Saturday, May 11, 2019

Robert Johnson did not meet the Devil


Not many facts about Robert Johnson are known, even with recent discoveries and the narratives of musicians who knew him, but one thing is certain, and that is: he did NOT meet the Devil, or any incarnation of the Devil, at any crossroads whether in Mississippi or anywhere else. 
This truly hoary cliché is trotted out every time someone writes about Johnson or makes a documentary about him and it’s always in the context of explaining how he went from being a poor guitar player. mocked by his elder peers, to being by far the best, most innovative blues guitarist of his time with an influence that spread further and wider than almost any of his contemporaries or successors.
The explanation is obvious and simple. He left his stomping grounds, where he was known and under rated, and spent time elsewhere practising hard and acquiring the skills and nous, and developing the creativity that made him the legend his is today. In every generation there are a few musicians who transcend their contemporaries, such as, for example, Jimi Hendrix,  who came to England and absolutely astonished his fellow musicians and audiences not with his, to them, otherworldly guitar playing yet nobody has every seriously suggested that he, too, had sold his soul to the Devil. Hendrix got good because he practised a lot an played a lot, and was astonishing because the English audiences allowed him to be the freak his creativity demanded he should be to be innovative beyond the limitations of the blues and R & B roots he came from.
This must be true for Robert Johnson too. He practised hard and gained experience away from the scrutiny of the people who knew him as a struggling guitarist and had no chance to see him develop gradually as would have been the case if he’d stayed around.  The change in his abilities was more awe inspiring because of the time spent away than if the audiences and other musicians had observed the incremental changes and improvements that would have occurred over time. It‘s like someone going away with a full head of hair and returning bald, simply because of male pattern baldness that nobody had anticipated.
And, my guess is, once Johnson had achieved technical mastery, his enquiring mind and inquisitiveness, creativity  if you will, led him to bend and break the rules of what blues playing was supposed to be.  It’s a cliché of art that the artist must learn the rules  and techniques of craftsmanship, composition and colour  before  discarding them, and I would imagine the same would apply to musicianship. Blues is a very traditional music and can be somewhat hidebound, and formally restricted, and many blues musicians are capable of doing no more than learning the formal requirements and playing the same thing and in the same way all the time, once mastered.  Some of the most brilliant classically trained musicians will never improvise regardless of the peerless abilities they may possess and it’s doubly true for most mediocre musicians who never stray beyond the formal strictures of whatever music they play. They can’t imagine that there is another way and they don’t have the technical ability and sense of what if, to think outside of the musical box they find themselves in.
Typically, a musician would learn (some originals, whether completely so or reworked standards, and some well known songs by other artists) enough songs for an hour or two of playing time  and then sustain this repertoire throughout his or her career, being the most popular, in demand tunes every audience would want to hear. Recording artists had to write or find new material more often to avoid repetition but even so, in performance, relied on the greatest hits. 
This is where Johnson was different and if he hadn’t had the technical expertise too, might never have achieved the fame he has, part of which, no doubt, is down to his early, mysterious death and mostly unknown life. There are 29 known Johnson compositions and all of them, some in different takes, are available on record.  This canon represents some of the best known and most often performed blues songs ever and are claimed to be at the root of a great deal of what came to be known as rock and roll and the early death must at least be partly the cause of Johnson’s celebrity and high regard in which these few songs are held.
King of the Delta Blues Singersis the record that brought the musician to the attention of and inspired so many young Whit blues musicians in the Sixties. Before its release only avid, obsessive record collectors would have known of Johnson because the music was available only on 78s and then rarely. After its release, he truly became the legend he is today. When John Hammond searched for Johnson in the late Thirties he was already dead but not yet legendary; many of the older bluesmen who’d recorded in the Twenties and Thirties, and then faded away, were rediscovered by blues detectives and became famous, at least amongst White blues  aficionados, but Johnson was long gone and therefore elevated into godlike status, unlike, say Son House, who was as influential in his day but very much alive to play his trademark tunes to White college audiences.
I bought King of the Delta Blues Singerswhen I was in my late teens or very early twenties, because is was very interested in the blues albeit the electric blues of Muddy Waters, Howlin Wolf, John Lee Hooker and Elmore James. I’d read about Johnson and this record and when I saw it at a discounted price in some record store, I grabbed it. At the time I was not ready for what I heard as a crude, grating somewhat primitive acoustic sound. The loud, energetic, exciting ensemble sound of the Muddy Waters band was more to my taste. I did not like folk type music much in the first place then, preferring faster, louder, and it was many years and much musical growth later (and on the way I began appreciating all kind of other folk bluesmen) that I developed more of an affinity and appreciation  for Johnson’s music.
I’m no musician and cannot comment on any of the strictly musical aspects of what Johnson did and accomplished but I can dig the way he plays and the structure of the tunes and the intriguing lyrics of some of the best songs, even if so many of the tropes might have been in the folk tradition already or were repeated, in many variations, by songwriters who followed. Even so, he is not my favourite bluesman and I still find It somewhat hard work to listen to his songs and especially a whole album of them. That one record is still the best exposure to the oeuvre and I’ve never been tempted to buy the double CD release of all the recorded versions (alternate takes) of his songs. Listening to a bunch of Johnson’s performances at one time is still hard work for me.  
Many blues musicians have done their takes on the classic Johnson tunes (Fleetwood Mac’s piano driven version of “Hellhound on my trail” is a particular favourite) and the likes of Peter Green’s Splinter Group with The Robert Johnson Songhookand Eric Clapton with Me and Mr Johnson, represent the best, with Clapton edging out Peter Green mostly because the Splinter Group’s versions seem a tad too jolly and slick. In his heyday, Green would have been the perfect Johnson interpreter because his vocal tones and inflections had more of the deep blues about them than Clapton has achieved. 
I don’t understand why the myth of the deal with the Devil at the crossroads persists. It must be clear to everyone that Johnson got better, just like every other musician, by practising hard and long, and that he was a very creative, original songwriter, and shone in comparison to the many journeymen, unimaginative bluesmen around him at the time. I’d also bet that the myth of the crossroads, apparently quite an old tale, was applied to him after his death at a relatively young age, to add to the mystery and legend for the sake of commercial interests.









Sunday, January 15, 2017

Gerald Clark keeps the blues alive.

   AFROBOER & THE GOLDEN GOOSE  (2015)

Not the simplest, or most descriptive, of titles for a record of blues and soul tinged tunes that is the best blues album of this year and the best blues album by any South African musician since the demise of Delta Blue.

Gerald Clark was once the lead singer of Delta Blue who reached the apex of their recording career with Inbluesstation and Heaven, to my mind two of the best blues-rock-soul albums ever released in South Africa. Inbluesstation counts among the best South African records released so far in this 21st century.

Clark has followed a solo career for some years now, mostly as a bluesman, with at least one album of Afrikaans music as well.

Afroboer sounds like an extension of the Inbluesstation style of blues, soul and rock, albeit with a lighter touch, far less of the hoarse soulful voice Clark had back then and more expansive arrangements for the band. Clark’s vocal tone, although still impassioned, is now so light and almost airy that one might think he has given up smoking and drinking.

Three of the tunes, “Hesitate’, “Easy Baby” and “Let Me Tell You”, are reworked versions of Delta Blue releases and “Fire” features (presumably) isiXhosa vocals.

The basic approach is tough blues-soul-rock with punchy riffs and loping rhythms, piano and organ, blues harp, sharp lead guitar and emotional vocals with a slight pop edge. The musicians have been around this style of music for long enough know exactly when to ratchet up the raunch a couple of notches or when to lay back. The tunes are solid and Clark has made an art of the modern blues lyric that incorporates clichéd tropes yet always has a subtle new twist.  The most overt example of Clark’s methodology is in the careful melding of his lyrics in “Easy Baby” with parts of Willie Dixon’s classic “I Just Want To Make Love To You,” to the extent that I wonder whether Clark will have to pay some royalties to Dixon’s estate.

Ballistic Blues have been a kind of natural successor to Delta Blue and their vocalist has copped the original Clark sound and perhaps Clark now wants to distinguish himself from that approach by singing with this affective lightness of tone. His crack band supports his performances with the subtlety and nous one has come to expect from the best of local musicians in this genre. Clark’s backing musicians are less blustery and forceful than the likes of Black Cat Bone or Jet Black Camaro, who emphasise the sheer rock and roll exhilaration of the same roots rather than the deep blues and heartfelt soul viewpoint of Clark.

The four opening tracks, “Hesitate”, “Jesus”, “Guilty” and “Fire”, set out the stall of the wares on display over the balance of the record. It is a fulsome thrill to hear this kind of accomplished, loose yet never sloppy accomplished playing in a genre that I love and is so abused by musicians who know the licks but have little or no feel. It is trite that blues is about feel and not technique and too many currently popular blues rock musicians are technicians first, foremost and only.

“Lights Across the Bay” slows down the frenetic opening pace with a plea of love with an airy musical backing, and is then followed by the barnstorming “How I Met The Golden Goose” that sounds like an old school big band swing jump blues with ominous organ, trumpet and some razor sharp slide guitar. No wonder this exhilarating tune is kind of the title track.

On the other hand, “Small Town Fashion Guru” is pretty much hard rock, featuring Henry Steele, once lead guitarist for Delta Blue.

“Summer Shoes” is jumping party blues. “All I Need Is Your Love” and “Don’t Look Back” amped up the soul grooves.

“The Landlord Blues” is the most traditional, overt, slow blues on the album, a complaint about the haves who disdain the have nots.

The final cut, “Sitting in the Sun,” is a light-hearted, sprightly song of longing (a duet with Luna Paige) that is nonetheless quite upbeat and an excellent send off.

I cannot overemphasise how much I love this record. Compared to the recent output of Dan Patlansky (Introvertigo) and Albert Frost (The Wake Up), both of whom made their name as blues guys and who now venture further into their own take on rock, Clark seems quite old-fashioned but the quality of the songs on this album and of the musicians who play them is on par with the best of the other two guys, and it there is no doubt but that Gerald Clark is a far superior vocalist.

Afroboer . appeals on an emotional, visceral level and it is a record I will be able listen to far more often, over the next several years, with generally greater enjoyment than either The Wake Up or Introvertigo.




Dan Patlansky is not so introverted

 INTROVERTIGO (2016)

Introvertigo is another giant step in Patlansky’s journey away from blues and towards blues-inflected hard rock. This old-fashioned approach of 10-songs-in-36-minutes album is the follow up to the excellent Dear Silence Thieves (2014). The riffs (from the opening cut “Run” onwards) are huge, the sound powerful and the rocking hard. The Stevie Ray Vaughanisms are almost undetectable (“Poor Old John” has the closest remnants) and there seems to be much more of a Jimi Hendrix thing going on, particularly on “Bet On Me” with an intro that sounds like a repurposed version of the intro to “Little Wing.” The tasty electronic organ and big chorus make it an affective, memorable tune.

“Loosen up the Grip” is the big, soaring, emotive ballad and “Still Wanna Be Your Mean” is the big slow blues. These two tracks alone are more than enough evidence of Patlansky’s maturity as songwriter who now knows that tunes and hooks are important, not merely arrangements and virtuoso guitar solos.

“Heartbeat” opens with a “whoo hoo” hook that is copied from somewhere else (but that I cannot quire recall now) and has an intriguing, atypical rhythmic opening before settling into the big rock riff.

The two least effective tunes are “Sonova Faith” and “Western Decay,” coincidentally the most philosophical musings on the record, which rely on their arrangements and the playing of the musicians to carry them. This is also the case with “Queen Puree”, which has some indelible guitaring without which the song would be pointless sludge.

On album at least, Patlansky is no longer overtly a bluesman.  Either he has followed the path of progression, like that of the blues bands of the late Sixties blues boom who went from purism to hard rock or heavy metal, or he has realised that blues rock is a more commercial prospect than straight-ahead blues.  The good news, though, is that he has found song writing form and has learnt to be concise in his arrangements and playing, and has learnt about hooks that make the songs memorable. Dear Silence Thieves and Introvertigo represent a purple patch of enjoyable creativity after the rather dire 20 Stones and Wooden Thoughts.

Dan Patlansky has upped his game and if he can maintain this level, greatness awaits.  For far too long he has shone as master guitarist with the emphasis on technique over content; over his two most recent albums he has shown us that he can make consistently good records that celebrate the strength of the material and do not rely on his instrumental prowess only.