WALTER "WALE" LINIGER, a native of Switzerland,
	fell for the Blues when he heard his first Lightnin' Hopkins record. After he graduated
	from the University of Bern (Switzerland) he taught for eight years in the Swiss public
	school system before he moved to the United States in 1982.
	From 1984 until 1992 Liniger worked as a Research Associate
	at the University of Mississippi's Blues Archive, directing the archive's oral history
	project, "The Original Down Home Blues Show."
	In 1984, a Folk Art grant by the Mississippi Arts Commission
	allowed Liniger to start his apprenticeship with James Son Thomas (1926-1993), one of the
	Delta's great bluesmen. During the following seven years the duo appeared at most major
	Blues festivals throughout America and participated extensively in the statewide Arts in
	Education program. This valuable experience, mentioned in the Gerard Herzhaft's Encyclopedia
		of the Blues, was sobering and necessary: it allowed Liniger to re-evaluate his rather
	intellectual notion of the Blues. In addition, Liniger continued his studies under Sonny
	Boy Nelson (Eugene Powell), Jack Owens, Johnny Woods and Wilburt Lee Reliford, exponents
	of traditional Mississippi Blues.
	In 1993 Liniger became a Distinguished Lecturer with the
	Institute for Southern Studies, University of South Carolina. In addition to teaching his
	successful course ECHOES IN BLUES at the South Carolina Honors College, he continues to
	perform on a regular basis. In recent years he often joins guitarist and National Folk
	Heritage Award winner Etta Baker (b.1913) on stage.
	In 2001 Wale Liniger became the first recipient of a stipend
	at the International Jazz Archive in Eisenach, Germany. This residency was sponsored by
	the U.S. Consulate General in Leipzig, Germany. It not only led to a number of
	performances and workshops at a variety of educational institutions throughout Thuringia
	and Saxony, but also to an extensive article about the Guenter Boas Collection, the core
	collection of the archive.
	Maybe it is because of his own multi-cultural background that
	Liniger seeks to highlight the healing endeavors of artistic voices, maybe it is because
	he believes in the creativity of the human mind when the heart is in trouble. In his
	performances Wale Liniger not only examines some of the cultural roots and tonal lures of
	the Blues through musical interpretations on harmonica, guitar and voice, but he also
	explores the underlying issues of translation and exile.