Stephen Dale Petit

Stephen Dale Petit
Stephen Dale Petit live (Photo by Peter Surcombe)
Background information
Birth nameStephen Dale Petit
Also known asSDP
Born (1969-04-19) 19 April 1969
GenresBlues, blues-rock
Occupation(s)Musician, singer-songwriter, artist
Instrument(s)Guitar, vocals, bass guitar, piano, keyboards
Labels333 Records
WebsiteOfficial website

Stephen Dale Petit (born 19 April 1969) is an American-born guitarist, singer, songwriter and new blues musician.

Petit's blues guitar experience started at a young age in California and continued through addiction, alcoholism, homelessness, and subsequent recovery. He went from being a performer in the London Underground to giving masterclass University lectures on blues music whilst becoming a well-known stage act.

Petit has released six albums, toured extensively around the United Kingdom and Europe, gaining critical recognition, sizeable sales and widespread radio airplay. His musical collaborators include Rolling Stones Ronnie Wood and Mick Taylor, Dr. John, Hubert Sumlin, Albert Lee, Chris Barber, The Pretty ThingsPhil May and Dick Taylor, The Black KeysPatrick Carney, Max Middleton, Paul Jones and Shemekia Copeland.

Petit's playing style, described by Classic Rock Magazine as containing "The fire of Freddie King, the instinct of Jimmy Page and the soul of Eric Clapton" moved former Rolling Stone Mick Taylor to comment: "He’s got his own unique take on contemporary blues… I’ve heard him do a great live version of Freddie King’s "Have You Ever Loved a Woman?" It was wonderful. All his albums are very interesting, he deserves the recognition."