Thursday, July 6, 2017
Saturday, June 10, 2017
The Band B. Perfect
This picture, which I've not done justice by reproducing with my phone, was taken by my friend Doug, at Blueberry Hill, and does a perfect job illustrating the beautiful musical and working relationship of drummer Keith Robinson and Chuck Berry. Robinson was the best drummer I ever saw live playing with Chuck Berry, and the two of them obviously loved playing off one another. Chuck never lost a bit of his rhythm on stage, and he loved bouncing riffs off a drummer who could match him.
I just saw a hack review of CHUCK in Rolling Stone magazine. Rolling Stone has some great political writing, but it rarely did justice to Chuck Berry. Except for a collage that included virtually everyone, he made the cover only once before he died, back in 1969. I don't guarantee this, but my fading memory tells me that The Captain and Tenille also made the cover at least once.
But it wasn't just the covers. Rolling Stone also blew the reviews. As I recall, their write up of the mostly brilliant album "Back Home" complained that Chuck Berry had not kept pace with the music he invented-- that he hadn't "grown." "Back Home" was a great Chuck Berry record-- a joyous return to Chess Records after a three year stint at Mercury-- with Lafayette Leake on piano and Phil Upchurch on bass and more swing than you could find in the rest of 1970 combined.
After that, and after his death, you'd think the magazine would try to make it up to the guy who started what they write about, but not so much. Easier to fall back on the same old bullshit. At best, an appearance or two in Random Notes, and an occasional (and these I appreciated) ranking in Top 100 Guitarists, or Song Writers, or Whatever. And of course, he made the cover again when he couldn't see it.
Anyway, in the hack review the hack reviewer calls the backup on CHUCK a "bar band" and suggests that the album could have been improved with a drummer like Charlie Watts.
No disrespect from me to Charlie Watts. He's great. But the drumming on CHUCK is great, too; a perfect fit, with all the pounding, beautiful energy of the best early Chuck Berry records. And so is the "bar band"-- a core of incredible professionals who've put down the best rhythm section I've heard on a Chuck Berry record since the 1950s and early 1960s.
Yes, they've played in a a lot of bars. And if you've been to some of those bars, you'll know that St. Louis has some of the best blues and r&b in the world.
But better yet, they played with Chuck, for years, and in one case, for decades. He couldn't have found, hired, recruited a better band for the last Chuck Berry album anywhere.
So, Rolling Stone writer. Thelonious Monk's band were often "bar bands." B.B. King's bands were "bar bands." Muddy Waters' band was a "bar band." And so, in his final years, was Chuck Berry's.
But none of them were hacks.
Friday, May 19, 2017
Bye Bye Johnny B. Goode
Years ago I wrote about meeting Chuck Berry and giving him a framed picture of himself as a child. Peter K. had given me the photograph and we'd had fun trying to figure it out. In the picture Chuck is on the roof of a building, dressed to the nines, and using a small telescope. It's daytime. The telescope is pointing skyward. And it doesn't take long to figure out that all the shadows are behind Chuck: in other words, that he's pointing it at the sun. I wondered in an e-mail if it might have been an eclipse, and sure enough, Peter K. found out there had been two in St. Louis at around that time.
When I gave the picture to Chuck he was visibly excited. He said something like "Ooh, wee! Where'd you get this?" Then he said, "I'm going to show it to my friends, and you're going to be there when I do!" And off he went, running down the hallway to another hall where a bunch of people enjoyed his reaction to the picture. What made it even better is that my friend Doug was there, and my wife, who did some math with Chuck and his son to determine the date. (American history and practical math. We lived it!).
Here's the thing: You never know when you'll see a person you love for the last time.
I wasn't able to go to Chuck Berry's funeral, and I never went to another show, so it turns out that was the last time I ever saw the man. He was glorious that evening. He'd just put on a very good show. He was dressed all in black, with a black leather jacket and dark glasses. And the very, very last thing he did, before he went down the hall and into the street, was to stand in front of me, lift his dark glasses, and say "You look like Seattle!" And then he was gone, like a cool breeze.
Whatever that means, I'll take it. And what a blessing to have my last glimpse of Chuck Berry be up close, personal and so direct. Thank you again, Mr. Berry.
When I gave the picture to Chuck he was visibly excited. He said something like "Ooh, wee! Where'd you get this?" Then he said, "I'm going to show it to my friends, and you're going to be there when I do!" And off he went, running down the hallway to another hall where a bunch of people enjoyed his reaction to the picture. What made it even better is that my friend Doug was there, and my wife, who did some math with Chuck and his son to determine the date. (American history and practical math. We lived it!).
Here's the thing: You never know when you'll see a person you love for the last time.
I wasn't able to go to Chuck Berry's funeral, and I never went to another show, so it turns out that was the last time I ever saw the man. He was glorious that evening. He'd just put on a very good show. He was dressed all in black, with a black leather jacket and dark glasses. And the very, very last thing he did, before he went down the hall and into the street, was to stand in front of me, lift his dark glasses, and say "You look like Seattle!" And then he was gone, like a cool breeze.
Whatever that means, I'll take it. And what a blessing to have my last glimpse of Chuck Berry be up close, personal and so direct. Thank you again, Mr. Berry.
Sunday, March 19, 2017
On Valentine's Day in 1971, when I was just 14, I walked into a nearly empty Memorial Auditorium in Sacramento and saw a lone figure on stage backed by a local rock band. He was playing the blues when I pushed open the door and looked as sad and alone as anyone or anything I'd ever seen. Within a few minutes he picked it up and got us all on our feet and kept us there until, mercifully, he could leave Sacramento. But eight months later he was back with a full crowd rocking from the very start.
I haven't added to this site in a long time. I'll have two more posts, at least. A summing up, and a piece about his long awaited new album. In the meantime, I've shut down some of the more recent posts for a time to put my "book" about Chuck and my own peculiar love affair with him on top again for just a bit. Hail! Hail! Love you Chuck!
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