Isaac Scott III (June 11, 1945 – November 16, 2001), was an American blues guitarist and singer. He recorded a studio album in 1982, and a couple of live affairs in his lifetime, and was strongly linked to Seattle, Washington with its own blues scene, having moved to the city in the early 1970s.His influences included Albert Collins and Jimi Hendrix.
Scott was born in Vancouver, Washington, United States, before relocating with his family to Portland, Oregon, when he was in his childhood. Whilst he was there the young Scott was exposed to both gospel music and blues. Self-taught on both the piano and guitar, his early musical experiences involved playing guitar with gospel based groups, including touring the West Coast with the Five Blind Boys of Mississippi in the early 1970s. Scott related “Riding in the station wagon with them, they began to sing and the car was so full of sound I was just overcome.” His friendship with Albert Collins was an important part of his life. By 1974, when he began to live in Seattle, Scott decided to concentrate on playing the blues. His dislike of travelling limited his exposure; for an almost 25 year period he wowed primarily northwest audiences with his powerful style.
His repertoire and style continued to exhibit elements of blues, gospel and soul, and in emulating Collins played by plucking his guitar with his thumb rather than utilising a pick. "I've had a lot of rock influences. Jimi Hendrix for one, a big influence," Scott related in an interview in 1984. "But basically I think Jimi had that blues thing deep inside. If you listen to "Voodoo Chile," you can tell those blues roots." His decision to stay and mainly play around the West Coast for almost thirty years helped to define a sound for the area, whilst Scott was hailed as a founding father in the clubs that were lined along Seattle's First Avenue.
Here’s “Listen To The Blues” from above album.
A fellow musician noted that Scott was ill for a lot of his time in his own twenties. "I'm trying to burn out this bug I got," he would say. This was the start of hypertension and what turned out to diabetes, that dogged him most of his adult life. In 1979, Scott recorded live his debut album, The Isaac Scott Blues Band. Three years later, he released what turned out be his only studio-based album, Big Time Blues Man, also on Red Lightnin' Records.
The effects of his ongoing diabetes became so acute that, in 1987, he had his left foot and right leg amputated. However, he continued to perform in a wheelchair, donned in black to match his customary black cowboy hat, pants and shirt. In 1996, High Class Woman was issued, which was another live recording. His work also appeared on the compilation albums, Live at the San Francisco Jazz Festival and Live at the Roadhouse. A private, sometimes intimidating man of few words, Mr. Scott was hard to get to know. But those close to him found a sensitive man behind the hard shell.
He was inducted into the Washington Blues Society's Hall of Fame in 1991 and achieved their lifetime-achievement award in 2000. Scott also performed at the opening of the Experience Music Project in 2000. Scott was insistent on maintaining his own guitars. His former wife, Eloise DePoe, told the Seattle Times she once found his guitar in the bathtub when he was stripping the varnish, and then lost part of her dresser, as the mahogany was utilised in the rebuilding of the neck of his guitar.
Scott died on November 16, 2001, in Stevens Memorial Hospital, Edmonds, Washington, from the complications of diabetes, at the age of 56. Sadly, Scott only recorded a small number of albums during his lifetime and appeared on one live compilation. A live performance was released back in 2008 appropriately titled Posthumous Blues Live, but when it comes to someone who was so instrumental in crafting the Northwest blues scene, his musical legacy is unfortunately lacking.
(Edited from Wikipedia, Mississippi MacDonald & Cascade Blues Association)