BOZ WILL RELEASE HIS FIRST WINE FROM SCAGGS VINEYARD FALL OF 2008. Boz Scaggs has spent years laboring over his Napa Vineyards hoping to produce his finest. In 1998, Scaggs planted Mourvedre and Grenache, which along with Syrah form the basis of many Rhone blends. The result is just over 2 acres in the approximate ratio of grapes from the Rhone Valley towns of Beaucastel and Gigondas, Scaggs says: 46 percent Mourvedre, 38 percent Grenache and 16 percent Syrah.
Says Scaggs, "It's taken years to move [the wine] from down-the-sink to drinkable to sellable, and I'm determined to make it a medal winner." His first vintage was 2003, but he wasn't crazy about it, so he's waiting to see how the 2004 "sits in the bottle for a few months" and said he is hoping to release it once he completes the BATF legal process and label approval. "It's in a bonded warehouse and will be released.
From Boston Globe Interview:
Q: Speaking of new releases, we hear Scaggs Vineyards has a new wine coming out.
A: Yeah, we brought out a rosé last fall that some San Francisco restaurants are carrying. This fall we'll release our first red. The wines will primarily be sold online [Scaggs Vineyards].
Q: Who knew you were an oenophile?
A: I am. My wife and I bought property in Napa 14 years ago and planted a vineyard about nine years ago. We've been making wine for the past six years. It's fun, but we're real small-time.
Boz Scaggs graces the Music Circus
Boz Scaggs will perform at the South Shore Music Circus, 130 Sohier St., Cohasset, on June 13.
By R. Scott Reedy, correspondent
GateHouse News Service
Posted Jun 04, 2008 @ 01:46 PM
These days, when people say they enjoy the work of Boz Scaggs they may be referring not only to his music, but also to his wine. The Grammy Award-winning singer/songwriter and northern California resident who opens the season at the South Shore Music Circus in Cohasset next Friday and plays the Cape Cod Melody Tent on July 5 recently added vintner to his resume.
I got involved in the wine business a few years back when my wife and I moved up to a small place in Napa. It was almost a requirement that we plant a few grape vines. One thing led to another, our yields steadily increased, and we found ourselves needing to sell some of it, explained Scaggs by telephone recently. We live in a foodie culture in San Francisco so it seemed to make sense that we go in this new direction. Before long, what had been a hobby became a business for us.
We learned pretty quickly, however, that the wine business is not childs play. There are lots of regulations that have to be followed. This year, were releasing our first wine a 2006 Rose from the Scaggs Vineyard. Initially, it will be sold in restaurants in San Francisco and then we will see where it goes from there.
Where Scaggs himself goes next is on his annual summer concert tour with a show that features some of the biggest hits in the singers more than four decade-long career, including Lido Shuffle, Look What Youve Done to Me, Heart of Mine, Lowdown, and Were All Alone.
Born in Ohio, as William Royce Scaggs, but raised in Texas, Scaggs earliest musical influences included rhythm and blues, soul music, early rock and roll and raw Delta and Chicago blues the music he recalls hearing on the radio in Texas, but from places as far away as Nashville. In high school, he provided lead vocals for a band led by classmate Steve Miller. By 1965, he found himself in London and then spent the next couple of years traveling around Europe, playing everything from small clubs to sidewalk cafes before making his first record and establishing a home base in Stockholm.
In 1967, Scaggs headed to San Francisco (via India and Nepal), where he reunited with his friend and classmate, joining the Steve Miller Blues Band to take part in the now legendary Bay Area scene that was revolutionizing American rock and roll.
After two albums with Miller, Scaggs made his U.S. solo debut for Atlantic Records with the self-titled Boz Scaggs. The release led Columbia Records to sign Scaggs, where he released a series of top-selling albums including Moments, Boz Scaggs & Band, and My Time.
It was in 1976, however, that Scaggs really broke big with the release of Silk Degrees, which he recorded with drummer Jeff Porcaro, keyboardist and arranger David Paich, bassist David Ungate, and guitarists Louie Shelton and Fred Tackett. The album was his commercial and artistic breakthrough into the mainstream. After its release, Silk Degrees remained on the Billboard album charts for 115 weeks, posting three chart-topping singles and becoming one of the signature albums of the 1970s. When the single Love Look What You've Done To Me was included on the soundtrack of the 1980 feature film Urban Cowboy, Scaggs soaring popularity only went higher.
Scaggs made a few more albumsincluding the 1980s top-selling Middle Manbefore taking a hiatus from the road and the pressures of stardom.
Scaggs spent a good part of the 1980s in retirement, owning and operating the San Francisco nightclub Slims, and limiting his performances primarily to the clubs annual black-tie New Year's Eve concerts. He resurfaced in 1988 with the album Other Roads, and three years later resumed regular touring. In recent years, Scaggs has released Greatest Hits Live, a two-disc live collection that spans his entire career. He also made But Beautiful, in which he tackled the Great American Songbook accompanied by a jazz quartet. Later this year, Scaggs will release a second volume of standards, entitled Speak Low, on his own Gray Cat record label. Scaggs acknowledges that recording new versions of standards associated with people like Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby and Nat King Cole has been an interesting process even for an accomplished performer.
It opened up a whole new set of challenges for me, he says. Its sacred ground, as far as Im concerned, and the more I got into it, the more I realized how little I know.
What Scaggs who will turn 64 on Sunday does know is that, wine-making aside, performing will always have a unique place in his life.
Im a professional musician. It pays the bills and it satisfies the itch Ive had to perform since I was 10 years old. There are very few people that Id rather be around than musicians. When you work live, its never the same experience twice. If it becomes boring, then you've done something wrong. Now, if I were doing this 10 or even 12 months a year, then I might feel very differently, but I love going on the road in the summer.
Foodies and vintners come in all stripes, even in the garb of a top-of- the-charts 1970s rock singer turned critically acclaimed jazz crooner. In 1997 Scaggs and his wife Dominique, who plan to launch a commercial brand next year, bought a property in the Mayacamas mountain range that divides Napa and Sonoma counties.
Although Scaggs liked wine, becoming a vintner wasn't initially part of the plan.
"We were having some fruit trees and olive trees planted and a fellow said he had some vines left over from a job earlier that day and did I want to plant them," says Scaggs, a part owner of Slim's who divides his time between Napa and an apartment in San Francisco.
One-third of an acre of Syrah went into the ground; Scaggs went on tour and forgot about it. But when he returned, "it was a warm September night and there were little grape vines stickin' out of the ground," says the Texas native, tenderly. "We started looking after the vines and it's just been a pretty seductive process."
Scaggs, who is particularly enamored of wines from France's Rhone Valley, went to work researching rootstocks and talking to neighbors and local growers. The old-timers told him that Mourvedre -- also known as Mataro -- was popular on Mt. Veeder in decades past, when Italian wine families dominated the area.
So in 1998, Scaggs planted Mourvedre and Grenache, which along with Syrah form the basis of many Rhone blends. The result is just over 2 acres in the approximate ratio of grapes from the Rhone Valley towns of Beaucastel and Gigondas, Scaggs says: 46 percent Mourvedre, 38 percent Grenache and 16 percent Syrah.
Scaggs also planted a small amount of Roussanne, a white Rhone varietal.
The grapes are farmed organically, although Scaggs says he doesn't intend to go through the lengthy process of having the vineyard certified.
Today the property is producing charming, complex wines, but their quality wasn't clear at first. The initial harvests were ruined by a bacterial infestation in the winery where they were made, Scaggs says.
New winemaker
He sought a new winemaker and in 2002, John Olney, the vice president and winemaker for Ridge Lytton Springs, agreed to make the singer's wine in Olney's Healdsburg garage.
Olney's winemaking brought out the exceptional qualities of Scaggs' grapes. The wine "is special. Delicious. You slurp it down," says Berkeley wine merchant Kermit Lynch, who is friends with Scaggs and introduced him to Olney.
Scaggs bottled two blends of his 125-case 2002 vintage, which will not be commercially released -- one Mourvedre-dominant and the other mostly Grenache. Both are exceptional wines with velvety textures, rich fruit and the charming spiciness the Rhone varietals are known for.
The wines were so good that I invited friends over to help finish them instead of regretfully pouring them down the drain, which I often do with even very good wines. Not a drop of Scaggs wine was left for the sink.
For the 225-case 2003 vintage, Scaggs, Olney and Lynch decided to create an old-fashioned "field blend" by throwing the entire harvest together, rather than aging the varietals separately and trying to craft the perfect mix.
"We decided it would be simpler and just as good as anything we might try to conjure up," says Scaggs.
The wine shows great promise, although it is still in its fetal stages. Like many good, young wines, it tastes and smells rough-hewn, but shows a rich character, great depth of fruit and should soften and integrate with some time in the bottle.
The singer, who says he plans to call his new wine brand Scaggs, also intends to sell a dry rosé and a small amount of Roussanne. Prices have not been set; Scaggs says he doesn't expect wine to be a big profit center, but he also doesn't want to lose money on the venture.
Long and winding road
For now, Scaggs is neck-deep in the legalities of launching a wine brand, which includes state, federal and local licensing and label approvals from the U.S. Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau.
The singer hopes to sell the 2003 wines by next fall via his Web site, bozscaggs.com, and a few white-tablecloth restaurants.
Lynch, who owns a vineyard in Gigondas, has been advising Scaggs on going commercial. Lynch says he likes his friend's wine so well that he would consider selling it in his Berkeley shop, although he typically carries only European wine.
While other celebrities have wine labels -- Jerry Garcia's was started posthumously and Mick Fleetwood of Fleetwood Mac launched Mick Fleetwood Private Cellar this year -- Scaggs' role is unusually hands-on.
Scaggs is slowly learning the winemaking process; this fall he had responsibility for testing the Brix (sugar content) of the grapes and making harvest decisions -- as well as trucking the grapes to Miner Family Vineyards in Oakville, which is making his 2004 vintage wines. Becoming a winemaker "is quite a venture," says Scaggs. "I'd like to, but I don't know. We're taking things as they come for now."
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2004/12/23/WIGTVAFGPP1.DTL
This article appeared on page F - 4 of the San Francisco Chronicle
Friday, June 16, 2006
By Dorothy J. Gaiter and John Brecher, The Wall Street Journal
Animal labels are so 2005. Now that winemakers have used up pretty much all real critters for their labels and are resorting to mythical creatures like two-headed cats, it's pretty clear that this trend has peaked. Next up: paparazzi wines.
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Appropriate to an age when gossip is ascendant and personality is king, wine stores these days are a virtual People magazine of labels. There are labels for race-car drivers (Richard Childress, Randy Lewis, Jeff Gordon, Mario Andretti), golfers (Arnold Palmer, Greg Norman, Ernie Els) and stars of other sports (Joe Montana, Larry Bird). There are labels for live musicians (Bob Dylan, Vince Neil of Motley Crue), dead ones (Jerry Garcia, Frank Sinatra) and some who may or may not be dead (Elvis Presley). There are labels for living Hollywood stars (Fess Parker) and immortal ones (Marilyn Monroe). Madonna's father has his own winery -- Ciccone Vineyard & Winery -- in Michigan. His winery says his first Madonna label will be released any day now. There is even celebrity synergy: Football commentator John Madden grows some of the Syrah grapes for the wines of Olympic skater Peggy Fleming. John Madden on ice -- wow.
Of course, there have been some paparazzi wines for a long time. We bought our first bottle of Always Elvis, with a shiny label outside and bad Italian wine inside, in 1980. Around the same time, we had our first Smothers Brothers wine and a Muscat Canelli from Pat Paulsen. The director Francis Ford Coppola started his winery in Napa 30 years ago; now it's one of the biggest in the U.S. However, when Costco, Gallo and Martha Stewart all get involved, you know a trend is coming ashore, so consider this: Costco will soon be carrying a line of wines with Mick Fleetwood, drummer and co-founder of Fleetwood Mac. Gallo now has MacMurray Ranch, named for actor Fred MacMurray, who used to own the land where the grapes are grown. And Martha Stewart has been quietly mixing up her own line of Sonoma County wines. We're told she's particularly interested in making a great rose. That will probably be her first release, along with a Chardonnay.
Clearly this trend has hit the slipstream, as Mr. Lewis, the race-car driver, whose wines are very well-regarded, might say. We seem to see a new paparazzi wine every day. Some companies now specialize in putting celebrities' pictures on wine labels. The question is: How are they? When we conducted a tasting of animal labels a couple of years ago -- we dubbed them critter wines, a name that has stuck -- we found most of them, as we put it then, "beastly and fowl." How about paparazzi wines? Are the pretty labels concealing ugly wine? We conducted an extensive tasting to get the answer.
We found at least one wine from everyone mentioned above, plus quite a few others -- more than 50 bottles in all. A few, such as Greg Norman, are widely available. Others are obscure. In some cases, we had to order directly from the winery and in other cases we had to look hard to find wines from dealers who specialize in unusual orders. While many wineries are owned by famous people, we only bought wines in which a celebrity's picture or name, or some version of the name, appeared on the label. We did not include Coppola wines; they have done so well in our general blind tastings that we can simply stipulate that these are good wines across a wide varietal spectrum.
In most cases involving a live celebrity, the winery claims that the star is intimately involved in every aspect of the winemaking. We believe this. We also believe that Paris Hilton personally harvests materials from sperm whales to make her namesake perfume. But it is clear that some celebrities are more involved than others. Our assistant, Melanie Grayce West, heard that popular '70s singer Boz Scaggs made wine in California, so she called around to try to find some. Then her phone rang. "This is Boz Scaggs," said the voice on the other end. "You called about my wine?" Mr. Scaggs said his first vintage was 2003, but he wasn't crazy about it, so he's waiting to see how the 2004 "sits in the bottle for a few months" and said he may release it -- around 200 cases -- later this year.
And, of course, death alone is no reason why stars can't be part of the process. Two winemaking buddies, Christian Garvin and Andrew Kahn, longtime Frank Sinatra fans, decided the day after Mr. Sinatra died in 1998 to make a wine in his honor. With vintage Sinatra songs wafting through Kahn Winery, which they opened in 1996, they made one barrel of Cabernet Franc, which they called Cab Frank. Then, Mr. Garvin told us, they wrote Old Blue Eyes' family to tell them what they'd done and thus began a partnership of sorts in which more wine would be bottled -- 2,000 cases at its peak -- and a portion of the proceeds given to the Frank Sinatra Foundation.
We tasted the wines in blind flights over several nights and we have good news: They were surprisingly tasty, and some were excellent. The overall quality was high. To be sure, they weren't all winners. We found the reds, in general, better than the whites. Indeed, we tasted 10 Chardonnays and didn't like any of them. We also found that live people make better wines than dead ones. We have never much liked the well-known Marilyn Merlot brand and we didn't this time, either. We tried several different Elvis wines from the Graceland Cellars line and didn't like any of those. Nor did we like any of the Jerry Garcia wines we tried. The Sinatra Merlot was an excellent exception, but, sadly, it is no longer made. The 2001 Merlot we had was made after the two friends parted ways, Mr. Garvin says, adding that the business, minus the Sinatra piece of it, was sold last year. "It was a fun run," he says.
We very much liked the Bracco Pinot Grigio. Lorraine Bracco, who plays Tony Soprano's psychiatrist in the hit HBO series, told us she has loved wine since she moved to France as a teenager and lived there for 10 years. With all of the offers for her to endorse this product or that, she jumped at the chance when her business manager and an associate of his brought to her the idea of launching a line of wines. "I loved the fact that I would own the business and I loved the fact that it was something that I loved to do," she told us. "I love to eat and drink." So with her importer, she visits wineries in Italy and tastes and chooses the wines that will bear her name, she says. Her dream, she adds, "is to have a fabulous rose" in her portfolio.
We also really enjoyed Mick Fleetwood's wine, which is a blend of Merlot and Cabernet Franc. Mr. Fleetwood, whose wines are made at various wineries, told us he enjoys the blending process, the trial and error it takes to get something good that he wants to put his name on. "I don't mind the responsibility," he said. "Take it home. I trust you will really love the experience of drinking it, but if you don't you know who to blame." He added: "So far we've had almost exclusively good comments. The wine is obviously accessible to a broad palate, which it has to be to be really drinkable. I don't like being hit over the head. I don't like to be traumatized. For some people it's all about the full tannic approach where you feel like the enamel is being stripped off your teeth. I don't like that."
In general, we would say that, at the moment, people, especially live people, are a better bet than animals in the wine shop. Hmm. Maybe that's a natural evolution.