Toulouse Engelhardt, (born April 14, 1951, Milwaukee, Wisconsin) is an acoustic guitarist and the last member of the Takoma Seven, a group of fingerstyle guitarists who recorded for Takoma Records from 1959–1976. The group included John Fahey, Peter Lang, and Leo Kottke.
Thomas Lloyd Engelhardt is the younger of two sons of Alan and Arlene Engelhardt. After moving to the west coast, first to San Francisco in 1953, his family migrated south to Hermosa Beach, California and in 1956 settled in Palos Verdes Estates, California, where he graduated from Palos Verdes High School in 1969. Engelhardt developed his first interest in guitar at the age of six when he heard surf music.
Although he lacks formal training in guitar technique and music theory, Engelhardt did receive impromptu lessons from two established jazz guitarists of the 1960s: Wes Montgomery and Larry Carlton. His first guitar lesson was from Carlton, who taught him how to play "Walk, Don't Run" by The Ventures. In the summer of 1966, at the age of fifteen, Engelhardt was given tips in technique by Montgomery while they were at the backstage door of the Lighthouse Café in Hermosa Beach.(2)(6)
Engelhardt's break came in 1971 when he was booked as a support act for The Byrds' final American tour. In 1975, he signed with Briar Records, a subsidiary of Fahey's Takoma label. After the release of his first album, he became disillusioned by his experiences in the music industry. He took a ten-year sabbatical and returned to college to pursue two academic degrees in the natural sciences. In the early 1990s he was awarded a master's degree from California State University, Fullerton in botany. He has been adjunct professor of biology at community colleges in Southern California.