Isaac Scott (musician)

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.

[2] By 1974, when he began to live in Seattle, Scott decided to concentrate on playing the blues, having been influenced by Albert Collins.

His repertoire and style continued to exhibit elements of blues, gospel and soul,[4] and in emulating Collins played by plucking his guitar with his thumb rather than utilising a pick.

"[2] 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.

Three years later, he released what turned out be his only studio-based album, Big Time Blues Man, also on Red Lightnin' Records.