Pervis Spann


Pervis Spann is an American former broadcaster, music promoter and radio personality. Spann has been influential in the development of blues music in Chicago, Illinois. Spann was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 2012.

Life and career

Pervis Spann was born in Itta Bena, Mississippi. During his teenage years, he cared for his family by picking cotton and managing a local movie theater, The Dixie Theater after his mother after she suffered a stroke. Spann, his sister and mother moved to Battle Creek, Michigan in 1949. Shortly after moving to Michigan, Spann left to work in Gary, Indiana, and spent a time in the forces in the Korean War, before returning to live in Chicago, Illinois, where he worked in a steel mill, drove a taxi, and repaired television sets.
Under the G.I. Bill, Spann attended the Midwestern Broadcasting School, before starting work on WOPA radio in 1959. Spann organized his first concert, featuring B.B. King and Junior Parker, in 1960. Three years later, when Leonard and Phil Chess launched WVON, Spann was given a regular late-night blues slot, and won attention with an 87-hour "sleepless sit-in" on the station to raise money for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.. During the 1960s, Spann managed the careers of leading blues and soul performers, including B.B. King, and claimed to have a role in discovering the Jackson 5 and Chaka Khan. Known as a workaholic, Spann also co-owned several clubs, including the Burning Spear. After WVON was sold in 1975, Spann helped set up a new blues and gospel-oriented station, WXOL, on the same frequency in 1979; it became WVON again in 1983. Spann continued to promote blues festivals, and also ran station WXSS in Memphis, Tennessee, during the 1980s.