John Hammond turns 76 on Thursday. I had the opportunity to catch two of his sets on the Blues Cruise a couple of years ago and he's just as cool now as he was many years ago. I was already a fan but nobody lays the acoustic Blues out there like John. Although there is one guy here in town who is right there with him in stature and quality. Y'all know who that is. Good gig at the RR on Saturday night. Newcomer Harpdog Brown will join the Sistahs and Smokestack for a harp barnburner. Joe Kopecki's fundraiser appeared to be a huge success on Sunday. I'm sure the news is out by now, but we committed a huge clerical error and Joe's entry info didn't go in on time. Therefore, he's PBS's solo/duo entrant for 2020. It's all about communication and we had a bad breakdown. Blame it on me. Other than that, y'all have a great week!! Sincerely, Jim Crawford, PBS
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 It's In the Blood
by Sheila Daughtry
" He's a great force of nature. John sounds like a big train coming. He chops them all down." - Tom Waits
He smiles and nods towards the audience while slipping back onto a stool in the center of the stage. He runs a rough and weathered hand through his thick gray hair, drops a harmonica rack over his neck and props his National Steel up on his lap. He eases the slide onto the third finger of his fretting hand and drops his head slightly. It is curious to watch, to see, this distinguished looking man who looks like he just walked out of a corner office of a Fortune 500 company, go through this ritual. Then he strikes a string, the slide hits the neck of the guitar and makes a mad run along its length, the lone note screams into a blue register. The player raises his head and grins at his audience. Seconds later you're hearing one of the deftest interpreters of the Delta blues, playing with the passion of a man obsessed and singing with the same mix of joy and pain that marked the blues originators.
John Hammond plays the blues with a passion that is just as hot now as it was when he started 40 something years ago.
Born on November 13th, 1942 in New York City, Hammond (the son of legendary talent Columbia Records talent scout John Henry Hammond) didn't make the decision to go into music until he went to college. John has always disputed what many said by implying that his father had nudged him into the music business. "People assume I grew up in a musical bonanza, surrounded by it all the time, which was not the case". According to Hammond in an interview with the Los Angeles Times in 1995, "My parents divorced when I was five and I lived with my mother and my brother Jason. I wasn't aware of my fathers' position until I was a lot older, until I had gone on the road as a musician myself. Then I had to clarify the fact I got into this on my own and my dad didn't nurture me. He wasn't thrilled when I began this career."
Perhaps there was something in the blood that drew him to the blues and the older recordings. Maybe his father was somehow subliminally driving John into the music arena. But no matter how it happened, John found himself fascinated by the music that his own father had a hand in bringing into the mainstream with his 'Spiritual to Swing' concerts at Carnegie Hall in the '30s. As a teenager, Hammond listened to practically any blues record he could get his hands on citing influences like Jimmy Reed, Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker. But it was the then rare and difficult to find recordings of Robert Johnson that captivated him most. "In hearing Robert's music, I was moved so deeply that I felt changed inside," Hammond confessed in an interview with Sheila Daughtry in Players in 1992.
"Something emerged in me and built up 'til it just had to come out."
He picked up his first guitar in his late teens and like so many before and since, immersed himself in it deeply, never taking a lesson and learning to play by ear. "I got a guitar when I was 18 and drove all my friends nuts for about a year-and-a-half. I got a little better and a little better, and became a raging fanatic."
While attending Antioch College in Ohio, Hammond began performing for other people. Once he left college, he hitchhiked to California and worked the local coffee houses. But coffee house gigs were few and far between and Hammond spent a lot of time busking on the streets of L.A. Country star Hoyt Axton found Hammond on the street and managed to get him his first club gig playing at The Satire Club. It began a string of gigs in various haunts in and around the L.A. area.
He worked his way back across the country finally ending up back in New York City after spending some time in Chicago where he befriended Mike Bloomfield and Sonny Boy Williamson. While he was in New York, Hammond secured a set at the Newport Folk Festival where he scored many favorable reviews, most notably in The New York Times. Shortly afterwards Hammond recorded his debut album for Vanguard Records.
Hammond began to spend time in Greenwich Village, which at the time was the hub of the burgeoning folk scene spending time with Bob Dylan, John Sebastian, Rory Block, Richie Havens and blues greats like Mississippi John Hurt and the Reverend Gary Davis. For a brief time, he befriended a young guitarist by the name of Jimmy James (later known as guitar great Jimi Hendrix) and even shared a stage with him.
"He (Hendrix) was playing at a place called Café Wha and a friend of mine said 'You've got to hear this guy, he's great,' Hammond said in a recent interview. "I was playing at the Gaslight and Hendrix was just fired from the Curtis Knight band and was stranded in New York. He and I met between gigs and he asked me if he could play. I was delighted."
That lasted for a few weeks before Hendrix was discovered by Chas Chandler and taken to the U.K. where he was transformed into a superstar.
Hammond recorded and released three more albums in 1964 for Vanguard and was becoming a recognizable name in the New York folk/blues scene. In 1965 Hammond recorded "So Many Roads" and was backed by a band that had three members who would become founding members of The Band shortly thereafter; Garth Hudson, Levon Helm and Robbie Robertson (blues luminaries Michael Bloomfield and Charlie Musselwhite also played on the disc).
Hammond continued to record and tour throughout the '60s, building his reputation as one of the country's most true and accurate blues interpreters. Often times Hammond's recordings would showcase guest spots and cameos of some of the biggest names in blues and rock including Duane Allman, Dr. John and Michael Bloomfield. By 1970, Hammond was brought onto Columbia by Clive Davis (the very label that Hammond's father had helped make famous). In 1971, Hammond wrote and recorded the soundtrack for the Dustin Hoffman film "Little Big Man."
Although the '70s and '80s were lean times for many blues artists, Hammond managed to continue to tour and record regularly. According to Hammond, "There were folk festivals in the summer, coffee houses and colleges that weren't dependent on the radio or media and blues has never gone out of style, it's always been there."
By 1975 Hammond had begun to grow weary of playing with a band and decided to go back to solo work. He jumped back to Vanguard Records and returned to the sound that had launched his career. It was a shrewd move and again propelled Hammond into the world-wide blues lime light. He continued on, taking his blues on the road internationally.
In 1983 Hammond played the Montreaux Jazz Festival alongside Stevie Ray Vaughn, Koko Taylor, J.B. Hutto, Sugar Blue and Luther 'Guitar Junior' Johnson and the live recording of the showcase, titled Blues Explosion, won a Grammy award. Hammond was then recruited to play on John Lee Hooker's comeback albums "The Healer" and later, "Mr. Lucky" both which were warmly received by both critics and fans alike. Again, Hammond was sought out by various labels and continued to record solo albums that were produced by artists as varied as J.J. Cale, Tom Waits and Duke Robillard.
In his career that spans 40+ years, Hammond has never been short of work. In an interview, Hammond is quoted as saying "It won't die; they can't kill it. They tried. God knows, in the '70s they Xed the blues off the airwaves, and the big labels axed all their blues-oriented artists. "But the phenomenal success of the release of the Robert Johnson box set (by Columbia in 1990) revived interest in the blues yet again. "Its almost immediate worldwide success made everybody go: 'Geez, there's a lot of blues clubs all over the place that we didn't notice'. All these years, I've never been out of work."
When asked about surviving in the business and on the road for such a long time, Hammond said "You have to go on the road to make money unless you are the best studio musician in the world. Then you have to learn how to live on the road. Since I don't make rock star money, I have to play a lot. I play smaller theatres and clubs. With experience you learn how to maintain your energy and not blow it."
And at 76 and still on the road, Hammond clearly hasn't 'blown it'. He still draws everywhere he plays and still grins wide every time he takes the stage. He may be a bit older now but it's evident in his eyes, his voice and in his hands that he's still the same kid who was moved by the blues early and has no intention on stopping his lifelong blues mission trip any time soon. |
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Moved? Changed email addresses? Please let us know of any changes in your address, email, or phone number so we can keep you informed about the Blues community in Arizona. Email us at: info@phoenixblues.org or write to: Phoenix Blues Society P.O. Box 36874 Phoenix, Arizona 85067 |
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Out & About Tuesday, December 11 Wednesday, December 12 Hans Olson, 7 p.m., Time Out Lounge, Tempe Carvin Jones, 7 p.m., Sicilian Butcher, Phoenix Thursday, December 13 JC & The Juke Rockers, 5:30 p.m., The Patio @ The Forum, Chandler Eric Ramsey Hosts OPEN MIC, 6 p.m., Fatso's Pizza, Phoenix Hans Olson (EVERY THURSDAY), 6 p.m., Handlebar, Apache Junction Arizona Blues Project, 8 p.m., Harold's, Cave Creek Friday, December 14 Cold Shott & The Hurricane Horns, 8 p.m., Rhythm Room, Phoenix Rocket 88s, 7:30 p.m., Rags, Youngtown Pop Top, 6 p.m., Mountain View Pub, Cave Creek Sugar Thieves, 7 p.m., Nile Coffee Shop, Mesa Hoodoo Casters, 8 p.m., El Dorado, Scottsdale Eric Ramsey, 6 p.m., Duck & Decanter, Phoenix Leon J, 6 p.m., Osteria, Mesa Carvin Jones, 8 p.m., Tim Finnegan's, Glendale Paris James, 7 p.m., Bar Vinedo, Queen Creek Saturday, December 15 Harmonica Band Showcase, 8 p.m., Rhythm Room, Phoenix Rocket 88s, 7:30 p.m., Rags, Youngtown JC & The Juke Rockers, 6 p.m., Mountain View Pub, Cave Creek Hoodoo Casters, 8 p.m., Lucky Strikes, Apache Junction Ray DeSylvester's Blues for the Holidays, 2 p.m., Spirit Room, Jerome Sugar Thieves, 8 p.m., Biltmore Hotel, Phoenix Carvin Jones, 8 p.m., Irish Wolfhound, Surprise Sunday, December 16 Big Daddy D & The Dynamites, 3 p.m., Steel Horse, Phoenix Hoodoo Casters, 2 p.m., Spirit Room, Jerome Carvin Jones, 5 p.m., Rhythm Room, Phoenix True Flavor Blues, NOON , Copper Star, Phoenix Monday, December 10 |
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Weekly Jams
Rocket 88s JAM, 4 p.m., Chopper John's, Phoenix
Bourbon Jack's JAM w/Kody Herring, 6 p.m., Chandler
Sir Harrison, JAM every other Sunday, The Windsock, Prescott
NEW JAM Hosted by Ray Ray & Uvon, 6 p.m., Draw 10, Phoenix MONDAY
Bam Bam & Badness Open JAM, 9 p.m., Char's, Phoenix
Weatherford Hotel JAM, 6:30 p.m., Flagstaff TUESDAY JAM Sir Harrison, 9 p.m., Char's, Phoenix
Rocket 88s, JAM, 6 p.m., The Last Stop (Old Hideaway West), Phoenix
Gypsy's Bluesday Night JAM, 7 p.m. Pho Cao, Tempe Tailgaters JAM, 7 p.m., Glendale
WEDNESDAY Tool Shed NEW JAM Party, 6 p.m. Gabby's, Mesa
THURSDAY Tool Shed JAM Party, 7 p.m., Steel Horse Saloon, Phoenix Jolie's Place JAM w/Adrenaline, 9 p.m., Chandler
Friday
Saturday Bumpin' Bud's JAM 2nd & 4th Saturdays JAM, 6 p.m., Marc's Sports Grill |
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GOT BLUES? If you are a Blues musician, a group, or a club that features Blues music, and would like to be listed, please send your info to info@phoenixblues.org and we'll be happy to list your event in our weekly Out & About section of the newsletter |
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