See You At the Blues Fest! Springing the Blues– Jacksonville Beach, FL 4/5-7/13

The Seawalk Pavilion Main Stage on Friday night in Jacksonville Beach. Yes, those are palm fronds and the mighty Atlantic Ocean in the right margin!

The Seawalk Pavilion Main Stage on Friday night in Jacksonville Beach. Yes, those are palm fronds and the mighty Atlantic Ocean in the right margin!

” I’m gone back down to Florida…where the sun shines damn near everyday” – Muddy Waters

For more than twenty years, the arrival of spring in Northeast Florida is heralded by the Springing the Blues fest on the first weekend in April at this oceanfront venue. The format has all bands save headliners and local openers playing not only the main stage pictured above, but the smaller West stage a block inland, where you don’t have to buy a VIP badge to stand or sit within spittin’ distance of the band. Having thrown in with the hoi polloi eons ago, it was my pleasure to eschew the daily surcharge and dodge Mr. Sun’s rays with the Eighth Avenue sailors, bikini-clad teens, professed former surfers, and Westside Tush Hogs on Budweiser who are all drawn to this open-container deadzone at the  end of Beach Boulevard and the start of the Atlantic Ocean at this time every year like keg-seeking lemmings.For one weekend a year, it’s hard to get arrested in Jax Beach!

Friday night was highlighted by the Parker Urban Band, an eight-piece ensemble led by the formidable chops of guitatrist/bandleader John Parkerurban, and fronted by twin lead singers Myrna Stallworth and Juanita Parkerurban. John whipped the band through a string of originals ” Chicken and Rice”, ” Writing a Letter” , and ” Heroes Journey” ( John is ex-USMC and Semper Fi ), as well as funky covers of Tower of Power’s  ” What Is Hip?” and The Meters’  ” Just Kissed My Baby”. The sax, keyboards, and blues harp additions to the lineup delivered a broad, forceful sound that melded blues, jazz, and funk to great effect.

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Parker Urban Band at STB 2013. John is center stage, with Juanita and Mryna on the wings.

Saturday was a gorgeous day in Jax Beach, with high 60s temps, a mild ocean breeze, and a huge turnout of fans who responded with indifference to the recently elected mayor’s cornpone Beaches Welcome sellout to the Chamber of Commerce and pimping of local merchants. Mayor, I know Fland Sharp, and you’re no Fland Sharp! But back to the music.

Perhaps the  Saturday crowd favorite was the Austin-based Peterson Brothers Band, featuring the teenaged sibs Alex on bass and Glen Jr. on lead guitar, offering Stevie Ray-style Texas blues with some R and B flavor on tunes like ” If You Love Me Like You Say”. The kids managed to stir both the VIP-ringed Main Stage and the more intimate West Stage with their poise, proficiency,  and enthusiasm. Sure, a sixteen-year-old lacks the gravitas to sing most wisened blues lyrics, and you have to chuckle to hear a teenager croon, ” I know the rules; I’m not a fool “, but these kids kids appear to be speaking their minds and playing from their hearts, and I’ll take that at any age. Go see them before it gets expensive!

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Glen Peterson, Jr. and Alex Peterson at STB 2013

The West Stage was still cookin’ from the Petersons when the Cedric Burnside Project began laying down the classic Hill Country Blues of Fred McDowell, Junior Kimbrough, and Ced’s grandaddy R.L. Burnside. The stripped-down lineup of North Mississippi natives Ced on drums and vocals with Trenton Ayers on guitar evoked memories of the fine sets at STB by Cedric and Lightnin’ Malcom, who was last seen on bass with the North Mississippi Allstars. Cedric’s powerful drumming and choices of crowd-pleasing tunes like ” Po’ Black Maddie” and ” Goin’ Down South”, coupled with deft ringing slide from Trenton, made for a compelling groove in the Florida sun that had young and old shakin’ ’em on down.

Cedric Burnside and Trenton Ayers, Springing the Blues 2013

Cedric Burnside and Trenton Ayers, Springing the Blues 2013

A tough act to follow, no doubt, but shredmaster Damon Fowler  was undaunted, leading his band through originals and covers on slide, lead,  lap steel, and dobro. The Brandon, FL native traffics in roots rock, swamp boogie, and slide blues, and fired off a hot set with originals ” Sugar Shack”, ” You Go Your Way”, and an unexpected inspired cover of Merle Haggard’s ” Tonight the Bottle Let Me Down”.

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Damon Fowler Group on the West Stage at Springing the Blues 2013. That’s Damon on lap steel, natch.

Sunday brought blazing sun and summer-like temps to the fest venue, and the promise of headliners The Lee Boys and the influential late 60s guitarist Kim Simmonds and Savoy Brown. But first, some fast, nearly psychedelic trippings from New Yorker Dave Fields, who evoked Hendrix, Trower, and the recently departed Alvin Lee, as well as more jazz-influenced players like Bonamassa and Trucks, in his wildly received sets on the Main and West Stages.

Dave Fields, West Stage, Springing the Blues 2013

Dave Fields, West Stage, Springing the Blues 2013

Fields wowed even the hardcore devotees with his tuneful runs and melodic fills, peaking with a choppy version of the Booker T./ William Bell classic, ” Born Under A Bad Sign” and a masterful crescendo  on his instrumental, ” Lydia “, from his new ” Detonation ” CD.  And later at the merch tent, Fields was so open and unguarded that he admitted to family from Palatka. I begged him not to admit that around Floridians!

Typical pushy New Yorker; Dave Fields stalks remaining unbelievers.

Typical pushy New Yorker; Dave Fields stalks remaining unbelievers.

Kim Simmonds lead his power trio onstage to welcome applause; many of the boomer dudes in the audience had talked of having Savoy Brown LPs among the stacks in the garage or somewhere of equal irritation to their spouses. Simmonds played a set of 1967- 1970s Savoy tunes on amplified accoustic guitars, noting that the sound of those early rock tunes seems to ring true without electrics, including Charles Brown’s ” Black Night” and my personal fave, ” Shot In the Head”. Simmonds shifted to electric on newer blues-based material in the second half of the set before closing with a spirited uptempo     ” Rollin’ and Tumblin’ ” that I suspect would have moved McKinley Morganfield himself. That’s the great thing about the blues; anything that’s out there is fair game for anyone to play, or even make Their Own. Heck, Muddy ripped that ” signature tune”  from Gus Cannon’s Jug Stompers’ 1928 ” Roll and Tumble Blues”, so there’s no tellin’ how far back some of these songs go.

Having seen the great Lee Boys twice at STB and from the front row opening for the Tedeschi-Trucks band last winter at the Florida Theatre, I felt no remorse in passing on their rollicking set and making one last swing through the food booth midway as I walked to my car for the Ride Back Across the Ditch ( that’s the Intracoastal Waterway for you townies!). The sun was setting on Florida’s largest free outdoor music festival, but never on the blues.

———————–  Your humble Northeast Florida correspondent, Nanker ” Next stop, Waneefest ”  Phledge

North Mississippi Allstars and Missing Cats

Cody on washboard, Luther on drums, Malcom on bass, JoJo on keys. Not pictured: gang of female fans wearing ” More Washboard!” t-shirts.

Concert Review- NMA at Ogden Theater, Denver, CO 9/15/2012

WORLD BOOGIE FLATTENS MILE HIGH CITY!!!

( Phledge gets loose on Colfax – a street in Denver, not his latest scrip –  to commune with his heroes! – Editors)

      The opening hook of Keith Richards’ page-turning ” Life ” is the hilarious tale of Keith and Ronnie’s 400-mile drive from Memphis through west Arkansas on their way to a sold-out show in the Cotton Bowl in Dallas. The boys stop in a redneck bar, decide to get high for 40 minutes in the Men’s room, and proceed to occupy legions of the local gendarmes, the Highway Patrol, and authorities up to the Governor’s manse for the next 12 hours over the suspected contents ( not Tupelo Honey, Keith admits) of their rented ride parked outside the roadhouse.
And who sent them on this happy jaunt through country straight out of Charlie Daniels’ ” Uneasy Rider” ? As Keef says,  ” Jim Dickinson, the southern boy who played piano on “Wild Horses” , had told us that the Texarkana landscape was worth the car ride”.

Luther freestylin’ on… bass drum?.. as Malcom thumps along

Yes, that Muscle Shoals session that the Stones casually threw into their tour gave us        ” Wild Horses” and ” Brown Sugar”,  and later nearly caused a riot in Dallas had Keef and Ronnie missed the gig just for a  maintenance dose of that pharmaceutical Merck blow in the boys’ room. Jim Dickinson, a Memphis session pianist, had fortuitously been invited to the top-secret session at Jimmy Johnson’s studio, and struck up a kinship with Keef over the latter’s newfound affinity for southern country music, spurred by Keef’s time with Gram Parsons, who was not in Muscle Shoals, despite stories over the years. As Jim says,        ” Well, hell, if Gram Parsons had been there, I certainly would never have played the piano; it would have been him” .   And leave it to Jim to straighten out that perpetual controversy over the second verse of ” Brown Sugar, and the name ” Skydog Slaver”: ” Skydog is what they called Duane Allman in Muscle Shoals, because he was high all the time. And Jagger heard somebody say it, and he thought it was a cool word so he used it”.

Musicians in Southern towns like Memphis, Nawlins, and Muscle Shoals in the 60s and early 70s  were living out what Patterson Hood would later call the ” duality of the Southern Thing” ( “proud of the glory; stare down the shame…”), making great music with people of all races and cultures, while the struggles of the civil rights era were taking place within small-arms range. Small independent studios like Stax in Memphis and Fame in Muscle Shoals produced a stunning array of great songs by black and white artists, and might arguably have been the genesis, along with Nashville, of what is known as Americana today. Jim Dickinson emerged from this musical melting pot with a simple, direct sense of what ” good music” sounds like, and he became a well-known session player and producer. “I may not be the world’s best piano player, but I’ll put my taste up against anybody’s”. Jim located his family in Hernando, Mississippi, in the Hill Country populated by blues greats like Fred McDowell, R.L. Burnside, Kenny Brown, and Junior Kimbrough. To Jim’s amazement, his two sons grew up to not only embrace this music, but to play with and befriend the legends who were eager to see their historic sound not only honored, but updated by the young instrumental wizards. Jim nurtured the boys, produced their records, and mentored them as respectful students of a worthy genre of American music.

Jim was a tireless advocate for artists, and would often close cover letters  sent with the latest tapes or CDs to promoters and media outlets by saying, ” World Boogie is coming!”  Most figured this meant music as an irresistible unifying force. But as several have pointed out, surely Jim thought that World Boogie was already here. He passed in August, 2009, and the boys produced and recorded a great CD send-off to him, ” Keys to the Kingdom”.

I first saw the NMA about eight years ago in Minny with Gebippe at the famous Cabooze. Yes, that’s a train caboose, now a club. He’d turned me on to the “Electric Blue Watermelon” CD and I was anxious to see the boys live in a small venue. Luther turned out to be a revelation: a truly great slide player and compelling singer despite limited range. Cody was like a backwoods Charlie Watts on drums: always driving the sound, but never in the way. The younger Dickinson also played a nasty guitar himself, and blew out the crowd with his amplified washboard soloing. The bassist Chris Chew thumped along like a pulsating coffeepot, and stepped out for a soulful uptempo version of Al Green’s ” Love and Happiness”.  Gebippe and I later saw them opening for and backing John Hiatt at the Ogden in Denver, followed by shows over the years at the Freebird in Jax, the Boulder Theater, the Greeley Blues Festival, the Bluebird in Denver, and a memorable night at the Orange Peel in Asheville where we stood so close that Big Chew was hitting on my date, the Notorious Pamalama. I came to love and respect not only their artistry, but their integrity. They were playing exactly what they wanted to play, with no apparent concern for current trends or commercial appeal.

So when I heard they were coming to town, I called in several.. um, favors, and scored VIP for me and Il Padrone, my driver and consigliere. As we stood on Colfax outside the Ogden for our early entry, up walked Cody and JoJo, the keyboard player for the opener Missing Cats. The skinny Cody could not have been more gracious, stopping to chat with fans, and inviting us all in. We got to attend the soundcheck and see the boys working out endings to songs, and some cool improvising of the finale to the Stones’ ” Can’t You Hear Me Knockin’?”. I recognized Lightnin’ Malcom, whom I’d seen at Springing the Blues with Cedric Burnside doing Hill Country tunes, standing in for Chew on bass. Chew has had health issues of late, but is expected back soon ( See our Calendar page for update – Ed.). Then the Missing Cats did their soundcheck, as we realized that the NMA would be backing the Cats’ opening set. Hey, the mo’ Dickinsons, the mo’ betta!

Malcom, Luther and JoJo at soundcheck

After the soundcheck, the boys came offstage to meet the alleged VIPs and sign posters, and you would have thought they were the neighborhood garage band stopping by to make sure they weren’t playing too loud. Just a pair of nice Southern boys genuinely happy to see people show up to hear them play. Rendered dumbstruck in their presence, I was luckily able to mutter some thanks for coming to Colorado before they strolled backstage.

The Cats’ set was quite inspired, with JoJo Herman on keys and Sherman Ewing on guitar backed by Luther and Cody. The Cats harmonized nicely on a number of clever originals, and left space for Luther to solo on several tunes. I would love to have heard their CD,       ” Larry Brown Amen” before the show to catch the tunes quicker; it’s got some catchy stuff.

After a short intermission, the Dickinsons returned with Lightnin’ Malcom and kicked into a rolling set of classic Hill Country tunes like ” Drop Down Mama”, ” Skinny Woman”, and       ” Po’ Black Maddie”, and threw in originals like “This A Way”, ” Shake”, and the rearranged cover of Dylan’s ” Memphis Blues Again”. Cody wailed on the washboard, and traded licks on guitar with Luther. Malcom and Luther each took a spin on the drum kit, and JoJo came on to add depth near the end of the set. The crowd had swelled rapidly once the NMA walked on, and was now wildly rocking along to the rolling, irresistible beat, as Luther tailored the R.L. Burnside ” Georgia Women”  lyrics to the venue:

” I don’t know, but I been told: them Denver women… got a sweet jelly roll..”

Cody, Luther, Malcom, and JoJo

Much to the delight of the crowd, many of whom were hardcore fans who had followed the band on previous swings through the state, and had memorized the Boulder Fox Theater recording that the band self-released, ” Boulderado”. The fans roared the band back for an encore of more thumping bass, driving skins, and wailing slide until… the lights came on, and a magical night of music was a pounding memory in the brain. How had it passed so quickly?
The crowd shuffled out, heads shaking in amazement. World Boogie had arrived.

Phledge has been returned from VIP to Mere Poobah, and we’re all the better for it! – Ed.