jackson of Paradise; and five brothers and sisters.

Roy Rogers and the Delta Rhythm Kings, Tom Rigney and Flambeau and the
Carlos Reyes Band will appear Nov. 22 in a benefit and memorial at the
Paradise Performing Arts Center in Paradise. Funeral and other
memorial plans are pending.
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