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Crown Prince Waterford Dies
Rev. Solomon
C. Waterford, 90, died February 1, 2007 in Jacksonville,
Florida. Waterford is one of the few survivors of the blues
shouting style first popularized by Big Joe Turner and Wynonie
Harris over a half century ago. He began his musical career
in 1936, and continued to perform over the next three decades,
all the while easily straddling the blues and jazz divide.
His full nickname was "Crown Prince of the blues."
During that time Waterford worked with such noted musicians
as Charlie Christian, Mary Lou Williams, Jay McShann, and
Pete Johnson, to name just a few. Although never becoming
a major hit-maker, he recorded prolifically, beginning in
1946 with a number of excellent sides appearing on Hy-Tone,
Torch, Aladdin, Capitol, King and Excello. Then, in 1965,
a life long dream of Waterford's was fulfilled when he became
a preacher. building several churches in northern Florida,
he served the ministry for over 30 years. Although he had
long since abandoned his secular musical career, he continued
to sing in church, recording a gospel album on the Envy
label entitled "The Reverend Waterford Sings."
In recent years Waterford's blues legacy has been will represented
on the reissue market with releases on both the Westside
(shared with one of his mentors Walter Brown) and the Classics
labels. in April of 2002 Waterford, with the After Hours
Band in support, played the Springing the Blues' festival
in his home of Jacksonville, Florida to an enthusiastic
response. The following month they went into the studio
together to record the record "All Over But The Shoutin'"
for the Cypress label.
Chico
Chism Dies
Chico Chism
died January 28, 2007. He was 79 years old. Napoleon "Chico"
Chism was born on a riverboat outside of Shreveport, Louisiana
on May 23, 1927. Little is known about Chico's upbringing.
Chico recorded in 1957 as a drummer for T.V. Slim on the
original version of "Flat Foot Sam" on the Clif
Record label. He was back in the studio again in 1959, but
this time as a front man, recording the song "Hot Tamales
And Bar-B-Que". He also worked in the bands of Choker
Campbell, with Big Joe Turner, Clifton Chenier, Classie
Ballou, Rosco Gordon, Sonny Boy Williamson II, Little Junior
Parker, and many others. At some point, he landed in Chicago
and became well known in the 1970's as Howlin' Wolf's last
drummer. He played on sessions with Eddie Shaw and the Wolf
Gang, Sunnyland Slim, and Willie Kent. He played at Antone's
in Austin, Texas, during the 1970's, befriending a yet to
be famous Fabulous Thunderbirds band and Stevie Ray Vaughn.
Chico started a record label called Cher-Kee Records, and
put out a series of 45's. Chico appeared as a featured star
of the American Blues Legends 1979 European Tour, which
also included Billy "The Kid" Emerson, Eddie C.
Campbell, Good Rockin' Charles, Noland Struck, and Lester
Davenport. This tour led to a companion LP on Big Bear Records,
in which Chico plays drums and sings two original numbers
("High Rise Blues" and "Big Fat Mama 480
LBS"). During the first half of the 1980s, Chico hosted
regular nights at Kingston Mines and Rosa's, which in Chicago's
competitive blues market, was a notable testament to Chico's
talent and charisma. In 1986, Chico relocated to Phoenix,
Arizona at the invitation of Bob Corritore, who had met
Chico in 1975 at a Howlin' Wolf performance. Chico immediately
found a home in Phoenix, and
became a huge part of its blues community, winning great
local popularity, and becoming a teacher to many budding
blues players. He was a fixture at the Rhythm Room, performing
often and regularly greeting his many musician friends as
they toured through town. He became Corritore's first call
session drummer, and recorded Phoenix sessions with Jimmy
Rogers, R.L. Burnside, Bo Diddley, Henry Gray, Lil' Ed,
Chief Schabuttie Gilliame, Mojo Buford, Louisiana Red, Big
Pete Pearson, Pinetop Perkins, Little Milton, Smokey Wilson,
John Brim, and many more. He would visit Chicago annually
to attend the Chicago Blues Festival, and often participated
in the festival's Howlin' Wolf tributes. In 2002, Chico
suffered a stroke, which limited his playing, but he remained
active in the blues scene until the end.
Homesick
James Dies
Blues
Legend Homesick James passed away December 13. He was in
his mid-90s, but his own accounts of his age would vary.
His correct age may remain in doubt (he's claimed he was
born as early as 1905), but the slashing slide guitar skills
of Homesick James Williamson have never been in question.
Many of his most satisfying recordings have placed him in
a solo setting, where his timing eccentricities don't disrupt
the proceedings Williamson was playing guitar at age ten
and soon ran away from his Tennessee home to play at fish
fries and dances. His travels took the guitarist through
Mississippi and North Carolina during the 1920s,
where he crossed paths with Yank Rachell, Sleepy John Estes,
Blind Boy Fuller, and Big Joe Williams. Settling in Chicago
during the 1930s. The miles and gigs had
added up before Williamson made some of his finest sides
in 1952-53 for Art Sheridan's Chance Records (including
the classic "Homesick" that gave him his enduring
stage name). James also worked extensively as a sideman,
backing harp
great Sonny Boy Williamson in 1945 at a Chicago gin joint
called the Purple Cat and during the 1950s with his cousin,
slide master Elmore James (to whom Homesick is stylistically
indebted). He also recorded with James during the 1950s.
Homesick's own output included crashing 45's for Colt and
USA in 1962, a fine 1964 album for Prestige, and four tracks
on a Vanguard anthology in 1965. Williamson has never stopped
recording and touring; he's done recent albums for Appaloosa,
Earwig and Fedora.
James
Brown Dies
James
Brown, the dynamic, pompadoured "Godfather of Soul,"
whose rasping vocals and revolutionary rhythms made him
a founder of rap, funk and disco as well, died on Christmas
day. He was 73 Along with Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan and a
handful of others, Brown was one of the major musical influences
of the past 50 years. At least one generation idolized him,
and sometimes openly copied him. If Brown's claim to the
invention of soul can be challenged by fans of Ray Charles
and Sam Cooke, then his rights to the genres of rap, disco
and funk are beyond question. He was to rhythm and dance
music what Dylan was to lyrics: the unchallenged popular
innovator. "James presented obviously the best grooves,"
rapper Chuck D of Public Enemy once told The Associated
Press. "To this day, there has been no one near as
funky. No one's coming even close." His hit singles
include such classics as "Out of Sight," "(Get
Up I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine," "I Got You
(I Feel Good)" and "Say It Out Loud -- I'm Black
and I'm Proud," a landmark 1968 statement of racial
pride. He won a Grammy award for lifetime achievement in
1992, as well as Grammys in 1965 for "Papa's Got a
Brand New Bag" (best R&B recording) and for "Living
In America" in 1987 (best R&B vocal performance,
male.) He was one of the initial artists inducted into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986, along with Presley,
Chuck Berry and other founding fathers. 'Disco is James
Brown, hip-hop is James Brown, rap is James Brown' From
the 1950s, when Brown had his first R&B hit, "Please,
Please, Please" in 1956, through the mid-1970s, Brown
went on a frenzy of cross-country tours, concerts and new
songs. He earned the nickname "The Hardest Working
Man in Show Business." In 1986, he was inducted in
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. And rap stars of recent
years overwhelmingly have borrowed his lyrics with a digital
technique called sampling. Born in poverty in Barnwell,
South Carolina, in 1933, he was abandoned as a 4-year-old
to the care of relatives and friends and grew up on the
streets of Augusta, Georgia, in an "ill-repute area,"
as he once called it. There he learned to wheel and deal.
By the eighth grade in 1949, Brown had served 3 1/2 years
in Alto Reform School near Toccoa, Georgia, for breaking
into cars. While there, he met Bobby Byrd, whose family
took Brown into their home. Byrd also took Brown into his
group, the Gospel Starlighters. Soon they changed their
name to the Famous Flames and their style to hard R&B.
In January 1956, King
Records of Cincinnati signed the group, and four months
later "Please, Please, Please" was in the R&B
Top Ten. While most
of Brown's life was glitz and glitter, he was plagued with
charges of abusing drugs and alcohol and of hitting his
third wife, Adrienne.
Blues
Grammy Nominations Announced
The Grammys
have announced this years nominations for the Blues categories.
The nominations include:
Best Traditional
Blues Album:
(Vocal or Instrumental.)
Brother To The Blues
Tab Benoit With Louisiana's Leroux
[Telarc Blues]
Bronx In Blue
Dion
[Razor & Tie]
People Gonna Talk
James Hunter
[Rounder]
Guitar Groove-A-Rama
Duke Robillard
[Stony Plain Records]
Risin' With The Blues
Ike Turner
[Zoho Roots]
Best Contemporary Blues Album:
(Vocal or Instrumental.)
Live From Across The Pond
Robert Cray Band
[Vanguard Records/Nozzle Records]
Sippiana Hericane
Dr. John & The Lower 911
[Blue Note Records]
Suitcase
Keb' Mo'
[Epic/One Haven/Red Ink]
Hope And Desire
Susan Tedeschi
[Verve Forecast]
After The Rain
Irma Thomas
[Rounder]
Jay
McShann Dies
Pianist,
singer and bandleader Jay McShann died Dec. 7th, one month
before his 91st birthday. Fittingly, he passed away in Kansas
City, Missouri, his adopted hometown and one of the most
significant incubators of modern jazz. Born in Oklahoma,
where he taught himself piano, McShann moved to Kansas City
in late 1936, the year before the Basie band was "discovered"
there by jazz impresario John Hammond, who arranged for
the band to leave Kansas City’s Reno Club for national tours
and recording sessions. By the end of 1938, the Kansas City
jazz style—extremely hard swinging and bluesy, emphasizing
instrumental solos backed by patterns called "riffs"—were
essential to the exploding popularity of "swing"
music. On December 23, Hammond, a supporter of the Communist
Party, made the Basie band the centerpiece of his first
"Spirituals to Swing" concert, which sold out
Carnegie Hall in New York City as a benefit for the Republican
forces fighting Franco in the Spanish Civil War. Eventually,
McShann would fill the void Basie left in Kansas City with
a swing orchestra assembled from local musicians, including,
most notably, a teenaged Kansas City native and budding
alto saxophonist named Charles Parker, Jr. In later interviews,
McShann relished telling his version of how Parker got his
famous nickname "Yardbird"—later shortened to
"Bird. " Parker left for New York City, where
he worked as a dishwasher, while honing his skills in Harlem
jam sessions. McShann kept his band together by touring
throughout the Midwest, with occasional stops in Kansas
City dancehalls still operating. The Jay McShann Orchestra
made its first recordings—without Parker—in late 1939. Parker
rejoined McShann the next year and stayed until he became
a member of pianist Earl Hines’ band in 1943, a group that
included Dizzy Gillespie and several other jazz modernists.
Unfortunately, although the Jay McShann Orchestra excelled
at popular songs, the success of Walter Brown’s vocal on
"Confessin’ the Blues" led Decca management to
pigeon-hole the band as "The Band that Plays the Blues."
McShann was drafted in 1943, bringing his classic swing
band to an end. He unsuccessfully attempted to establish
a viable jazz orchestra after his discharge, but times had
changed. While bebop took leadership of the jazz world,
McShann became a more commercially oriented rhythm-and-blues
performer. He scored a huge hit backing vocalist Jimmy Witherspoon
on a cover recording of "Ain’t Nobody’s Business."
McShann returned to Kansas City in 1950, where he raised
his three daughters and performed regularly in local establishments.
He toured sporadically, including a highly rewarding 1969
European trip, made occasional recordings and settled comfortably
into the role of an elder statesman. He was prominently
featured in the excellent 1980 homage to the Kansas City
golden age, "Last of the Blue Devils," was interviewed
in Ken Burns’ uneven 2001 documentary "Jazz,"
and performed during the piano segment of Clint Eastwood’s
2003 PBS mini-series "The Blues." On recordings,
McShann displayed a high degree of piano skill, with elements
of boogie-woogie underlying his always imaginative melodic
improvisations. He never developed the more modern sound
of his Kansas City contemporary, Mary Lou Williams, however,
and sounded increasingly dated as the years rolled on. Eventually,
he began singing as well, sounding remarkably like Walter
Brown. McShann performed
live until last year, when deteriorating health made it
impossible for him to continue. It was only a few days before
his death, however, when he entered St. Luke’s Hospital
in Kansas City complaining of a respiratory infection.
Wordie
Perkins Dies
Wordie
Perkins, one of the great Memphis blues guitar players of
all time, passed away November 24, 2006. Featured as Will
Roy Sanders' foil in the fabulous Fieldstones since 1974,
Perkins and Sanders' two guitar attack created legions of
blues fans from every country in the world, who either saw
the Fieldstones on their infrequent tours of Australia and
South America or came to hear them play in
Memphis' wildest area juke joints like J&J's Lounge,
Green's Lounge, and, most recently, the Blue Worm. Perkins
died due to heart failure after a year of various
operations. While the operations and sickness slowed him
down and made him weak, the potential for one final European
tour kept Perkins' ebullient spirit going through difficult
times. Always a prankster with a quip, Perkins constantly
had a smile on his face and tune ready in his guitar. Growing
up near Senatobia where he learned to play guitar as a youngster,
Perkins moved to Memphis in 1950, joining the Thrillers
in 1960. Soon thereafter, he began playing with Leroy Hodges,
Sr's. band, the Funky Four, from 1962 until 1974, when the
Fieldstones sharp guitar style created some of the Fieldstones'
most memorable dance songs like "The Thing," "The
Squeeze," and "Let's Do It." He also recently
wrote the Memphis River Kings' theme song, "River Kings
Rock." His total discography includes 2 full length
cds and 2 45s with the Fieldstones as well as the cd single
for the River Kings. Perkins amazing guitar playing, cool
composure, and positive spirit is already missed by blues
fans everywhere.
KBA
Recipients Announced
Twenty-one individuals
and organizations will be honored with The Blues Foundation's
2007 Keeping The Blues Alive (KBA)Award during a recognition
brunch Saturday, February 3, 2007, in Memphis Tennessee.
The KBA ceremony will be part of the International Blues
Challenge (IBC) weekend of events that will feature the
semifinals and finals of the 23rd IBC competition, as well
as seminars, presentations and receptions for blues societies,
fans and professionals.
The Keeping The Blues Alive
Awards recognize the significant contributions to Blues
music made by the people behind the scenes. Each is selected
on the basis of merit by a select panel of Blues professionals.
KBA Chairman Art Tipaldi notes with respect to this year’s
recipients, "Once again, the committee was faced with
the difficult task of selecting honorees from among the
many outstanding men, women and organizations, many of whom
could have been selected for the honor in the past due to
their record of service to the Blues genre. Each year, we
think we cannot match the quality of the previous year’s
recipients and, and each year we are wrong. It is a great
privilege to be involved in the process that gives these
folks their well-deserved recognition." The KBA Committee
has this year added an "International" category
to specifically recognize the global reach and popularity
of Blues music, even though past KBA Awards have presented
to Canadians and Europeans. For a complete list of recipients
the Blues
Foundation Website.
H-Bomb
Ferguson Dies
Robert "H-Bomb"
Ferguson, a bluesman and pianist who urged listeners to
"rock baby rock" at the dawn of the rock 'n' roll
era, has died. He was 77. Ferguson, who got his Cold War-era
nickname from his booming voice, died Sunday at Hospice
of Cincinnati of complications from emphysema and cardiopulmonary
disease, said a family friend, the Rev. Julia Keene. "If
it wasn't for folks like him, blues wouldn't be what it
is today. He was doing it first," said Lance Boyd,
guitarist for Ferguson's group, the Medicine Men. Ferguson
sang and played piano in a flamboyant style, wearing colorful
wigs; he was said to own dozens. "I want the audience
to go crazy and enjoy themselves," he told The Washington
Post (nyse: WPO - news - people ) in 1988. "Heck, if
they don't, I will anyway." His early works were featured
in the recent reissue "H-Bomb Ferguson: Big City Blues,
1951-54." It includes the hit "Good Lovin'"
and "Rock H-Bomb Rock," both from 1952. "Rock
H-Bomb Rock" also was included last year in the elaborate
box set called "Atomic Platters: Cold War Music From
the Golden Age of Homeland Security." According to
the Web site of Conelrad, the record label, the lyrics go:
"I said rock, rock and rock, rock baby rock. ... Tell
me, do you feel that rockin' bomb? Oh yeah, let's rock."
It wasn't until 1955 that rock 'n' roll became a mainstream
sensation, when Bill Haley and the Comets' version of "Rock
Around the Clock" became a hit. Cincinnati had observed
H-Bomb Ferguson Day on Oct. 17, and a documentary directed
by John Parker, "Blues Legend: The Life and Times of
H-Bomb Ferguson," debuted that day. Ferguson had quit
music in the 1970s but resumed performing in the mid-1980s.
"He wanted to be remembered as a performer who gave
it his all every time," said his wife, Christine Ferguson.
"His voice was just so magnetic - a very deep voice
with a mix of gravel in it." A native of Charleston,
S.C., the 11th of 12 children, Ferguson said his interest
in the blues dated back to his childhood. His father, a
Baptist pastor, paid for piano lessons "and wanted
me to do religious stuff," he told the Post in 1988.
"But after church was over, while the people was all
standing outside talking, me and my friends would run back
inside and I'd play the blues on the piano."
Memphis
Radio Pioneer Dies
John
R. Pepper II, co-founder of the first nationwide radio station
with programming targeting a black audience, has died. He
was 91. Pepper died Nov. 20th at St. Francis Hospital
after an extended illness, according to Forest Hill Midtown
Funeral Home, where services were held Friday. Still one
of Memphis' top stations, WDIA-AM was the first in the South
with an all-black on-air staff. Clear Channel Broadcasting
Inc. now owns the station, which reaches five states. WDIA,
which Pepper founded with Bert Ferguson in the 1940s, helped
launch the careers of B.B. King and Isaac Hayes, among others,
and eased the way for blacks throughout the country to break
into broadcasting. Hayes was a member of the station's "teen-town
singers," and King, whose real name is Riley King,
picked up his stage name while working as a WDIA disc jockey
from 1949 to 1955. He was known then as the "Beale
Street Blues Boy" and later as simply "B.B."
Robert
Lockwood Dies
Robert
Lockwood Jr., a Delta blues guitarist who became the torchbearer
of Robert Johnson's guitar legacy and a revered musician
in his own right, died Nov. 21st at a Cleveland hospital.
He was 91. Few guitarists had the enduring mystique of Johnson,
a hard-living, hardloving musician who created soulful blues
landmarks before his death at 27 from poisoned whiskey.
Growing up in rural Arkansas, Lockwood learned guitar fundamentals
from Johnson, who also functioned as an occasional stepfather
though the two were only a four years apart in age. A professional
musician at 15, Lockwood reached wider audiences through
radio work in the early 1940s from a station in Helena,
Ark. One listener, B.B. King, became Lockwood's pupil, and
years later, Lockwood advised the addition of horns to Mr.
King's band to disguise Mr. King's imperfect sense of keeping
time. Lockwood, who also sang and composed songs, was a
well-disciplined, unflashy musician — some called him the
least-known elder statesman in music. In the past few decades,
he almost exclusively played the 12-string guitar. In Chicago,
he became a fixture of blues and jazz recording sessions
for Chess and other record labels. He played with nearly
every blues giant who passed through the city in the 1940s
and 1950s, including guitarist Muddy Waters; singer Howlin'
Wolf; pianists Roosevelt Sykes, Curtis Jones, Sunnyland
Slim, and Eddie Boyd, and harmonica player Little Walter.
Long settled in Cleveland, he began recording as a soloist
in the 1970s after appearances at the Ann Arbor Blues and
Jazz Festival. He continued playing at clubs, college campuses,
and festivals around the world and received prestigious
awards and blues hall of fame inductions. Lockwood was born
March 27, 1915, on a farm in Turkey Scratch, Ark., about
25 miles from Helena. His parents separated when he was
young, and he learned guitar from two of his cousins. The
grandson of a preacher, he also enjoyed playing the blues
on the organ. When he was 11, Johnson showed up on his doorstep.
"He followed my momma home," Lockwood told the
publication Living Blues. "And she couldn't get rid
of him. He wouldn't leave. He hung around there and hung
around there. And he and my momma stayed together off and
on for 10 years." After Johnson's death in 1938, Lockwood
went to Chicago and made his first recordings, backing singer
Doctor Clayton. His experiments on the electric guitar gained
wide notice on the "King Biscuit Time," a 15-minute
radio program broadcast during the noon hour from Helena.
He later switched to an all-jazz format for a competing
show sponsored by Mother's Best Flour that had national
reach. In 1950, he became a session guitarist for Chess
Records, the premier blues label. During this boom period
in postwar urban blues, he was particularly adept at blending
in with classically educated musicians and those with little
formal training. "Most of the blues singers were kinda
uneducated, so maybe they didn't know when they were being
shorted," he said in 1994 of the notoriously bad bookkeeping
at most record labels. "The Chess brothers were a little
afraid of me because I was outspoken. "One
time, Little Walter got shot," he said. "When
they took him to the hospital, the police pried open his
fist, and he had three sticks of marijuana. They chained
Little Walter to the bed, so I told Leonard Chess what happened.
"He said, ‘That
… Walter's gonna give me a heart attack yet.' I told him,
‘I don't know about that, but I do know that he made you
a millionaire, so what you gonna do?' Chess called out there,
and they took the chains off of Little Walter, just like
that." An old
friend, harmonica player Sonny Boy Williamson II (also called
"Rice" Miller), lured him to Cleveland in 1960.
He stayed, figuring he had less competition than in Chicago.
He worked as a chauffeur
and nightclub manager and made an impressive guitar-piano
duet with Otis Spann, who had been Muddy Waters's pianist.
Their "Otis Spann Is the Blues" (1960) featured
a rollicking version of what became Lockwood's unofficial
theme song, "Little Boy Blue." His
1998 release "I've Got to Find Me a Woman," including
a guitar duet with B.B. King, received a Grammy Award nomination
for traditional blues album. "Delta Crossroads"
(2000), released on the Telarc label, received a second
nomination.
Ruth
Brown Dies
Singer
Ruth Brown, whose recordings of "Teardrops in My Eyes,"
"5-10-15 Hours" and "(Mama) He Treats Your
Daughter Mean" shot her to rhythm-and-blues stardom
in the 1950s, has died. She was 78. Brown, who later in
life won a Grammy and a Tony, died Nov. 17th of complications
from a stroke and heart attack at a Las Vegas-area hospital,
said Lindajo Loftus, a publicist for the Rhythm & Blues
Foundation, which Brown helped establish. "Ruth was
one of the most important and beloved figures in modern
music," singer Bonnie Raitt said in a statement. "You
can hear her influence in everyone from Little Richard to
Etta (James), Aretha (Franklin), Janis (Joplin) and divas
like Christina Aguilera today." "She was my dear
friend, and I will miss her terribly," Raitt said.
Brown's soulful voice produced dozens of hits for Atlantic
Records, cementing the fledgling record label's reputation
as an R&B powerhouse. Trained in a church choir in her
hometown of Portsmouth, Va., Brown sang a range of style
from jazz to gospel-blues in such hits as "So Long"
and "Teardrops in My Eyes." She later crossed
over into rock 'n' roll with some success with "Lucky
Lips" and "This Little Girl's Gone Rockin',"
a song she co-wrote with Bobby Darin. But as R&B and
rock 'n' roll fell out of style in the late 1950s, Brown
and her musical contemporaries were forced into retirement.
She spent most of the 1960s raising her two sons alone and
earning a living as a maid, school bus driver and teacher.
Brown enjoyed a career renaissance in the mid-70s when she
began recording blues and jazz tunes for a variety of labels
and found success on the stage and in movies. She won acclaim
in the R&B musical "Staggerlee" and won a
Tony Award for best actress in the Broadway revue "Black
and Blue." She also played a feisty deejay in the 1988
cult movie "Hairspray." A year later, she won
a Grammy for best jazz vocal performance for the album "Blues
on Broadway." Brown continued to perform and record
in her later years, becoming a popular host of National
Public Radio's "Harlem Hit Parade." She also became
a prominent advocate for the rights of aging R&B musicians
during her long struggle to recoup her share of royalties
from Atlantic. Her effort led to the formation of the Rhythm
& Blues Foundation, a Philadelphia-based nonprofit dedicated
to providing financial and medical assistance, as well as
historical and cultural preservation of the musical genre.
Timothea
Dies
Timothea
Beckerman, a New Orleans rhythm & blues singer and songwriter
who
dedicated her final years to raising awareness of hepatitis
C, died Nov. 14th in
New York of complications from the disease. She was 55.
Ms. Beckerman's life story was a blues song come to life.
At age 12, she was working the same bar circuit as Earl
King, Ernie K-Doe, Irma Thomas and Aaron Neville. In 1966,
at 14, she released her first single, "Teenage Prayer,"
featuring Dr. John. By
18, she'd had two marriages and two sons. After a long layoff
from music, she initiated a collaboration with Johnny Adams
and Walter "Wolfman" Washington. She sang at Dorothy's
Medallion Lounge and on the road, and wrote songs for Washington's
early Rounder albums. After appearing in the film "Down
By Law," she moved to New York.
Joe
Lutcher Dies
Joe Lutcher
a 1940's and 50's R&B recording artist passed away on
October
29th. Alto saxophonist and vocalist Joe Lutcher had R&B
hits in the late '40s with "Shuffle Woogie" (for
Capitol in 1948), "The Rockin' Boogie" (for Specialty
in 1948), and "Mardi Gras" (for Modern in 1949).
While he was a competent vocalist, his true forte was the
sax. His repertoire mixed instrumentals with vocal numbers,
employing an approach that generally fell within the Los
Angeles jump blues-R&B style of the late '40s and early
'50s, although he often added New Orleans accents and sometimes
went into a straighter big-band jazz mode. He's not nearly
as well known, though, as his sister Nellie Lutcher, who
was a more successful hitmaker as a vocalist. Lutcher
was born in Lake Charles, LA, moving to Los Angeles in the
early '40s, following his sister (who had moved there in
the mid-'30s). He played sax with the Nat King Cole Trio
for a time before forming his own band and signing to Specialty
in 1947. After some success with both Specialty and Capitol
(where Nellie Lutcher recorded), he joined Modern in 1949.
Modern encouraged him to add New Orleans spice to his recordings,
and one of those tracks, "Mardi Gras," was an
R&B Top 20 hit, preceding the more famous version of
the song by Professor Longhair. Lutcher
did some subsequent records for Peacock, London, and Masters
Music, but left R&B for gospel music, forming the gospel
label Jordan Records. It's been written that he was influential
in advising Little Richard to leave rock & roll for
religious studies in the late '50s.
Stanley
Mitchell Dies
Stanley
Mitchell has passed away at age 71. Mitchell was a member
of the
Hamptones (vocalists with Lionel Hampton) before going on
to replace Jackie
Wilson when Jackie was fired him from Billy Ward the Dominoes
in 1957. He
later went on to put his own group together, Stanley &
the Tornadoes and
had a top 5 R & B hit with "Four O'clock in the
Morning". He re-emerged in recent years with two other
Detroit veterans; Joe Weaver and Kenni Martin to perform
as the Motor City Rhythm & Blues Pioneers. They cut
a reord in 2002 for the Blue Suit label.
Henry
Townsend Dies
Blues guitarist Henry
Townsend, a Mississippi native who fled to St. Louis as
a boy then stayed for a prolific career that spanned eight
decades, died Sept. 24th of pulmonary embolism in Grafton,
Wis., where he was being honored. He was 96. Townsend, who
wrote and published hundreds of songs and accompanied musicians
on hundreds more, began recording in 1929 and continued
every decade since. Townsend, living in the same brick bungalow
he shared for 40 years with his late wife, Vernell, who
performed with him, was in Grafton to be honored as the
last surviving artist with the old Paramount Records. Townsend
was born in Shelby, Miss., grew up in Cairo, Ill., and left
for St. Louis as a 9-year-old to avoid a whipping from his
father, after he had "blown some snuff," he told
The Associated Press in an interview in June. He said his
father played a button box accordion, but young Henry loved
the guitar, and bought himself one. He also learned the
piano. While working as a shoe shine boy in St. Louis, he
came to know a generation of piano players who had grown
up on ragtime and were teaming up with guitarists to experiment
with the blues. He decided on a career in blues guitar after
hearing budding bluesman Lonnie Johnson perform in the old
Booker T. Washington Theater in St. Louis. In the 1930s,
Townsend played with blues greats Roosevelt Sykes, Walter
Davis and Robert Johnson at neighborhood parties and fish
fries. Townsend recalled they'd "jam up and down the
street" on top of a coal-hauling truck during the Depression
to help raise rent money for people being evicted. Townsend
and other blues musicians deemed worthy of studios' investment
survived the Depression. But they fell into near oblivion
when the juke box replaced live music, and the materials
needed for the war effort slowed down the record industry.
It wasn't until the late 1950s, when the old blues "race
records" were rediscovered during a growing folk revival,
that Townsend, Lonnie Johnson, Big Joe Williams and others
found renewed popularity. In the 1960's, he led a few sessions,
but they didn't receive much attention. Toward the end of
the '60s, Townsend became a staple on the blues and folk
festivals in America, which led to a comeback. He cut a
number of albums for Adelphi and he played shows throughout
America. By the end of the '70s, he had switched from Adelphi
to Nighthawk Records.Townsend, who won a National Heritage
Award in 1985 that recognized his being a master artist,
never stopped performing. In 2000 his autobiography, "A
Blues life" was published.
Etta
Baker Dies
Etta Baker,
an influential blues guitarist who recorded with Taj Mahal
and was awarded by the National Endowment for the Arts,
died Sept. 24th. She was 93. Baker was raised in a musical
family in western North Carolina. She made her first mark
in music in 1956, when she appeared on a compilation album
called "Instrumental Music of the Southern Appalachians."
The recording influenced the growing folk revival, especially
her versions of "Railroad Bill" and "One-Dime
Blues." She worked for 26 years at a textile mill in
Morganton before quitting at age 60 to pursue a career as
a professional musician. Baker became a hit on the international
folk-festival circuit, playing Piedmont blues, a mix of
the clattery rhythms of bluegrass and blues. She won a 1991
Folk Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for
the Arts. Mahal, who recorded an album with Baker in 2004,
was among those who found inspiration from her rhythmic
finger-picking. Baker toured well into her 80s, but finally
quit because of heart problems. Baker also is to appear
on blues-rock guitarist Kenny Wayne Shepherd's next album
due out in November.
Dick
'Huggy Boy' Hugg Dies
Dick "Huggy Boy"
Hugg, a pioneering rhythm and blues disc jockey whose career
spanned five decades in Los Angeles radio, has died. He
was 78. Hugg had been battling poor health for the last
several years. Born in Canton, Ohio, Hugg made his way to
Los Angeles shortly after World War II to pursue a career
in radio. The young man, who would become famous for his
smooth baritone voice and playful banter, soon found it.
By the early 1950s, Hugg was broadcasting a late-night show
from the window of Dolphin's of Hollywood record store,
then a hot spot for R&B music. Hugg is credited with
exposing white teenagers to Fats Domino, Chuck Berry and
Little Richard. Throughout a radio career that took him
to as many as nine local AM and FM stations, Hugg's programs
were so popular with Latino audiences that he often jokingly
referred to himself as "the Dick Clark of the Chicanos."
One of his more famous radio signatures was: "Remember..
Others imitate, but none can duplicate the sound found here..
The Huggy Boy Show must be the best. It's outlasted all
the rest." After making as much as $100,000 a year
at his peak in the 1950s and early '60s, Hugg struggled
financially during the '70s and '80s. Forays into the record
and television business never succeeded. With
the help of disc jockey Art Laboe, Hugg landed a job in
1983 at KRLA-AM (1110), which then had a loose "Oldies"
format. Hugg stayed until 1998. Hugg's
career in radio ended in 2002 after a stint at KRTH-FM (101.1).
Jesse
Mae Hemphill Dies
Jessie
Mae Hemphill, whose award-winning blues career lasted decades
and was heavily influenced by her upbringing in rural Mississippi,
died here on July 22nd. She was 71. The cause was complications
of an infection that may have resulted from an ulcer, according
to Olga Wilhelmine Mathus, the founder and president of
the Jessie Mae Hemphill Foundation. Wihelmine, a blues singer
who spearheaded Hemphill's nonprofit foundation, also produced
her last album, "Dare You to Do It Again", on
her 219 Records label in February 2004. Ms. Hemphill began
playing guitar at age 7 or 8, and later moved on to other
instruments. She lived in Memphis for 20 years and played
the clubs on the city’s famous Beale Street before finding
an international audience. "She had a creative, unique
sound that was what people call country blues," said
University of Memphis blues scholar and bluesman David Evans,
who toured as a guitar accompanist with Hemphill. It was
Evans who produced her first three albums -- "She-Wolf",
"Feelin' Good" and "Get Right Blues"
and encouraged Hemphill to start her professional career
in the 1980s. Ms. Hemphill won the W. C. Handy Award for
best traditional female blues artist in both 1987 and 1988.
In 1991 she won the Handy Award for best acoustic album.
In 1993, Ms. Hemphill had a stroke that paralyzed her left
side, leaving her unable to play guitar. She retired from
touring and returned to Senatobia, Miss., where she lived
with her dog, Sweet Pea. She recorded one final album a
decade later, titled "Dare You to Do It Again."
Floyd
Dixon Dies
West Coast
jump blues and R&B pianist/vocalist/songwriter Floyd
Dixon died Wednesday, July 26, 2006 in Los Angeles, California,
of kidney failure. He was 77. The critically acclaimed performer
- best known for his 1954 song "Hey Bartender"
(popularized by The Blues Brothers) - stood alongside Charles
Brown, Ray Charles and Louis Jordan as one of a few artists
who helped transform swing music into Rhythm & Blues.
Dixon was one of the true heroes of early R&B and jump
blues. He first recorded for Supreme Records in 1947 and
then for Modern Records in 1949. He switched to Aladdin
Records and had his first hits, "Telephone Blues"
and "Call Operator 210" in 1951 and 1952 before
hitting it big in 1954 with "Hey Bartender" for
the Cat label. Floyd Dixon was born in Marshall, Texas on
February 8 1929. His family moved to Los Angeles when he
was 13. A self-taught pianist, Dixon began his career by
singing mostly cool, after-hours piano blues in the Charles
Brown mode. Soon enough, however, Dixon charted his own
territory with a more rocking, jumping style. From traditional,
slow blues to booming R&B, pop and proto-rock and roll,
Dixon's created a sound and style that was his alone. After
Dixon won a few talent contests in Los Angeles, bandleader
Johnny Otis encouraged him to
record. Dixon recorded his first single, "Dallas Blues,"
while still working his day job at Orenstein's Drug Store.
He went on to record hits for a number of labels, including
Modern, Supreme, Aladdin, and Specialty. By the time he
released the classic "Hey Bartender" 1954, Dixon
was an established star in the West Coast R&B scene.
He toured constantly and at various times shared the stage
with
the likes of Ruth Brown, B.B. King, Charles Brown and Ray
Charles. It was an early tour with Charles that Dixon encouraged
Ray to switch from his suave Nat King Cole approach to a
more gospel- inspired delivery. Charles took his advice,
and the result for Ray Charles was an unsurpassed string
of R&B hits. Although he continued to perform and record
sporadically through the 1960s and early 1970s, Dixon nearly
dropped out of music altogether, living a secluded life
in Paris, Texas. He was invited to perform in Sweden and
quickly developed an international following. With reissues
of his older material beginning to surface, European interest
in Dixon continued to rise. In 1980, he joined the European
Blues Caravan tour with old friends Charles Brown and Ruth
Brown. Dixon performed
occasionally on the West Coast during the 1980s and even
spent time on the road with the then-unknown Robert Cray
and Little Charlie & The Nightcats. In 1984 he received
a "Billboard" Blues Award for "Hey Bartender,"
recorded by the Blues Brothers. The following year, he received
a "Billboard" Country Award for the song, recorded
by country singer Johnny Lee. In
1993 Dixon received the Rhythm & Blues Foundation's
Pioneer Career Achievement Award. This helped him secure
gigs at major outdoor blues festivals, including the Monterey
Jazz Festival, the Sacramento Blues Festival and the Chicago
Blues Festival. In
1996 a new album, "Wake Up And Live!," was released
on Alligator Records. The album won the 1997 Blues Music
Award from The Blues Foundation for "Comeback Album
of the Year." The CD reintroduced Dixon to old fans
and brought him many new ones. He never stopped performing,
and he recorded another CD, "Fine, Fine Thing,"
for the HighJohn label in 2005. In June 2006, Dixon recorded
a live CD/DVD with fellow pianists Pinetop Perkins and Henry
Gray, scheduled for a fall release on HighJohn.
National
Endowment for the Arts Announces 2006 Recipients
The National
Endowment for the Arts (NEA) today announced the 2006 recipients
of the NEA National Heritage Fellowships, the country's
highest honor in the folk and traditional arts. Eleven fellowships,
which include a one-time award of $20,000 each, are presented
to honorees from nine states. These awardees were chosen
for their artistic excellence, cultural authenticity, and
contributions to their field. They represent a cross-section
of ethnic cultures including Hispanic, Hawaiian, Alaskan,
and African American artistic traditions expressed through
art forms ranging from hula dancing and cedar bark weaving
to blues piano and gospel singing. The 2006 NEA National
Heritage Fellowship recipients are:
Charles M. Carrillo; santero
(carver and painter of sacred figures); Santa Fe, NM
Delores E. Churchill; Haida (Native Alaskan) weaver, Ketchikan,
AK
Henry Gray; blues piano player, singer; Baton Rouge, LA
Doyle Lawson; gospel and bluegrass singer, arranger, bandleader;
Bristol, TN
Esther Martinez; Native American storyteller; San Juan Pueblo,
NM
Diomedes Matos; cuatro (10-string Puerto Rican guitar) maker;
Deltona, FL
George Na'ope; Kumu Hula (hula master); Hilo, HI
Wilho Saari; Finnish kantele (lap-harp) player; Naselle,
WA
Mavis Staples; gospel, rhythm and blues singer; Chicago,
IL
Treme Brass Band; New Orleans brass band; New Orleans, LA
Joe
Weaver Dies
Pianist
and vocalist Joe Weaver died on July 5 following a stroke.
He was 71. He and his high school pal, guitarist Johnnie
Bassett, started the Bluenotes and won local talent competitions.
Their first hit was "1540 Special" on the Deluxe
label. The Bluenotes became the house band for Fortune Records
and also recorded their own tunes; "Baby I Love You
So" was their biggest hit. Weaver backed the Miracles
on their first recording for Berry Gordy, leading to many
sessions and live gigs with Motown acts like Martha Reeves,
Stevie Wonder, and Marvin Gaye. After the heyday of Motown,
Weaver went to work in a Ford factory, retiring after 31
years, and came back to music, making three tours of Europe
(as recently as last Autumn) and a new CD in 2000, "Baby
I Love You So", on the Black Magic label. In 2002,
Weaver got together with two old friends, Stanley Mitchell
of Stanley and the Hurricanes and solo singer Kenny Martin,
both '50s hitmakers out of Detroit, to form the Motor City
Rhythm and Blues Pioneers. The R&B Pioneers released
a self-titled CD that year on Blue Suit.
Johnny
Jenkins Dies
Influential
guitarist Johnny Jenkins died in his home town of Macon,
Georgia, on June 26. He was 67. He was a left-handed guitarist
who helped Otis Redding in his early career and influenced
Jimi Hendrix with his acrobatic style. In the late 1950s
and early '60s Jenkins toured the South with his band, the
Pinetoppers. He was legendary on the college circuit for
stunts like playing his guitar behind his head. Hendrix,
whose aunt lived in Macon, saw Jenkins perform; vocalist
Arthur Ponder, who sang with Jenkins, recalled Hendrix as
a "little guy who would follow us around a lot. Next
thing we know, he's Jimi Hendrix." Jenkins discovered
Otis Redding at the Douglass Theater, Macon's leading venue
for black performers, and it was at the end of a Jenkins
recording session at Stax in Memphis that Redding made his
first hit record. Redding died in a plane crash in 1967.
Phil Walden, who had begun as an agent booking bands to
play at colleges, formed Capricorn Records in 1969 and signed
Jenkins. Walden, who died in April this year, was convinced
that Jenkins could have been the greatest thing in Rock'n'Roll,
but Jenkins didn't want to fly, which limited the amount
of promoting he could do. His only album on Capricorn was
"Ton Ton Macoute!" in 1970, with members of the
Allman Brothers Band, which got good reviews. Capricorn
went out of business in the 1980's, but Walden produced
a Jenkins comback album, "Blessed Blues", in 1996.
Jenkins' last two albums, "Handle With Care" (2001)
and "All in Good Time" (2003), issued on Mean
Old World Records.
Big
Bill Broonzy Box Set Released
Two CDs
capturing live performances by Big Bill Broonzy will be
released in the U.S. as a box set by Munich Records on September
19. Featuring the long awaited recordings of two shows from
February of 1953, Big Bill Broonzy: Amsterdam Live Concerts
1953 contains 25 songs and between-song storytelling, plus
extensive liner notes about Broonzy's legacy and his little-known
second life as a European, and dozens of previously unseen
photos.
After an afternoon performance in Holland in 1953,
Broonzy was taken to a pub in old Amsterdam. When he was
asked to sing a few more songs he refused, to the surprise
of his Dutch friends. When they asked for the reason, he
explained that he was afraid he'd be arrested for being
black. After it had been explained to him that there was
no reason to fear that in the Netherlands, Bill played for
over an hour. Thus was Big Bill's experience of Europe,
but especially the Netherlands, where he was made to feel
welcome and would live different life than he knew in the
States. He met and fell in love with a Dutch girl, Pim van
Isveldt. Together they had a child named Michael who still
lives in Amsterdam.
Although these performances were recorded in the early
'50s, Louis van Gasteren, who was a sound engineer at the
time and went on to become one of the Netherlands' most
acclaimed filmmakers, ensured the integrity of the recordings.
Locked away in van Gasteren's safe for more than 50 years,
they are finally surfacing now after a few failed attempts
at releasing them between the '50s and '80s. The first concert
took place on February 26 at the Ons Huis club in the Rozenstraat
in Amsterdam and the second on February 28, in the middle
of a sold-out European tour.
Also included in the box set are never before published
photos from the private collections of Michael van Isveldt,
The Maria Austria Institute and the Netherlands Jazz Archive.
Broonzy was born in Scott County Mississippi in 1901.
Learning guitar from his uncle Jerry Belcher, he played
country dances and picnics. Bronzy served in the U.S. Army
during World War I, and in 1924, following his discharge
plus a short return to Arkansas, he moved to Chicago, where
he joined such musical contemporaries as Memphis Minnie,
Tampa Red, Jazz Gillum, Lonnie Johnson and John Lee "Sonny
Boy" Williamson. In 1938, Broonzy performed as part
of John Hammond's famous "Spiritual & Swing"
concert at Carnegie Hall - his first show for a white audience.
He recorded more than 260 blues songs as he traveled between
Chicago and the South. With the arrival of electric artists
like Muddy Waters, Broonzy's brand of folk blues was pushed
aside. He found adoration in Europe, where he first toured
in 1951. The material from Amsterdam Live Concerts was recorded
on tour in '53. In 1957, Broonzy was diagnosed with throat
cancer, and died in August 1958.
Clifford
Antone Dies
Clifford Antone,
owner of the namesake blues club credited with launching
the careers of Stevie Ray Vaughan and other musicians, died
May 23. He was 56. Fats Domino, John Lee Hooker and B.B.
King all performed at Antone's, and it became famous as
the home club of then-rising Texas stars Vaughan and the
Fabulous Thunderbirds. Vaughan died in a helicopter crash
in 1990. Antone was 25 when he founded the club, which celebrated
its 30th anniversary last year. "My friends and I in
Port Arthur just wanted to hear the blues," he said
last year. "We figured the only way we could hear it
is if we bring it to us." He said that "between
'75 and '85, I don't think there's any question we were
the best blues club in the world." In 1987, he started
Antone's Records, a label that featured many of the nightclub's
top acts. Antone went to prison on federal charges of drug
trafficking and money laundering in 2000 and was released
in 2003. The charges
stemmed from a plot to distribute more than 2,000 pounds
of marijuana and launder roughly $950,000 in drug proceeds.
Little
Buster Dies
Edward
James Spivey-Forehand, a self-taught blind blues singer
and guitarist
who was a key player in helping the blues flourish on Long
Island, died
Thursday in a Nassau County nursing home. He was 63. Forehand
was born in Hertford, N.C. His father, Edmund J. Spivey,
was a barber and his mother, Martha Lee Forehand, was a
stay-at-home mom. He was the fourth of 11 children. He started
losing his sight to cataracts when he was about 9. He joined
his father in Philadelphia for unsuccessful surgeries but,
homesick, he returned home and later went to a state school
for the blind and deaf in Raleigh, N.C. Forehand left for
New York in 1959 with his childhood friend, drummer Melvin
Taylor, and 25 cents in his pocket, his wife said. Forehand
became a staple on the Long Island blues scene, playing
five nights a week from the Steer Inn in Freeport to Hansom
House in Southampton during the '70s. He later toured in
Europe, Japan and Canada. Forehand made a name covering
such standards as "I Got You," "Knock on
Wood"
and "The Thrill Is Gone." But at 52, after 30
years atop the Long Island bar band circuit, Little Buster
released his first album of his own songs, "Right on
Time." In 2000 Fedora released "Work Your Show."
Willie
Kent Dies
Willie Kent, 70, died
March 2nd at his home in the Englewood neighborhood. The
cause, according to friends, was cancer. Born in 1936, in
the Mississippi Delta town of Inverness, Mr. Kent worked
at gas stations in Florida and Memphis, Tenn., before coming
to Chicago. It was in the smoky clubs here that he would
take a childhood love of music, ingrained after turning
an ear toward a Helena, Ark., radio station's "King
Biscuit Time" Delta blues music show, and turn it into
a six-decade career
as one of the blues' most prominent bass guitarists, earning
him repeated W.C. Handy Awards and countless rousing receptions.
After arriving in Chicago, Mr. Kent hung out in clubs and
started playing music by sitting in with a friend's band.
He switched from guitar to bass when the band's bassist
showed up for a gig too drunk to play, and he quickly found
himself in demand, backing up Chicago blues greats such
as Little Walter, Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf. In the
2002 interview Mr. Kent stressed the simplicity of what
he was trying to do on the four strings of his bass. "So
many people now [are] playing so much funk, it doesn't even
sound like the blues," Mr. Kent told the Tribune in
2002. "I don't do a lot of solos, I don't do a lot
of funk. I try play a no-nonsense sound."
Wilson
Pickett Dies
Wilson
Pickett, the soul pioneer best known for the fiery hits
"Mustang Sally" and "In The Midnight Hour,"
died of a heart attack Jan. 19th in a Reston, Va., hospital.
He was 64. Pickett - known as "the Wicked Wilson Pickett"
- became a star with his soulful hits in the 1960s. "In
the Midnight Hour" made the top 25 on the Billboard
pop charts in 1965 and "Mustang Sally" did the
same the following year. Pickett was defined by his raspy
voice and passionate delivery. But the Alabama-born Pickett
got his start singing gospel music in church. After moving
to Detroit as a teen, he joined the group the Falcons, which
scored the hit "I Found a Love" with Pickett on
lead vocals in 1962. He went solo a year later, and would
soon find his greatest success. In 1965, he linked with
legendary soul producer Jerry Wexler at the equally legendary
soul label Stax Records in Memphis, and recorded one of
his greatest hits, "In the Midnight Hour," for
Atlantic Records. A string of hits followed, including "634-5789,"
"Funky Broadway" and "Mustang Sally."
His sensuous soul was in sharp contrast to the genteel soul
songs of his Detroit counterparts at Motown Records. As
Pickett entered a new decade, he had less success on the
charts, but still had a few more hits, including the song
"Don't Let The Green Grass Fool You." Pickett
suffered through some tough times. In 1991, he was arrested
for allegedly yelling death threats while driving a car
over the mayor's front lawn in Englewood, N.J., and less
than a year later was charged with assaulting his girlfriend.
In 1993, he was convicted of drunken driving and sentenced
to a year in jail and five years' probation after hitting
an 86-year-old man with his car. In 1987, he was given two
years' probation and fined $1,000 for carrying a loaded
shotgun in his car. Besides his induction into the Hall
of Fame in 1991, he was also given the Pioneer award by
the Rhythm and Blues Foundation two years later. In 1999
he released the critically acclaimed comeback "It's
Harder Now."
Doug
MacLeod Fans Organize Grass Roots Effort To Win Blues Award
Fans of
acoustic blues legend Doug MacLeod have launched a "grass
roots"
effort to support his nomination for two Blues Music Awards
in 2006. The Blues Music Award (formerly known as the WC
Handy Award), presented by The
Blues Foundation (www.blues.org),
is the most prestigious award in Blues music. Mr. MacLeod
has been nominated in two categories: "Acoustic Artist
of the Year" and "Song of the Year" for "Dubb's
Talkin' Politician Blues". A new web site dubbheads.com
has been created to promote The Blues Foundation and
organize the voting drive for Mr. MacLeod. "He's the
real thing. Doug has been bringing us passionate blues storytelling
and incredible acoustic guitar work for years now. We figured
it was high time more people knew about him" said Phil
Matuzic, one of the movement's organizers and self-confessed
"DubbHead". Membership in DubbHeads is free to
all blues fans. A free DubbHeads t-shirt will be given to
the first 50 people to join The Blues Foundation and cast
their vote.
Phil
Elwood Dies
Phil
Elwood, one of the best friends jazz and blues ever had,
died Jan. 11th of
heart failure. He was 79. Elwood covered jazz, rock, blues
and comedy, the entire panorama of nightlife, for the San
Francisco Examiner beginning in 1965. He continued his career
at The Chronicle after the two papers merged in 2000 and
retired in 2002. He was an endless fount of jazz lore, an
unflagging enthusiast of the music and a world-class raconteur
blessed with an extraordinary memory. He was also one of
the first people to broadcast jazz on the FM dial. His weekly
radio program, "Jazz Archive," began in 1952,
when very few people even owned FM radios. His show continued
on Berkeley's KPFA until 1996. Over the course of his distinguished
career, Elwood covered anything that moved on stage. In
his 2002 farewell column for The Chronicle, he noted the
breadth of acts he covered in just his first weeks on the
job. "I reviewed Stan Kenton one night and Lena Horne
the next," Elwood wrote. "I heard Charlie Byrd
at El Matador, and Tom Lehrer at the hungry i; also Art
Blakey, Chico Hamilton, Denny Zeitlin. Kay Starr, the Mills
Brothers, Cannonball Adderley, Joe Bushkin and bassist Vernon
Alley, and Duke Ellington at Basin Street West. My first
seven weeks (21 reviews or features in print) ended Aug.
31 with a Beatles show at the Cow Palace that afternoon
and Judy Garland at the Circle Star Theater in San Carlos
that night." After
his retirement from The Chronicle, Elwood continued to write
a column for the Web site Jazz West. In 2002, he received
the Beacon Award from the San Francisco Jazz Festival and
was the subject of a tribute concert, underwritten by See's
Candies.
Blues
Legend Recorded In Dallas
Blues
legend Robert Johnson's whole life is shrouded in mystery,
from his alleged pact with the devil to how he died to where
his body is buried. But at least one riddle -- the Dallas
site of his landmark 1937 recordings -- has finally been
solved. For years, historians guessed Mr. Johnson cut "Hellhound
on My Trail" and other blues classics at 508 Park Ave.,
a three-story art deco building that still stands two blocks
east of Dallas City Hall. Yet nobody knew for sure. The
only person who recorded Robert Johnson, producer Don Law,
died 23 years ago without ever writing
down the location of the Dallas session -- or so the experts
thought. But now, San Diego blues fanatic Tom Jacobson has
tracked down a long-lost 1961 letter that says 508 Park
is indeed the spot where Mr. Johnson recorded 13 songs that
changed the course of the blues and influenced the likes
of Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones and Led Zeppelin. "It's
a big deal for us," says Dr. Michael Taft, head of
folk
culture archives at the Library of Congress, which acquired
the letter in December. "I'm not going to say the building
should be a shrine. But it's a very important site because
we know so little about Robert Johnson. To finally be able
to say this is the building he recorded in, that's a way
of bringing Robert Johnson back to life." According
to a letter, 508 Park Ave. was the recording site for 13
of Robert Johnson's songs. Some theorized the site was 508
Park Ave, since that was where Don Law and Brunswick Records
were based in 1937. Legend has it that everyone from Charlie
Parker to Bob Wills recorded in the building, which was
originally a Warner Bros. film distribution center for the
movie theaters on Elm Street. So, in 1998, Mr. Jacobson
-- a 57-year-old San Diego blues freak and photography expert
-- traveled to Dallas to see the old building where Mr.
Johnson probably recorded. Later, he went to New York City
to meet Frank Driggs, who produced and wrote the liner notes
for King of the Delta Blues Singers. There, in Mr. Driggs'
basement, sat piles of rare recordings and documents he'd
taken from Columbia Records because he said his bosses didn't
care about blues history. The two men spent three days digging
through the cellar before literally tripping over a stack
of rare test pressings of the Robert Johnson sessions. Mr.
Jacobson bought the recordings from Mr. Driggs -- as well
as the 1961 letter in which Mr. Driggs asks Mr. Law to describe
Robert Johnson, and Mr. Law scribbles his answers in the
margins. The old yellow document confirms some of the few
stories that exist about Robert Johnson -- like the night
in San Antonio he asked Mr. Law for money to pay a prostitute
("She wants 50 cents and I lacks a nickel") and
how he was so secretive about his guitar technique that
when other musicians watched, he played facing the wall
in a corner of the room. The letter says the blues legend
was paid all of $25 per song. It
could also play an important role in the future of 508 Park,
which has sat vacant for years in a part of downtown that's
yet to see urban renewal. Glazer's, a Dallas beverage distribution
firm, has owned 508 Park Ave. since the 1950s. The company
has been trying
to sell it for years, to no avail, says R.L. Glazer, chairman
of the board.
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