You’ve got great taste.
Sign in to follow your favorite artists, save events, & more.
Sign In

Geno Washington and The Ram Jam Band | Geno Washington and The Yo Yo's
January Blues Festival 2026: THE ANIMALS + GENO WASHINGTON and THE RAM JAM BAND + DJ Snowboy (Day 1)
229
229 Great Portland St

About this concert
January Blues Festival 2026 presents
THE ANIMALS
+ special guests: GENO WASHINGTON and THE RAM JAM BAND
+ Host/DJ: SNOWBOY
House of the Rising Sun, Don't Le Me Be Misunderstood, We've Gotta Get Out of This Place, Baby Let Me Take You Home, Bring It On Home To Me, It's My Life and many more helped make The Animals one of the biggest groups in the world during the 1960's. Founding member and drummer with the group John Steel now leads his own version of the legendary band.
Geno Washington is an American Rhythm 'n' Blues singer who shot to fame in the late 1960's with his group The Ram Jam Band. Celebrated by Dexys Midnight Runners with their #1 1980 single Geno, Geno Washington & the Ram Jam Band released five albums between 1966-1969 before splitting.
Show More
Find a place to stay
Event Lineup
Upcoming concerts from similar artists
What fans are saying

Kris
January 26th 2024
Brilliant Gig
So much fun
Geno is such a great storyteller
And his band are excellent
A great Blues and Soul evening
🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸
London, United Kingdom@Pizza Express Live Holborn
Easily follow your favorite artists by syncing your music
Sync Music

Share Event
Geno Washington and The Ram Jam Band | Geno Washington and The Yo Yo's Biography
Geno Washington and The Ram Jam Band had two of the biggest selling UK albums of the sixties. Amazingly both of these were live albums. Hand Clappin, Foot Stompin, Funky Butt Live was in the album charts for 48 weeks of the year 1966 and was only out-sold by The Sound of Music and Parsley, Sage, Rosemary & Thyme.
US soul acts rarely visited the UK and, having come over as a part of the US Air Force and stayed, Geno was our soul man. His level of touring and the high energy of his gigs was, and still is (as immortalized by Dexy's Midnight Runners in the 80's hit Geno) the stuff of legends. During his sets, the beat was continuous and the hits were incessant. It was really Geno who pioneered this Go, Go style of performing and the audiences simply could not get enough. With the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Cream, and Pink Floyd in support Geno could never relax.
These spiritual meanderings were abruptly halted when, in 1980 Blighty beckoned once more. A call came from old friends in the UK that a tribute called Geno (mentioned above) had gone to number one in the charts. In interviews, the singer, Kevin Roland, was speaking of this legendary soul man, whose name they used to chant up and down the land and public interest in Geno was growing for a new generation. Soon, Anglophile Geno, was back in the UK and back on the road.
The arrival of the nineties saw Geno go back to his roots (he was a Blues singer originally in his home, town of Evansville, Indiana) doing a show he called Cut Loose and Singing the Blues. This was a great success and spawned the band The Purple Aces. He then took this band to Edinburgh for the Fringe Festival, had a great reaction and a three week sell-out run. This in turn resulted in a collaboration with Ray Fenwick (The Spencer Davis Band) and an album called Change Your Thoughts You Change Your Life.
Read MoreUS soul acts rarely visited the UK and, having come over as a part of the US Air Force and stayed, Geno was our soul man. His level of touring and the high energy of his gigs was, and still is (as immortalized by Dexy's Midnight Runners in the 80's hit Geno) the stuff of legends. During his sets, the beat was continuous and the hits were incessant. It was really Geno who pioneered this Go, Go style of performing and the audiences simply could not get enough. With the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Cream, and Pink Floyd in support Geno could never relax.
These spiritual meanderings were abruptly halted when, in 1980 Blighty beckoned once more. A call came from old friends in the UK that a tribute called Geno (mentioned above) had gone to number one in the charts. In interviews, the singer, Kevin Roland, was speaking of this legendary soul man, whose name they used to chant up and down the land and public interest in Geno was growing for a new generation. Soon, Anglophile Geno, was back in the UK and back on the road.
The arrival of the nineties saw Geno go back to his roots (he was a Blues singer originally in his home, town of Evansville, Indiana) doing a show he called Cut Loose and Singing the Blues. This was a great success and spawned the band The Purple Aces. He then took this band to Edinburgh for the Fringe Festival, had a great reaction and a three week sell-out run. This in turn resulted in a collaboration with Ray Fenwick (The Spencer Davis Band) and an album called Change Your Thoughts You Change Your Life.
Follow artist