Boz Scaggs
William Royce "Boz" Scaggs (born June 8, 1944) is an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist best known for his blue-eyed soul, R&B, and soft rock music, with a career spanning over five decades marked by gritty blues influences and polished commercial hits.[1][2] Born in Canton, Ohio, Scaggs grew up in Oklahoma and Texas, where he immersed himself in blues, R&B, and early rock 'n' roll during his teenage years in Dallas, playing in local combos.[1] He began his professional career as a bandmate of Steve Miller in the early 1960s groups The Ardells and later the Steve Miller Band, contributing guitar and vocals to their 1968 debut album Children of the Future and 1969's Sailor.[3] Launching his solo career in 1965 with the album Boz, Scaggs released several records in the late 1960s and early 1970s, including the self-titled Boz Scaggs (1969) on Atlantic Records, before achieving mainstream breakthrough with the 1976 Columbia release Silk Degrees, which peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 and spent 115 weeks on the chart.[1][3] Silk Degrees yielded the Grammy-winning hit "Lowdown" (Best R&B Song, 1977) and other Top 40 singles like "Lido Shuffle" and "What Can I Say," propelling Scaggs to stardom with its blend of soulful grooves and yacht rock polish, followed by two more platinum albums, Down Two Then Left (1977) and Middle Man (1980).[4][1] Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, he explored varied styles, including a Grammy-nominated blues album Come on Home (1997) and jazz standards projects like But Beautiful (2003) and Speak Low (2008), the latter topping the Billboard Jazz Albums chart.[4][1] Scaggs also founded the influential San Francisco nightclub Slim's in 1988, which became a hub for live music until its closure in 2020.[1] In recent years, Scaggs has continued touring and recording, earning a Grammy nomination for Best Contemporary Blues Album for Out of the Blues (2018).[4] He returned in 2025 with Detour, his first studio album in seven years, offering fresh interpretations of Great American Songbook classics via Concord Jazz, alongside an extensive "Rhythm Review" tour featuring expanded setlists and longtime collaborators.[5][6] With seven Grammy nominations and a lasting influence on soul and rock, Scaggs remains a versatile figure in American music.[4]Early life and education
Family and childhood
William Royce Scaggs was born on June 8, 1944, in Canton, Ohio, to parents Royce and Helen Scaggs.[7] His father worked as a traveling salesman and had served as a pilot in the Army Air Corps during World War II.[7] The family structure centered around these parents, with Scaggs as the eldest child in a household that emphasized mobility due to his father's profession.[8] The Scaggs family relocated frequently during his early years, first moving to McAlester, Oklahoma, and later settling in Plano, Texas—a rural farm town north of Dallas at the time.[7] These moves exposed young Scaggs to diverse regional environments, shaping his formative experiences in the American Midwest and South.[1] During his teenage years in Texas, Scaggs encountered the vibrant local music scenes, gaining early immersion in blues, rhythm and blues, and nascent rock 'n' roll through radio and community influences.[1] This environment in Plano and surrounding areas fostered his budding interest in music, distinct from formal training.[7] Scaggs acquired his lifelong nickname "Boz" during adolescence, stemming from a schoolmate's playful moniker "Bosley" or "Boswell," which was eventually shortened for everyday use.[9]Schooling and musical beginnings
Scaggs attended St. Mark's School of Texas, a private preparatory school in Dallas, beginning in 1959 after transferring from a public high school.[10] Growing up amid his family's Texas roots, he gained early exposure to local rhythm and blues scenes through radio broadcasts from stations like WLAC in Nashville.[11] At St. Mark's, he excelled academically and athletically, serving as vice president of the junior class, co-captain of the all-conference soccer team, and a member of the track team, while graduating in 1962.[10][12] Scaggs had learned to play the guitar at the age of 12 prior to attending St. Mark's, where he met fellow student Steve Miller, who helped him develop self-taught blues techniques.[11][12] Deeply influenced by Ray Charles' soulful R&B style, which Scaggs later described as having the most profound early impact on him, he began incorporating similar expressive phrasing into his own playing and singing.[13] In 1959, Scaggs joined Miller's band The Marksmen as lead vocalist and tambourine player, marking his initial foray into performances; the group played high school dances and events at country clubs across Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana.[10] These early gigs honed his skills in a blues-oriented repertoire, solidifying his commitment to music.[10] Following graduation, Scaggs briefly attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison with Miller in 1963, where they continued performing in blues bands like The Ardells, but he soon opted to pursue music full-time over extended college studies.[14][11] This decision led to travels throughout Europe starting in the early 1960s, including busking in London amid the burgeoning blues scene and further explorations that broadened his musical perspectives.[14] By 1965, he reached Stockholm, Sweden, where he recorded his debut solo album Boz, featuring blues standards that reflected his evolving style.[14]Career
Early collaborations and debut
Scaggs began his solo recording career in Europe with the album Boz in 1965, followed by a 1966 release on Polydor, though these efforts achieved limited commercial success.)[15] In 1967, following a postcard invitation from his longtime friend Steve Miller, Boz Scaggs relocated to San Francisco and joined the Steve Miller Band, contributing guitar and vocals to their debut album Children of the Future (1968) and follow-up Sailor (1968), helping shape the group's early psychedelic blues sound.[16][14] Scaggs' high school friendship with Miller, forged during their teenage years in Texas, had laid the groundwork for this collaboration.[7] Scaggs departed the Steve Miller Band in 1968 after supporting Sailor on tour, primarily due to diverging musical tastes and a desire to pursue his own artistic direction.[7][17] He immersed himself in San Francisco's burgeoning psychedelic music scene, where the band had been active, absorbing influences from the city's vibrant hippie and counterculture environment.[12] Signing with Atlantic Records, Scaggs released his self-titled debut album for the label, Boz Scaggs, in August 1969, recorded at the newly established Muscle Shoals Sound Studio in Alabama with producers Jann Wenner and Marlin Greene, incorporating the studio's renowned rhythm section for a blend of blues, soul, and rock elements.[18][19] The album featured the extended track "Loan Me a Dime," a 12-minute blues-rock epic showcasing guest guitarist Duane Allman's searing slide work, which later achieved cult status among blues-rock enthusiasts for its raw intensity and improvisational depth.[20][21]Breakthrough albums and hits
After signing with Columbia Records in 1971, Boz Scaggs released his debut album for the label, Moments, which marked a shift toward a more polished rock sound while incorporating soul influences. The album featured tracks like "We Were Always a Sweethearts," helping to establish Scaggs' presence on the label, though it achieved modest commercial success initially.[22][23] Scaggs followed with My Time in 1972, which included the single "Dinah Flo," a funky, upbeat track that highlighted his growing affinity for rhythm and blues elements within a rock framework. The album, recorded at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, built on the momentum from Moments and showcased Scaggs' evolving songwriting. In 1974, Slow Dancer arrived, produced by Motown veteran Johnny Bristol, blending soulful grooves with rock sensibilities to create an urban, dance-oriented vibe on songs like the title track and "You Make It So Hard (To Say No)."[24][25][26] The pinnacle of this era came with Silk Degrees in 1976, Scaggs' seventh studio album, which propelled him to mainstream stardom through its sophisticated fusion of blue-eyed soul, rock, and pop. The record spawned major hits including "Lowdown," which peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 and won the Grammy Award for Best R&B Song in 1977, and "Lido Shuffle," reaching No. 11 on the same chart. Certified five times platinum by the RIAA, Silk Degrees sold over five million copies worldwide, solidifying Scaggs' commercial breakthrough.[27][16][28] Scaggs maintained his momentum with Down Two Then Left in 1977, an album that continued exploring introspective themes amid smooth production, peaking at No. 11 on the Billboard 200. By 1980, Middle Man delivered further hits, notably "Look What You've Done to Me," featured on the Urban Cowboy soundtrack and climbing to No. 14 on the Billboard Hot 100, underscoring Scaggs' versatility in the pop-soul landscape.[29][27][30]Mid-career explorations
Following the commercial success of his 1980 album Middle Man, Boz Scaggs entered an extended hiatus from recording and touring, lasting approximately eight years, during which he prioritized family life and withdrew from the public spotlight.[31] This period allowed Scaggs to step back after more than a decade of intense activity, focusing on personal matters amid the demands of fame.[32] He emerged in 1988 with Other Roads, a polished adult contemporary effort that reflected a more relaxed, post-hiatus perspective, though it did not replicate his earlier chart peaks.[33] Scaggs maintained a lower profile through the early 1990s before releasing Some Change in 1994, an album that shifted toward a more introspective blend of rock and soul, drawing on his blues influences through collaborations with local Bay Area musicians.[34] This work marked a deliberate return to rootsier, less commercial territory, emphasizing emotional depth over pop accessibility after years of informal jamming sessions.[35] During this era, Scaggs contributed to select production and songwriting projects, including ties to Toto members like David Paich from prior collaborations, though his focus remained exploratory rather than prolific.[36] The mid-1990s saw further genre shifts with Fade into Light (1996), a laid-back acoustic reinterpretation of his catalog and new material, featuring unplugged arrangements that highlighted guitar-driven intimacy.[37] This was followed by Come on Home (1997), a tribute to his foundational blues and R&B inspirations, covering classics by artists like Jimmy Reed and Sonny Boy Williamson while incorporating original tracks rooted in electric blues traditions.[14] These releases underscored Scaggs' pivot to authentic, unhurried explorations of his musical heritage. Concurrently, his ownership of Scaggs Vineyard in Napa Valley's Mount Veeder region, established around 1995 with his wife Dominique, shaped a more grounded lifestyle, integrating winemaking with creative downtime.[38]Later releases and revivals
Following a period of relative quiet in the 2000s, Scaggs experienced a creative resurgence in the 2010s, marked by a return to his blues influences. His 2018 album Out of the Blues, released on July 27 by Concord Records, featured a blend of covers from blues legends such as Bobby "Blue" Bland, Jimmy Reed, and Magic Sam, alongside four original tracks co-written with longtime collaborator Jack Walroth.[39][40] The self-produced effort, recorded at Fantasy Studios in Berkeley, California, emphasized Scaggs' gritty guitar work and soulful vocals, reconnecting him with the genre that shaped his early career.[39] This blues-focused phase extended into live performances, with Scaggs touring extensively to support the album, including dates that highlighted his roots-oriented sound amid the challenges of 2020. In 2020, he continued this momentum through virtual and limited in-person shows as part of the Out of the Blues promotion, incorporating live interpretations that echoed the album's raw energy.[41] Scaggs' output remained steady into the 2020s, culminating in the release of Detour on October 17, 2025, via Concord Records—his first new studio album in seven years. The 11-track collection draws from the Great American Songbook, offering intimate interpretations of jazz and blues standards like "Angel Eyes," "Once I Loved," and "The Very Thought of You," alongside originals such as "I'll Be Long Gone."[42][43] Born from informal sessions with pianist Seth Asarnow, Detour showcases Scaggs' laid-back phrasing and smoky delivery, blending nostalgia with contemporary subtlety.[43] A vinyl edition followed on December 5, 2025.[43] Complementing his musical revivals, Scaggs maintained an active touring schedule, with the 2025 Rhythm Review tour featuring North American stops including the Paramount Theatre in Denver on November 1 and The Factory in Chesterfield, Missouri, on November 4. These performances underscored his enduring stage presence and catalog-spanning setlists.[44][45] In 2025, the publication of Lowdown: The Music of Boz Scaggs by music journalist Jude Warne further highlighted this phase, offering the first comprehensive analysis of Scaggs' discography through exclusive interviews and historical context. Published on April 8 by Chicago Review Press, the book explores his stylistic evolution and contributions across six decades.[46][47]Personal life
Marriages and children
Boz Scaggs' first marriage was to Donna Carmella Storniola in 1973; the couple divorced in 1980 following a contentious custody battle over their children.[48][49] Scaggs married Dominique Gioia on July 17, 1992, and the couple has remained together for over three decades, residing primarily in California's Napa Valley.[50][51] With his first wife, Scaggs had two sons: Austin, born in 1975, who pursued a career as a music journalist and columnist for Rolling Stone, and Oscar, born in 1977, who died of a heroin overdose on December 31, 1998, at age 21.[52][53][54] The family provided crucial support during Scaggs' career hiatuses, including the eight-year break after his 1980 divorce when he focused on raising his sons and traveling, as well as the emotional recovery following Oscar's death, which prompted further withdrawals from public life and relocations within California.[55][56][57]Residences and philanthropy
Boz Scaggs has maintained a long-term residence in California's Napa Valley, specifically on the slopes of Mount Veeder, since the mid-1990s. In October 2017, their home was destroyed in the Northern California wildfires, but the couple continues to reside in the Napa Valley area. Alongside his wife, Dominique, he purchased a property in 1996 that includes a 2.2-acre vineyard planted with Rhône varietals such as Grenache, Mourvèdre, Syrah, and Counoise.[58][59] The couple's home featured terraced gardens that reflected their commitment to the region's natural landscape, providing a serene retreat amid Scaggs' musical endeavors.[58] In retirement pursuits, Scaggs embraced winemaking and organic farming, transforming the vineyard into a certified-organic operation by 2005. The Scaggs Vineyard produces small-batch Rhône-style red blends and rosés, emphasizing sustainable practices and high-elevation terroir on Mount Veeder. In 2016, the couple sold the vineyard to Newfound Wines, which continues production.[60][61] These endeavors highlight his shift toward agrarian interests, blending his artistic background with hands-on cultivation in Wine Country.[62] Scaggs' philanthropy centers on music education and cultural preservation, notably through his recognition by the Texas Cultural Trust, which funds arts programs across the state. In 2019, he received the organization's Texas Medal of Arts Award for Music, an honor that underscores his contributions to Texas-rooted genres like blues and R&B, with event proceeds supporting music education initiatives.[1][63] He has also participated in charitable efforts benefiting musicians, including contributions to relief auctions and foundations aiding the music community.[64] Throughout the 2010s, Scaggs managed private health challenges, including a 2019 tour postponement advised by physicians, from which he made a full recovery after rest.[65] These experiences were handled discreetly, allowing him to continue his professional and personal pursuits in Napa Valley.Musical style and influences
Genre evolution
Boz Scaggs' musical journey began in the 1960s with deep roots in blues and R&B, shaped by his formative experiences in Texas and Oklahoma, where he immersed himself in the works of artists like T-Bone Walker and Lightnin' Hopkins. His early involvement with the Steve Miller Band from 1967 to 1968 contributed to a ragged psychedelic blues-rock sound on albums such as Children of the Future (1968) and Sailor (1968), blending raw guitar work with emerging San Francisco psychedelic elements.[14] Scaggs' solo debut, Boz (1965), featured covers of blues standards like "Stormy Monday Blues," solidifying his foundation in the genre.[14] By his self-titled 1969 album, recorded at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio with the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section, he refined this into a more structured blues-rock hybrid, highlighted by the epic "Loan Me a Dime."[66] The 1970s saw Scaggs pivot toward a sophisticated fusion of yacht rock, soul, and funk, expanding his blues base into broader pop accessibility. This evolution peaked with Silk Degrees (1976), which integrated polished R&B grooves, disco-inflected rhythms, and soulful ballads, achieving five-times platinum status and peaking at No. 2 on the Billboard 200, where it spent 115 weeks on the chart.[1] Tracks like "Lowdown" exemplified this shift, combining funky basslines and horn sections with Scaggs' blue-eyed soul delivery, while the album, produced by Joe Wissert, emphasized layered arrangements over raw blues energy.[67] Follow-up Down Two Then Left (1977) continued this refined mid-1970s aesthetic, prioritizing sonic clarity and commercial appeal.[66] In the 1990s and 2000s, after a recording hiatus, Scaggs adopted a more introspective acoustic singer-songwriter approach, moving away from high-production funk toward personal, stripped-back narratives. Albums like Some Change (1994) and Fade into Light (2001) highlighted this style, with the latter featuring reimagined versions of his hits in intimate, guitar-driven settings that underscored lyrical depth and contemporary pop/rock sensibilities.[68] This period also encompassed jazz explorations, such as But Beautiful (2003) and Speak Low (2008), where Scaggs interpreted Great American Songbook standards with subtle orchestration; both reached No. 1 on the Billboard Jazz Albums chart.[14][69] Come on Home (1997) bridged this shift by blending original blues material with covers, signaling a partial return to roots amid the acoustic focus.[70] Scaggs circled back to blues in the 2010s, revitalizing his early influences with contemporary twists on his 2018 album Out of the Blues, which debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Blues Albums chart through covers of Jimmy Reed and Bobby Bland tunes enhanced by modern production.[70] This release reaffirmed his genre-spanning versatility, drawing on soulful R&B elements while maintaining a fresh, collaborative edge.[1] In 2025, Scaggs continued his jazz standards work with Detour, released on Concord Jazz, offering further interpretations of classics in a sophisticated, vocal-led style.[44] Across these phases, Scaggs' sound has been defined by consistent hallmarks: his smooth, versatile vocals that convey emotional nuance from gritty blues to silky soul; idiomatic guitar phrasing evoking classic blues licks; and inventive horn arrangements that enriched the textural depth of his 1970s fusion work.[66]Key inspirations and collaborators
Scaggs' early musical development was profoundly shaped by blues and soul pioneers, particularly in his vocal style and phrasing. He has cited B.B. King as a primary influence for his guitar work and emotive delivery, drawing from King's commanding presence in blues performances during Scaggs' formative years in Texas.[71] Similarly, Ray Charles served as a cornerstone for Scaggs' integration of R&B elements, with Charles' big band arrangements inspiring Scaggs' own explorations of horn sections and rhythmic drive in his early recordings.[72] Little Willie John also left a lasting mark, as Scaggs has described him as one of his favorite artists whose raw, soulful tenor informed his approach to interpreting blues standards with personal nuance.[73] The soulful polish in Scaggs' arrangements owes much to Motown's legacy, which influenced his adoption of tight, layered productions blending pop accessibility with R&B grooves. This is evident in tracks like those on Silk Degrees, where Motown-inspired horn charts and backing vocals create a sophisticated urban sound.[74] Among Scaggs' most significant early collaborations was with Steve Miller, beginning in high school with the band the Ardells and extending to Scaggs' tenure in the Steve Miller Band from 1967 to 1968, where he contributed guitar and vocals to albums like Children of the Future and Sailor.[75] In the 1970s, Scaggs worked closely with session musicians who would form Toto, including keyboardist David Paich, drummer Jeff Porcaro, and bassist David Hungate, whose contributions to Silk Degrees (1976) provided the album's signature fusion of rock, soul, and jazz-funk precision.[36] Production partnerships further refined his sound; Johnny Bristol, a former Motown producer, helmed Slow Dancer (1974), infusing it with lush, orchestral soul elements that marked a pivotal shift toward more polished R&B.[76] David Paich extended his involvement into the 1980s, co-writing and performing on Middle Man (1980), where his synthesizer and keyboard work enhanced the album's sleek, synth-driven pop-rock aesthetic.[77] Scaggs has also made notable guest appearances, including performances alongside Donald Fagen in the New York Rock and Soul Revue during the early 1990s and later in the Dukes of September Rhythm Revue, where their shared affinity for sophisticated soul and jazz informed collaborative sets blending Fagen's solo material with Scaggs' catalog.[78]Legacy
Awards and honors
Throughout his career, Boz Scaggs has received seven Grammy Award nominations and one win recognizing his contributions to pop, R&B, and blues music. In 1977, at the 19th Annual Grammy Awards, he was nominated for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male for the single "Lowdown" from his album Silk Degrees, Best R&B Vocal Performance, Male for "Lowdown", Album of the Year for Silk Degrees, Best Album Package for Silk Degrees, and Best Engineered Recording, Non-Classical for Silk Degrees, produced by Joe Wissert.[79] Additionally, "Lowdown" secured a win for Best R&B Song at the 19th Annual Grammy Awards, marking a significant accolade in his discography.[79] In 1981, at the 23rd Annual Grammy Awards, Scaggs received a nomination for Best Album of Original Score Written for a Motion Picture for his contributions to the Urban Cowboy soundtrack.[80] Scaggs' early involvement with the Steve Miller Band, where he contributed guitar and vocals to the group's debut albums Children of the Future (1968) and Sailor (1968), ties him to the band's 2016 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, with his role in shaping their initial psychedelic blues-rock sound frequently highlighted in retrospectives.[81] In recognition of his later blues-oriented work, Scaggs received a Grammy nomination for Best Contemporary Blues Album for Come on Home (1997) at the 40th Annual Grammy Awards and for Out of the Blues (2018) at the 61st Annual Grammy Awards.[82][4] Scaggs was honored with the Texas Medal of Arts Award for Music in 2019 by the Texas Cultural Trust, acknowledging his lifelong contributions as a singer, songwriter, and guitarist from the state.[63] His commercial success is evidenced by multiple Top 10 albums on the Billboard 200 chart, including Silk Degrees, which peaked at No. 2 in 1976, and Middle Man, which reached No. 8 in 1980.Cultural impact and tributes
Boz Scaggs' track "Lowdown" from his 1976 album Silk Degrees has left a lasting mark on hip-hop, where its funky bassline and groove have been sampled by artists such as MF DOOM in "Black Snake Root" from the 2003 compilation Special Herbs + Spices, Volume 1.[83] This sampling exemplifies Scaggs' crossover appeal, bridging soft rock with later genres. The song also played a pivotal role in the yacht rock revival of the 2000s, a movement that retroactively celebrated the polished, smooth sounds of 1970s West Coast music; "Lowdown" became a staple in the 2005 web series Yacht Rock, highlighting Scaggs' contributions to the genre's luxurious, jazz-inflected aesthetic.[84] Scaggs' music has been widely covered and featured in media, underscoring its enduring popularity. Rita Coolidge's 1977 rendition of "We're All Alone" achieved significant chart success, reaching number seven on the Billboard Hot 100 and introducing the ballad to broader audiences.[85] His songs have appeared in films and television. Scaggs' blend of soul, rock, and R&B has profoundly shaped soft rock and adult contemporary music, influencing the genre's emphasis on melodic sophistication and emotional depth. Contemporary acts in these styles often draw from his blueprint of seamless genre fusion, as seen in the yacht rock-inspired elements in modern pop-rock productions.[86] In 2025, music journalist Jude Warne published Lowdown: The Music of Boz Scaggs, a comprehensive exploration of his six-decade career, analyzing his discography's stylistic evolution and cultural resonance through interviews and archival insights.[46] The book serves as a scholarly tribute, emphasizing Scaggs' role in bridging blues roots with mainstream appeal.Discography
Studio and live albums
Boz Scaggs launched his solo recording career with his debut album Boz in 1965 on Polydor Records. His second album, the self-titled Boz Scaggs in 1969 on Atlantic Records, was recorded at the renowned Muscle Shoals Sound Studio in Sheffield, Alabama, where he blended blues, soul, and rock influences with session musicians like Duane Allman on guitar. The album showcased Scaggs' guitar work and vocal style, drawing from his experiences in Europe and early collaborations, though it achieved modest commercial success initially.[87] Following a move to Columbia Records, Scaggs released Moments in 1971, produced by Glyn Johns at Wally Heider Studios in San Francisco, incorporating softer rock elements and R&B grooves with contributions from Rita Coolidge on backing vocals. This album marked a shift toward more polished production, highlighting tracks like "We Were Always Sweethearts." Later that year, he released Boz Scaggs & Band, featuring live elements and a fuller band sound. In 1972, My Time continued his exploration of soul and rock.[87] Scaggs' 1970s output solidified his reputation, beginning with Slow Dancer in 1974, which explored soulful ballads and uptempo numbers produced by Johnny Bristol and Scaggs himself. The pinnacle came with Silk Degrees in 1976, also on Columbia and produced by Joe Wissert at Davlen Sound Studios and Hollywood Sound in Los Angeles, featuring session players like David Paich and Steve Porcaro (later of Toto) and achieving five-times platinum certification from the RIAA for over five million U.S. sales. This era's hits were often tracked at The Automatt in San Francisco for mixing, contributing to the smooth, yacht rock sheen of albums like Down Two Then Left (1977) and Middle Man (1980), the latter recorded primarily at Studio 55 in Los Angeles with Toto members providing rhythmic drive.[88][89] After a hiatus from the early 1980s, Scaggs returned with Other Roads in 1988 on Virgin Records, embracing adult contemporary sounds, followed by Some Change in 1994 on Virgin, which revisited blues roots with producer Rick Rubin. His later catalog shifted toward standards and blues covers, including the blues album Come On Home (1997) on Virgin, Dig (2001) on 429 Records, But Beautiful (2003) on Gray Cat Records, and Speak Low (2008) on Decca, which topped the Billboard Jazz Albums chart. The 2010s brought Memphis (2013), A Fool to Care (2015), and Out of the Blues (2018) on Concord Records, emphasizing Southern soul and guitar-driven tracks produced at studios like Royal Studios in Memphis. This phase continued with In the Blues (2020), a collection of blues standards arranged with organist Mike LeDonne. Scaggs' most recent studio effort, Detour (2025) on Concord Jazz, features interpretations of Great American Songbook classics like "Angel Eyes" and "The Very Thought of You," born from informal sessions with pianist Seth Asarnow and released on October 17, 2025.[90][87] Scaggs has released few official live albums, reflecting his preference for studio precision, though archival and performance captures provide glimpses of his stage presence. Greatest Hits Live, recorded in 2004 at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco and issued on Mailboat Records, features extended versions of staples like "Lowdown" and "Lido Shuffle" with a tight band including guitarist Ray Parker Jr. An earlier archival release, Live in San Francisco '66 (2021) on Concord, documents a 1966 performance from his pre-solo days, offering raw blues-rock energy. Scaggs' early tenure with the Steve Miller Band informed the improvisational flair in these live outings.[91][92]Compilations and singles
Boz Scaggs's compilation albums serve as retrospective collections of his key recordings, often highlighting his commercial successes from the 1970s and 1980s. The 1980 release Hits! gathers tracks primarily from his albums Silk Degrees (1976) and Middle Man (1980), achieving a peak position of No. 30 on the US Billboard 200 chart.[93] In 1990, a compact disc edition of Hits! was issued, expanding accessibility to his signature blue-eyed soul and yacht rock sound.[94] Later, The Best of Boz Scaggs (1990) curated selections from his early Columbia Records era, emphasizing hits like those from Boz Scaggs (1969) and Moments (1971). An expanded edition of Silk Degrees arrived in 2007, adding bonus tracks and remastered audio to celebrate its status as Scaggs's breakthrough album.[95]| Compilation Album | Release Year | Notable Features |
|---|---|---|
| Hits! | 1980 | Peaked at No. 30 on Billboard 200; focuses on 1976–1980 hits[93] |
| The Best of Boz Scaggs | 1990 | Early career overview; CD format for broader distribution |
| Silk Degrees (Expanded) | 2007 | Remastered with bonus tracks from original sessions[95] |
| Key Single | Release Year | Chart Peak (Billboard Hot 100) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| "Lowdown" | 1976 | No. 3 | Grammy winner; from Silk Degrees[27] |
| "Breakdown Dead Ahead" | 1980 | No. 15 | From Middle Man[27] |
| "Angel Eyes" | 2025 | N/A (digital/streaming) | From Detour; jazz-infused cover[96] |