Key to the Highway KSCU
103.3FM
2019-12-07 Noon-5PM
Harpdog Brown and band LIVE in studio
Jimmy Yancey
Sam and Dave
Shakey Jake Harris
Jimmy Yancey
Sam and Dave
Shakey Jake Harris
*************************
In going through my past notes, I discovered it was on
this same day, Pearl Harbor Day two years ago, that Gil de Leon and I went up
to San Francisco’s Biscuits and Blues to see Harpdog Brown’s band. Anyway, the Dog is in Silicon Valley for only
one day on this West Coast tour and it is not in a club but, indeed, right here
in our KSCU studio to perform for you (and for free) in this very special
show. When I first got into radio in the
late 80s, one ambition I had was to present live music, but I had to give it up
because, without a good sound man, it never lived up to expectations. Therefore it is with the greatest gratitude
that I thank my friend and fellow KSCU Blues DJ Gil de Leon for providing his
equipment and expertise in order to make this happen.
Dog and I had discussed this for a long time with the
expectation of doing it on my regular Sunday show, but you’ve probably heard
something about the best laid plans of mice and men. Due to a schedule change, the only time Dog
will be available is between about two and four PM on Saturday as he drives
from Sacramento to Pismo Beach, so I also must sincerely thank Uncle P for
allowing me to usurp his time slot. And,
of course, thanks to Harpdog.
I am planning on doing my regular Sunday 7-11PM show
December 8th because it will be the last opportunity this year due
to the building being closed for the Christmas holiday. Then I will be back on January 12th.
Okay,
enough of that. Below is an essay I did
on the Dog back in May which should be good as an intro to Saturday’s
show. enjoy
*************************
Press release type of things are something
I've never done before, so bear with me. To my DJ friends, please give
the CD For Love & Money some airplay and mention the gigs. To my blog
readers who have become familiar with my taste in music, check them out if you
have the opportunity; I’m sure you’ll enjoy it! Here are comments from a
couple of well known Blues artists:
"I love Harpdog’s singing and
playing. He’s old-school which is a high compliment because Old-School is
Real-School! Harpdog is Real Deal Smokin and Cookin Old-School style. Look out
and stand back for the real deal!"
- Charlie Musselwhite, Blues Harmonica Legend and Host of Charlies Back Room on 95.9 The Krush. (Charlie did a harp duet with Dog on his 2017 CD. Stand Back was also the title Musselwhite used for his very first LP.)
"Hearing Harpdog Brown singing 'Reefer Lovin’ Woman' is a joy with the traditional old school instrumentation here. I am always drawn to the good old downhome style blues and this is certainly it!”
- Duke Robillard, Legendary Blues Musician
- Charlie Musselwhite, Blues Harmonica Legend and Host of Charlies Back Room on 95.9 The Krush. (Charlie did a harp duet with Dog on his 2017 CD. Stand Back was also the title Musselwhite used for his very first LP.)
"Hearing Harpdog Brown singing 'Reefer Lovin’ Woman' is a joy with the traditional old school instrumentation here. I am always drawn to the good old downhome style blues and this is certainly it!”
- Duke Robillard, Legendary Blues Musician
For this tour, Dog will be backed by
Canadian pianist Dave Webb, who was an integral part of Dog’s 2019 album For
Love & Money, and trumpeter Riley Bartlet along with a couple of Americans,
Rick Jacobson on drums and Dan Fincher on saxophone.
For further background, here is part of
the blog I wrote in advance of his December 2017 Bay Area gigs.
It might have crossed your mind that Harpdog
Brown was not this artist’s birth name. As he explains in his
song What’s Your Real Name, taken from the 2016 album Travelin’ with the Blues,
he was playing a gig at the club Momma Gold’s in Kitsilano Beach (an area of
Vancouver) in the fall of 1989 when a couple of guys in the audience began
yelling “Harpdog! Harpdog!”, and Brown found it fitting and began using
it, eventually even having his name changed legally. His friends just
call him Dog.
Brown was born January 28th 1962
in Edmonton, Alberta, and was adopted by a family including his slide guitar
playing mother. Quite naturally, the guitar was his first instrument and
by the age of fifteen he was playing in a garage band. He moved on to a
duo that was the opening act at comedy clubs and, in the early 80s, he signed
on as vocalist in a touring band. That gig lasted six weeks before he
quit and put together his own road Blues band.
Dog put out his first album in 1993,
Beware of the Dog, and his follow-up, the 1994 release Home is Where the Harp
Is, earned him the Muddy Award for the Best Northwest Blues Release from
Portland’s Cascade Blues Association as well as a Juno nomination for Canada’s
Best Blues / Gospel Recording. His next album was Once in a Howlin’ Moon
in 2001, then his release Naturally garnered the #1 Canadian Blues Album of
2010 as voted by The Blind Lemon Survey.
All of which brings us up to the two
albums we’ll be hearing today. I would be surprised if 2014’s What It Is
was not a major influence on Dog’s winning the 2015 Maple Blues Award for
Harmonica Player of the Year issued by the Toronto Blues Society (which he
would win again the next two years and is a nominee this year) and a 2014
Lifetime Award from the Hamilton Blues Society.
2016 saw Dog win Blues Artist of the Year
from the Fraser Valley Music Awards and the release of Travelin’ with the
Blues, recorded earlier in the year at Big Jon Atkinson’s Bigtone Records in
Hayward and Kid Andersen’s Greaseland Studios right here in San Jose.
It was very much a fun night (when I heard
Dog in Vancouver in 2017) that came to a bit of an abrupt end. As I was
outside the Yale after the show ended, having a nice little chat with the Dog,
a couple came by and warned us that there was a skunk approaching us.
Indeed, we were standing next to a van by the front tires and when I looked
down there was the skunk cruising down the gutter just behind the rear tires, a
little too close for me. Without a word, I made a quick exit to the other
side of the street and proceeded towards the car a few blocks away.
There’s no telling what those Canadian critters might do!
*************************
I’m sure I’ll
be exhausted after an afternoon show
(for the
last twenty-five years before I retired a couple of years ago, I was driving
cab at night and sleeping from about 10AM ’til maybe 5PM), otherwise I might be
heading up to the Smoking Pig in Fremont Saturday to catch Johnnie Cozmik’s
J.C. Smith Band’s last appearance there due to the restaurant’s decision to
cease live music after the end of this month.
Paul, the club’s owner, has been a strong supporter of the Blues for
several years now by providing a venue for Blues folk to perform and when I was
at KKUP he used to, and still does I’m sure, provide food for the participants
on air during the Blues and Jazz marathons, be they DJs or performing
musicians, so get out there this year and thank him by showing up. Johnnie’s show begins at 9PM.
*************************
These essays represent what I plan to get through
around our live performance of Harpdog Brown and his band Saturday. This repeat show from May of 2017 was one
that, after its airing, I never took out of my car’s CD player because every
time I started the engine the music was just too good to replace. You might be aware that I love a good piano
Blues and Boogie partly because it is the only instrument that can carry the
bass, percussion and lead at the same time and Jimmy Yancey is probably my
favorite solo pianist.
It’s also probably not news to you that I love the
strong Soul of the late 60s with Stax Records the prime example and Sam and
Dave perhaps the label’s best representative.
It’s a rarity for me to do a show without one of the
choices being fronted by a strong guitar player, but I felt Shakey Jake Harris
fit in nicely with the others so the lineup was set.
It
must have been a time that I had a lot going on because I did not include any
write-up at all, only the playlist. With
only two days before the second airing, I shall attempt to rectify that by
completing at least one segment, maybe more, but no promises. enjoy
*************************
Although the reported year of his birth varies between
1894 and 1903, all my sources agree on February 20th as James Edwards “Jimmy” Yancey’s birthday. Yancey had been active in the Chicago club
and house party scene since 1915 but, while younger pianists, many of whom
attributed inspiration from Jimmy (Meade
Lux Lewis, Albert Ammons, and Clarence “Pinetop” Smith) were already recording,
Jimmy didn’t get the opportunity until May 1939, recording The Fives and
Jimmy’s Stuff. Soon to follow was an
album of piano solos for Victor, the first of its kind. INCOMPLETE
*************************
There are probably other male Soul duets, but the only
one that comes to mind is Sam and Dave,
nicknamed “Double Dynamite” for good reason.
Sam Moore and Dave Prater met in Florida in 1961 and by the end of the
decade every fan knew them on a first name basis. Although
they recorded a few times previously, the pair didn’t hit their stride until they
got to the Atlantic semi-subsidiary in Memphis, Stax Records. The
exact relationship between Atlantic and Stax is somewhat unclear enough for me to
try to explain at present, but Prater and Moore signed in 1965 with Atlantic Records
who convinced Stax to produce them.
Both of our singers had similar Southern musical upbringings
including singing in church and later in Soul and R&B clubs in the
50s. Dave and his brother J.T. Prater
were in the Gospel group the Sensational Hummingbirds who released Lord Teach
Me in the 50s. Sam was on the Doo Wop
group the Majestics’ 1954 release Nitey Nite b\w Caveman Rock then later sang
Gospel as part of the Gales and the Mellonaires.
They met at the King of Hearts club in Miami in 1961
where Moore (the tenor, born in 1935) was host of an amateur night that Prater (a
baritone, 1935-1988) was performing in.
That night, Dave had trouble remembering the lyrics to a Jackie Wilson
song and Sam guided him through it. The
boys paired up then and became a favorite act around Miami, were signed by Soul
singer / record producer Steve Alaimo to Marlin Records, resulting in a couple
of singles in 1952. Then, with the help
of Marlin owner Henry Stone, they wound up signing with Roulette Records and
releasing a few more singles including one on Stone and Alaimo’s Alston label..
Once they signed with Atlantic, after Stone’s
introduction in the summer of 1964 to producer Jerry Wexler, it was Wexler’s
decision to have the duo record at Stax.
As Wexler remembered them, “Their
live act was filled with animation, harmony and seeming goodwill. I put Sam in the sweet tradition of Sam Cooke
or Solomon Burke, while Dave had an ominous Four Tops’ Levi Stubbs-sounding
voice, the preacher promising hellfire.” While at
Stax, much of their success must be shared with the team of Isaac Hayes and
David Porter, who wrote and produced the multiple hits beginning with their
third single You Don’t Know Like I Know in December, which hit #7 R&B, the
first of ten consecutive Top Twenty R&B 45s including numbers like Soul Man
(R&B #1, Pop #2), Hold on! I’m Coming (voted Billboard’s #1 R&B Song of
1966), You Got Me Humming, When Something is Wrong with My Baby, and I Thank
You (R&B #4, Pop #9). After Stax’
distribution deal with Atlantic was ended, so were the services of Hayes and
Porter as well as the backing of the house band, Booker T. and the MGs along
with the horn section of the Mar-Keys.
In their time with Stax, only Aretha Franklin had more
R&B chart success as the boys had ten consecutive Top Twenty hits and three
consecutive Top Ten albums. Soul Man even
hit #1 on the Cashbox Pop chart and won them the 1967 Grammy for Best
Performance – Rhythm and Blues Group to go along with their multiple Gold
Records. Atlantic seized on the
opportunity to cash in on their Stax glory with the Best of Sam and Dave, reaching
#24 R&B in 1969, but then only released two new singles from the Stax
sessions, Soul Sister, Brown Sugar returning them to the R&B Top Twenty but
its follow-up, Born Again barely charted.
Despite taking eight months for Atlantic to issue their first 45, Ooh,
Ooh, Ooh was the first time a Sam and Dave single failed to chart at all. Two more singles missed the rankings, and
Wexler was very blunt about it. “We just
made some shit-ass records with them. I
never really got into their sensibilities as a producer.” Even moving the next session out of New York
to work with the Muscle Shoals team failed to list.
Despite their amiable appearance on stage, behind the
scenes they could barely stand each other.
Sam and Dave broke up in June of 1970 but held occasional concerts
throughout the 70s and once the Blues Brothers (John Belushi and Dan Akroyd
from Saturday Night Live) re-popularized their Soul Man number, they put on
several concerts in 1980.
While Prater put out a single for Alston, Moore stayed
with Atlantic and released three singles in the year but neither artist had a
charting. Moore was in preparation of an
album produced by King Curtis which had to be ceased after Curtis was stabbed
to death in 1971. The boys got back
together in the studio one last time for Atlantic and finally got back on the
charts with Don’t Pull Your Love hitting #36 R&B and #102 Pop.
Prater teamed with Sam Daniels toured for a few years
in the 80s as Sam and Dave. In 1987,
Dave was arrested for selling crack cocaine to an undercover cop and a year
later died in an auto accident.
Sam and Dave made the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame in
1992. They have also been made members
of the Grammy Hall of Fame, the Memphis Music Hall of Fame and the Vocal Group
Hall of Fame.
To say their tours were a success would be damning
with faint praise. Between 1967 and
1969, Sam and Dave averaged 280 gigs a year, including an amazing 1967 when
they only had ten nights off all year. Otis
Redding’s manager Phil Walden said, “I think Sam and Dave will probably stand
the test of time as the best live act that there ever was. These guys were absolutely unbelievable. Every night they were awesome.” According to Walden, after headlining the
March 1967 Stax \ Volt Revue in Europe when he had to follow their exhausting
set every night, Redding refused to ever again be on the same bill.
An October 1968 Time magazine article opined that, “Of
all the R&B cats, nobody steams up a place like Sam and Dave … weaving and
dancing (while singing!), they gyrate through enough acrobatics to wear out more
than a hundred costumes per year.” Dubbed
the Sultans of Sweat, Sam saw it as, “Unless my body reaches a certain
temperature, starts to liquefy, I just don’t feel right without it.”
ALMOST COMPLETE
*************************
I picked Shakey
Jake Harris for today’s show because his name came up in our last show, two
weeks ago, when we wrote about Luther Allison.
Unlike a few harmonica players who acquire the Shakey moniker because of
the way they shake the microphone, James D. Harris took on the name because
gamblers, when someone was about to roll the dice, would yell, “Shake ‘em,
Jake”.
By the age of seven, Jake had moved to Chicago from
his birthplace of Earle, Arkansas INCOMPLETE
*************************
P.L.K. Blues
South Side Stuff
Rolling the Stone
Steady Rock Blues
Yancey’s Stomp
How Long Blues
Yancey’s Getaway
Jimmy Yancey 21mins
Soul Man
I Thank You
When Something is Wrong with My
Baby
You Don’t Know What You Do to Me
Soul Sista, Brown Sugar
Soothe Me
Said I Wasn’t Gonna Tell Nobody
You Got Me Humming
Hold On! I’m Coming
Sam
and Dave 25mins
Worried Blues
Keep a-Loving Me Baby
My Foolish Heart
Huffin’ and Puffin’
Jake’s Blues
You Spoiled Your Baby
Just Shakey
Shakey Jake Harris 16mins
Yancey’s Bugle Call
State Street Special
Crying in my Sleep
Tell ‘em about Me
Make Me a Pallet on the Floor
La Salle Street Breakdown
Jimmy Yancey 18mins
You Don’t Know Like I Know
I Take What I Want
I Can’t Stand Up for Falling Down
Can’t You Find Another Way
Gimme Some Lovin’
(Sitting on) The Dock of the Bay
Bring It On Home
Another Saturday Night
Summertime
Wrap It Up
Sam
and Dave 30mins
It Won’t Happen Again
Mouth Harp
Love My Baby
Jake’s Cha Cha
Easy Baby
Gimme a Smile
My Broken Heart
Shakey Jake Harris 27mins
White Sox Jump
Five O’Clock Blues
Monkey Woman Blues
The Mellow Blues
35th and Dearborn
Shave ‘em Dry
Yancey Special
Jimmy Yancey 21mins*************************
For Your
Information
To listen to KSCU on a computer, use
either iTunes or WinAmp for the media player.
To listen to KSCU on a smart phone use
either the NextRadio or TuneIn apps.
The studio phone number is (408) 554-KSCU or, for the
digitally inclined 554-5728 but, as always, make sure no one is speaking on the
air before you dial.
The
mailing address for sending CDs, et cetera, is:
KSCU
Local Music
500
El Camino Real
Santa
Clara, CA
95053
KSCU radio’s studio is located in the basement of
Benson Hall
KSCU’s Sunday morning Blues rotation has the Jakester,
Mister G, Dave the Blues Dude and the Bluesevangelist between 9AM and 1PM. Sherri Jones does her Blues show between
10:30AM and 12:30PM on Saturdays. And,
of course, me!
The
best way to reach me is by email at coyledon@yahoo.com
(my computer’s autocorrect adds a letter t, so if that shows up here please
remove it before trying to contact me; apparently, cotyledon is some kind of
botanical term). I do send out my blog
via email so, if you would like to be added to that list, just give me your
address and I’d be happy to do so, otherwise all my writings going back to 2014
are still available at key2highway.blogspot.
I do recommend the direct email to let you know when I will be on,
especially now that I will occasionally waiver from the second and fourth week of
each month format. Thank you all for
your continued support. Feel free to
call me during the show; it gets lonely in the dungeon.
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