Al Duncan
Biography
Al Duncan (October 8, 1927, McKinney, Texas — January 3, 1995, Las Vegas) was an American drummer and songwriter. Music critic and musicologist Eugene Chadbourne described Duncan as a "forefather of rhythm and blues" and "one of less than a half dozen key studio legends of the 1950s and 1960s who have sometimes been called the 'grandfathers of groove'." Chadbourne credited Duncan as helping develop the characteristic metric feel or timekeeping of rhythm and blues. His work is featured on recordings with Roy Buchanan, Billy "The Kid" Emerson, Buddy Guy, Dale Hawkins, Red Holloway, Camille Howard, Horace Palm, Jimmy Reed, Phil Upchurch, and Rob Wasserman among others. Of the songs he penned, the best known is "It's Too Late, Brother" which has become a blues staple.
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

The Twenty-Fifth Day Of December
1962

Boss Blues Harmonica
1972

Wizards From The Southside
1982

The Real Folk Blues
1966

The Original Lost Elektra Sessions
1995

The Best Of Chess Blues
1987

Confessin' The Blues
1974

I Was Walking Through The Woods
1970

The Chess Box
1988

Southside Blues Jam
1970

This One's A Good 'Un
1969

The Chess Blues-Rock Songbook: The Classic Originals
1997

Chess Blues
1992

Blue Midnight - Volume Three
1978

Down In Virginia
1969

Oh! Suzy-Q
1958

This Little Light
1965

Freedom Highway
1965
Credited work
474 releases · 112 albums · active 1956–2024
- Performance · 740
- Production · 3
- Other credits · 1
Studios: Score One Recording · Penguin Recording · MCA Recording Studios · Universal Recording Studio
Frequent collaborators
- Various
- Jimmy Reed
- The Staple Singers
- Sonny Boy Williamson (2)
- John Lee Hooker
- Little Walter
- Buddy Guy
- Otis Rush
