Tim Schuller Explained

Tim Schuller
Birth Name:Fredric Thomas Schuller
Birth Place:Salem, Ohio, U.S.
Death Place:Dallas, Texas, U.S.
Alma Mater:Kent State University at Salem
Occupation:Columnist, historian, music critic

Tim "Mit" Schuller (né Fredric Thomas Schuller; Salem, Ohio – 29 February 2012, Dallas, Texas) was an American, Dallas–Fort Worth-based music critic, who, for 37 years – from 1975 until his death – chronicled living blues and jazz musicians, mostly from Texas (particularly from the Dallas–Fort Worth area and the Southwest).

Career

Some of Schullers writings – notably those about Freddie King, Buster Smith, and Lightnin' Hopkins – have been cited in academic and encyclopedic publications. According to a Buddy magazine staff editor, Schuller provided blues pianist Boston Smith (né Boston Beverly Smith; 1907–1989) (Buster Smith's brother) with an epitaph worthy of his achievements.

He also was an update editor of the 2002 revised edition of MusicHound Blues: The Essential Album Guide (Schirmer Trade Books / Omnibus Press). At the time of his death, he had been writing a book, Scorning All Borders, covering 30 years of writing about Texas jazz and blues artists.

Early years

Schuller was born in Salem, Ohio, to Frederick Kane Schuller (1908–1956) and Mary Louise Layden (maiden; 1912–2005). Tim's father, who had been a newspaper journalist, died when he was seven. As a teenager, Tim attended Salem High School, graduating in 1967. During his senior year, he was the feature editor of the Salem Quaker, his high school newspaper. Tim went on to study at Kent State University at Salem, but did not graduate. In Ohio, Schuller had worked as a musician (playing guitar), a factory worker, and a stringer reporter.

Schuller then moved to Chicago with his childhood friend from Salem, Tom "Mot" Dutko (né Thomas Lawrence Dutko; 1949–2017), a blues drummer. Who went on to record with Little Al Thomas and the Crazy Horse Band, Billy Branch, and Eddie Shaw. In Chicago, Schuller played with Robert Lockwood Jr. and John Brim. Dutko also played drums for Big Walter Horton, Sunnyland Slim, Homesick James, Jimmy Walker, Erwin Helfer, and Eddie Taylor.

Schuller moved to Dallas around 1977 and briefly embarked in the record business. In 1977, he was worked at Peaches Records & Tapes at Cole and Fitzhugh Avenues, Dallas. Ken E. Shimamoto (born 1957), a music journalist in Dallas worked there with him. In 1980, Schuller was assistant manager at Sound Town at the Valley View Mall in Dallas.

Over the next 35 years, Schuller contributed to the following newspapers, periodicals, and records:

Periodicals and newspapers

  1. Guitar Player, Living Blues, Blues Access
  2. The Met (Dallas' arts & entertainment weekly)
  3. Southwest Blues
  4. DownBeat
  5. Buddy magazine
  6. Texas Jazz
  7. Juke Blues
  8. Coda
  9. Crazy Music (the journal of the Australian Blues Society)
  10. D Magazine
  11. Dallas Morning News,
  12. Dallas Observer
  13. Texas Observer
  14. Contemporary Keyboard
  15. Texas Highways
  16. Akron Beacon Journal

Discography

  1. Lucky Seven Records
  2. Black Top
  3. Trix
  4. Wolf Records (de) (Vienna, Austria)
  5. Bullseye Blues
  6. Fedora Records
  7. Blind Pig
  8. TKO Magnum Music
  9. Blue Moon
  10. Continental Blue Heaven (distributed by Harmonia Mundi)
  11. Cannonball Records (nl) 29110
  12. AudioQuest Music
  13. TopCat Records
  14. Mayhem Records
  15. JSP

Affiliations

Tributes

Father, family, and death

Schuller's father, Fred Kane Schuller had been a journalist in Pennsylvania and Ohio with over 13 newspapers, He had been in the editorial staff with the Youngstown Telegram (around 1935), staff editor for several years at the Cleveland News, night sports editor at the Pittsburgh Press (around 1940), editorial staff of the Daily News (McKeesport, Pennsylvania), managing editor of the Lorain Journal, and, near his death, worked for a stint at the Saint Petersburg Times. He was also an AP writer and contributor to Collier's and the Saturday Evening Post. He was a personal friend of John Barrymore, and after his death, corresponded with the family, including Lionel Barrymore.

Schuller's mother, Mary Louise Layden (maiden), died in 2005 in New York City. His older sister, Molly Davis (née Molly Lou Schuller) has lived in New York City since the 1950s.

Tim Schuller died February 29, 2012, in Dallas. He is buried in Salem, Ohio, at Grandview Cemetery.

Notes about cited periodicals and labels

Books

  1. MusicHound Blues: The Essential Album Guide (1998)
    Edited by Leland Rucker
    Foreword by Al Kooper
    1st Paper, 1st Printing edition (1997)
    Visible Ink Press




    Revised & updated (January 1, 2002)
    Leland Rucker (ed.)
    Al Kooper (forward)
    Tim Schuller (update editor)
    Schirmer Trade Books
    Omnibus Press


Periodicals

Record labels