Joe Bonamassa is an American blues rock guitarist, singer, and songwriter born on May 8, 1977, in New Hartford, New York — one of the most prodigiously talented and relentlessly productive musicians the blues has produced in the past forty years. His parents owned a guitar shop in New Hartford and exposed him to British blues rock records by Eric Clapton and Jeff Beck from early childhood. He began playing guitar at age four and by age eleven was being mentored by guitar legend Danny Gatton. At twelve years old, fronting his own band called Smokin' Joe Bonamassa, he opened for B.B. King — a gig that King's camp reportedly arranged after being stunned by the young guitarist's ability. King himself called Bonamassa a future torchbearer of the blues. That opening slot was not a fluke: it was the beginning of a professional career that has never paused.
In the 1990s, as a teenager, Bonamassa co-formed the blues rock outfit Bloodline alongside the sons of Miles Davis, Robby Krieger of The Doors, and Mick Fleetwood. The band released one self-titled album in 1994 before dissolving. His solo debut A New Day Yesterday arrived in 2000, produced by recording legend Tom Dowd — known for his work with Eric Clapton, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and The James Gang — and established Bonamassa as a genuine force in blues rock rather than merely a prodigy with a compelling backstory. Subsequent albums including Blues Deluxe (2003), Had to Cry Today (2004), You and Me (2006), Sloe Gin (2007), The Ballad of John Henry (2009), Black Rock (2010), Dust Bowl (2011), Driving Towards the Daylight (2012), and a long run of further releases through the 2010s and 2020s built a catalog of remarkable consistency. He has now achieved over 28 number one albums on the Billboard Blues chart — the all-time record, tied with B.B. King himself — with over 40 total releases including studio albums, live recordings, and collaborative projects.
In 2009, Bonamassa joined with Deep Purple and Black Sabbath bassist Glenn Hughes, Led Zeppelin drummer Jason Bonham, and Dream Theater and Alice Cooper keyboardist Derek Sherinian to form the hard rock supergroup Black Country Communion. Named for the area of England's West Midlands where Hughes and Bonham grew up, the band released five studio albums — Black Country Communion (2010), BCC2 (2011), Afterglow (2012), BCCIV (2017), and V (2024) — and became one of the most acclaimed supergroups in modern rock. The band briefly split in 2013 when Bonamassa departed, before Hughes and Bonamassa reconciled in 2016 and resumed the collaboration. Bonamassa has also released multiple albums in partnership with vocalist Beth Hart, including Don't Explain (2011), Seesaw (2013), and Black Coffee (2018), the latter of which earned a Grammy nomination for Best Blues Album.
Notable career milestones include multiple sold-out performances at London's Royal Albert Hall — among the most prestigious concert venues in the world — and the Keeping the Blues Alive at Sea cruise festival, now in its tenth year, which serves as one of the primary fundraisers for his nonprofit organization the Keeping the Blues Alive Foundation. The Foundation funds music education scholarships and provides resources to schools in need across the US. Bonamassa is also known for one of the most extraordinary vintage guitar collections in existence, amassed over decades of dedicated acquisition. He has performed alongside Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy, Peter Frampton, Warren Haynes, Derek Trucks, Steve Winwood, and virtually every significant figure in blues and rock.
Wayne Dennon photographed Joe Bonamassa as part of an archive that spans the full breadth of American music. Bonamassa is the rare artist who is simultaneously a child prodigy, a chart-record holder, a supergroup member, a philanthropist, and a working musician who tours more than almost anyone at his level — and who has never once lost his genuine love for the music that started everything when B.B. King let a twelve-year-old from Utica open his show.