portrait of this blog's author - by Stephen Blackman 2008
Showing posts with label Dr John. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr John. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Photos from Music History


Robbie, Bobby Charles and the Doc (playing his Gibson Byrdland) cut from The Last Waltz
look at Robbie’s face!

How come so many were left out completely from The Last Waltz?

Bobby Charles, the legendary Louisiana songwriter behind classics like "See You Later, Alligator" and "Walking to New Orleans," played a unique role in The Last Waltz, The Band’s historic farewell concert in 1976. While he took the stage to perform "Down South in New Orleans" with Dr. John, his performance was the only one cut from the final film, thought he ended up on the soundtrack. 
Though excluded from the final edit, Bobby Charles' connection to The Band ran deep. He was a steady collaborator with Rick Danko, who played a key role in producing Charles' critically acclaimed 1972 self-titled album. Their partnership continued on Danko's 1977 solo album, where Charles contributed his signature blend of swampy grooves and soulful lyrics.

I loved Bobby Charles and can’t believe he was cut!? 




 



Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Remembering Dr. John (November 20, 1941 – June 6, 2019)

 


Mac Rebennack was nearing 30 when he transformed himself into Dr John and released Gris Gris: he had already packed a lifetime’s worth of musical experience and incident into his 27 years. His father’s connections as a record store owner in New Orleans’ Third Ward enabled him to sneak into local recording sessions: by 13, he was a professional musician, playing organ in strip clubs in the Third Quarter and performing with Professor Longhair, a local pioneer whose blend of blues, boogie-woogie and Afro-Cuban rhythms, Rebennack would later claim, “put the funk into music”.

 

   
Dr John - The Midnight Special - Right Place Wrong Time 
By 16, he was a session guitarist and occasional producer, working out of Cosimo Studios and playing in a succession of bands. He even had a local solo hit in 1959, a brooding Bo Diddley knock-off called Storm Warning, but Rebennack was also trouble: his career as a guitarist was ended when his finger was injured by a gunshot at a gig in Jackson in 1960; he became a heroin addict and dealer; he was involved in running a brothel. In 1963, he was sentenced to two years for drug offences, and on release shifted operations to Los Angeles, where a contingent of exiled New Orleans musicians – led by arranger Harold Battiste – were making headway as session players.
Rebennack became a member of the most revered Hollywood session group of all, the Wrecking Crew, playing with everyone from Sonny and Cher to Frank Zappa, but professed himself dissatisfied and homesick. Pining for New Orleans, he created the character of Dr John, loosely based on the legend of a 19th-century Senegalese freed slave turned New Orleans voodoo king, the music inspired by the disparate sounds Rebennack had heard at a spiritualist church in the Lower Ninth Ward. Here, he claimed, “Hindus and Buddhists, Jews, Christians, Masons, even voodoos” all worshipped together. He initially developed the idea for singer and actor Ronnie Barron, but when Barron balked, Rebennack took on the role, surrounding himself with fellow New Orleans expats and recording Gris Gris in late 1967.
Alexis Petridis / The Guardian

Don's Tunes reminds us . . . . . 




So whatcha gonna do if someone shoots you in the finger? Why drop the guitar and take up piano of course!
From the good doctor’s how to play boogie woogie video!

Dr John (Mac Rebennack ) - Swannee River Boogie

Thursday, September 05, 2024

Dr John ‘Jiffy Jobs!’

Dr John on his way to record the 'Bluesiana Triangle' record at Acme Studios in Mamaroneck, 
New York on March 5, 1990. (Photo by Ebet Roberts)


You play the guitar, drums and bass guitar, too.
Dr. John: Well, all of those things I learned when I was playing in south Louisiana in what they call “jiffy jobs.” A band is booked for 12 hours with no break. And how you do it is, one guy at a time’s gotta take a break—you go to the bathroom or eat or whatever. While he’s gone, somebody’s gotta cover his instrument.
Stanley Moss, BOMB interview

Thursday, July 11, 2024

Dr. John - 40th International Jazz Jamboree '98 Festival Sala Kongresowa, Warsaw, Poland 25 October 1998 | FLOPPY BOOT STOMP

 Wow! And still more from XRay over at HQ! 

From Jack Bruce, Greg Lake with Garry Moore to ELO and Golden Earring to Dire Straits! to the good Dr

Is there a Doctor in the house sure n hell is!

AN XRay SPECIAL!

Dr John Live in Warsawa POLAND - 40th International Jazz Festival 1998 - FLOPPY BOOT STOMP


                          From Polish Radio III, 72 minutes  

1 Intro
2 Iko Iko
3 The Stroke
4 Tipitina
5 John Gris
6 Same Old Same Old - Quitters Never Win - Rite Away - Same Old Same Old
7 Such a Night
8 I Don't Want to Know about Evil
9 Mess Around - Going Back to New Orleans
10 Big Chief - Band Intros - Big Chief
11 So Long


Dr. John (Mac Rebennack) - vocals, piano, percussion 
Robert Broom, Jr. - guitar, percussion, background vocals 
David Martin Barard - bass, background vocals 
Herman Ernest III - drums, background vocals 

For the Boys at HQ!
(and any of the gals too!)

Carly Simon, Martha’s Vineyard, MA, 1981

📷 © Lynn Goldsmith







Sunday, May 19, 2024

Dr John (Mac Rebenack) on becoming a musician | HK Magazine


Tom Sheehan

Was it always your dream to become a musician?

Dr. John: I have no idea. That’s about as far as my brain could operate as far as what I wanted to do. I was failing in school so bad that my father told me to go on the road. My dad said, “Kid, my advice to you is to take a job on the road.” It made me feel okay to do that.

You’ve learned music from some of the greatest musicians. What are the most important things that they taught you?

DJ: I learned from piano players like Huey "Piano Smith," Allen Toussaint, Professor Longhair and James Booker. It would be hard to say what was the most important, but I’ll say this much: Huey Smith taught me how to write songs—more than just play piano—which helped me later in life. They all gave me ideas about writing songs and that’s all so important—a lot more than just playing the piano. I studied guitar originally and if I hadn’t gotten my finger shot off I would probably still be playing guitar.


What was it like to work in the music industry back in the 50s and 60s? And how does it compare to today?

DJ: You can’t compare, because we were making records one track at a time. The recording techniques were way different. Today you can record 16, 32 tracks—whatever you want to do. The other thing is that today nobody plays the music live together. Back then you had to because when you left the studio it was a finished record. No mixing or all that.



HK Magazine 


Wednesday, May 08, 2024

Bought when they came out! The Dixie Cups : Iko Iko from Gumbo to post-punk!


Thanks to Dr John I knew this one for the longest time and a street song as a child growing up too but the Dixie Cups added a pop cool this standard pop classic nursery rhyme (sic!) 

Another bought from the ex-jukebox bargain bins was a cover by the Belle Stars bringing up to date  . . . . . . . . used on the soundtrack of the wonderful Dustin Hoffa’s extraordinary Rainman





More? . . . here are the girls on BBC TV 26th June 1982 some awards do!


Back around to something a tad more authentic? well is there a DOCTOR in the HOUSE?!?

Friday, April 12, 2024

REMEDIES : DR. JOHN, The Night Tripper | PLAIN & FANCY

Dr. John, The Night Tripper - Remedies (1970, 2014 remaster)



Managerial problems – Dr John has had a few. One adviser encouraged him to spend time in a mental hospital to get out of a drug conviction – the part-finished Remedies comes from this insane period. Contains the 17-minute prison reform polemic, “Angola Anthem”.

“My managers put me in a psych ward. These guys were very bad people – I had gotten busted on a deal, and they got me bonded out of jail, and so when they did I could have got a parole violation. All of this stuff was so unconnected to music that it’s hard to relate it. A friend of mine had just come out of doing 40-something years in Angola [the infamous Louisiana State Penitentiary], he was just someone special in my heart – called Tangleye. And Tangleye says, ‘I’m gonna sell you this song. Got it in Angola, but ain’t nobody ever cut this song…’ Even now guys I know getting out of Angola know this song. It’s still a horrible place to be. They feed people every 10 days or whatever.

“And that’s why I cut this song: I got a friend doing 300 years in one of these satellite penitentiaries, he got high blood pressure, cirrhosis of the liver, he don’t get no medication. People have no idea what it’s like in a cell when it’s just you, and they feed you whenever they feel like it. One of these guys told me, ‘You can taste the food before you eat it.’ And they stretch it too with the rats and whatever other critters these guys have as pets.”
by Tom Pinnock, 15th June 2012

THE ROCKASTERIA

Monday, March 25, 2024

ALBUMS BOUGHT WHEN THEY CAME OUT : DR. JOHN : THE NIGHT TRIPPER

 My journey with Mac (Rebbenack) began here and heaven only knows what on earth we were into back then (ahem!) but then Gumbo came out too and I was gone on a life long journey into the Rhythm and Blues of New Orleans especially its piano players it could be said (Archibald, Fess, Alan Toussaint, Tuts Washington et al)

Dr. John - Gris-Gris (1968 USA, 2017 remaster)




When Dr. John's Gris-Gris hit the rock underground in 1968, it wasn't certain whether its master of ceremonies had landed from outer space, or just been dredged out of hibernation from the Louisiana swamps.  The blend of druggy deep blues, incantational background vocals, exotic mandolin and banjo trills, ritualistic percussion, interjections of free jazz, and Dr. John's own seductive-yet-menacing growl was like a psychedelic voodoo ceremony invading your living room.  You could be forgiven for suspecting it of having been surreptitiously recorded in some afterhours den of black magic, the perpetuators of this misdeed risking life-threatening curses for having exposed these secret soundtracks to the public at large.

In fact Gris-Gris was recorded surreptitiously, but not in some New Orleans house of sin.  It was laid down in the famed Gold Star Studios in Los Angeles, where Phil Spector had cut many of his classics.  It might have never come to pass at all had Dr. John and his co-conspirators not managed to wrangle some free studio time that had been originally earmarked for Sonny & Cher sessions.  The resulting album nonetheless sounded as authentically New Orleans as a midnight Mardi Gras stroll though the French Quarter.  Given the circumstances, that achievement was just as magical as anything the most powerful voodoo ritual could have wrought.

Gris-Gris was the first record credited to Dr. John, and to most listeners he seemed to have dropped out of nowhere with his mystical R&B psychedelia and Mardi Gras Indian costumes.  The album, however, was actually the culmination of about 15 years of professional experience, during which Dr. John -- born Mac Rebennack in New Orleans -- had absorbed the wealth of musical influences for which the Crescent City is famed.  Gris-Gris's roots reach back well beyond the dawn of the twentieth century, even as the album took in cutting-edge influences such as 1960s progressive jazz, and pushed into territory that no popular musician had ever explored in quite the same fashion.

"Gris-Gris" itself is a New Orleans term for voodoo, and the name Dr. John taken from a New Orleans root doctor of the 1840s and 1850s.  Also known as John Montaigne and Bayou John, he was busted in the 1840s for practicing voodoo with Pauline Rebennack, who may or may not have been a distant relative of our man Mac.  One of Mac's grandfathers sang in a minstrel show, and the latter-day Dr. John adapted one of grandpa's favorite tunes, "Jump Sturdy," into the track on Gris-Gris of the same name.  His onstage costumes and feathered headdresses, the source of shock and delight to audiences since the late 1960s, are similarly adapted from those worn by Mardi Gras Indians in New Orleans, famed for the infectious tribal percussive rhythms and chants they perform in local parades.

By the mid-1950s Mac Rebennack, still in his mid-teens, was busy gigging around the New Orleans area, absorbing more contemporary influences from jazz, rhythm and blues, gospel, and rock and roll.  In the late 1950s and early 1960s the multi-instrumentalist participated in a myriad of New Orleans R&B and rock records as a session musician, songwriter, and producer.  After battles with drug problems and the law, he moved to Los Angeles in 1965, joining an expatriate community of top New Orleans session dudes on the Hollywood studio circuit.  Rebennack scrounged for survival by playing on L.A. pop and rock sessions, getting much of his work with the help of arranger (and fellow New Orleanian) Harold Battiste.  Numerous recordings on which Rebennack played, sometimes as the featured artist, from the decade predating Gris-Gris have surfaced on compilations such as Medical School and Cut Me While I'm Hot .  Though of historical interest, and sometimes of considerable musical worth, these enjoyable but journeyman R&B/rock sides gave little indication of the idiosyncratic genius unveiled on Gris-Gris.

Ever since coming to L.A., Rebennack had hoped to make a concept album of sorts melding various strains of New Orleans music behind a frontman named Dr. John.  Mac actually wanted New Orleans singer Ronnie Barron to be the Dr. John character, but when Barron was (fortunately) unavailable, Rebennack took on the Dr. John mantle himself.  Harold Battiste, now a major Hollywood name as arranger for Sonny & Cher, got Dr. John some of the duo's studio time for free, and also helped get Mac a deal with Atlantic for an LP.  Had Atlantic known what was up it probably would have pulled the plug on the project.  However, the album was completed, with help from Battiste (who produced and played clarinet) and numerous side musicians.  These included transplanted New Orleans veterans like Jessie Hill (renowned for "Ooh Poo Pah Doo"), Shirley Goodman (half of Shirley & Lee of "Let the Good Times Roll" fame), saxophonist Plas Johnson, and Richard "Didimus" Washington, a percussionist who was particularly skilled at devising Afro-Caribbean rhythms and textures.  Two basses were used on some songs, which together with the army of percussionists (eight are credited) created an especially deep and thick rhythm section.

The opening track's title, "Gris-Gris Gumbo Ya Ya," was itself an indication of the record's homage to New Orleans eclecticism: the gris-gris voodoo, the gumbo (the regional stew made from numerous ingredients), and "Ya Ya," the title of one of the biggest hits to ever come out of the city (by Lee Dorsey).  Rebennack wasted no time in assuming his new identity, immediately declaring "they call me Dr. John, known as the Night Tripper," his half-sung growl a white swamp counterpart to Howlin' Wolf.  The snaky rhythms, soulful backup choruses, and ghostly echoing percussion set an eerie mood that if anything got spookier on "Danse Kalinda Ba Doom," its speaking-in-tongues ensemble vocals and middle eastern-by-way-of-New Orleans melodies establishing a quasi-religious ambience that permeated the record.  "Mama Roux," by contrast, was deep-fried soul-funk, Gris-Gris 's hit single-that-never-was.  It was back to the Bayou jungle, though, for "Danse Fambeaux," with its potion of Mardi Gras Indianesque chants, minstrel strings, impenetrable spell-casting lyrics, and mysterious melody.

The album's mischievous musical chairs were never as entrancing as they were on "Croker Courtbullion," with snake-charming flute and chants, Addams Family-styled keyboards (by Dr. John, who played all the keys on Gris-Gris), and free jazzy interplay revealing Rebennack's little-known admiration of musicians such as John Coltrane and Elvin Jones.  As if these weren't enough, there were also birdcalls and animal noises that sound like nothing so much as a futuristic mating of Professor Longhair and Martin Denny.  "Jump Sturdy" was a relatively brief, and quite infectious, marriage of vaudeville and funk.  The closing eight-minute tour de force, "I Walk on Gilded Splinters," would prove the album's most durable song, a creepy voodoo soup that both smoldered with ominous foreboding and simmered with temptations of sensual delights.

Atlantic executive Ahmet Ertegun was initially reluctant to release Gris-Gris, exclaiming, according to Dr. John's autobiography Under a Hoodoo Moon, "How can we market this boogaloo crap?"  Luckily, he relented, inaugurating an erratic career that saw Dr. John grow into an institution as a walking encyclopedia of New Orleans music.  For the most part, his subsequent recordings were far more grounded in blues and R&B, never matching the versatile adventurousness of his debut full-length.  Hard to find in its original form as an Atco LP, and only sporadically reissued since, Collectors' Choice Music is proud to make this classic available on CD for the first time in the United States. 
by Richie Unterberger 

Tracks
1. Gris-Gris Gumbo Ya Ya - 5:38
2. Danse Kalinda Ba Doom (Harold Battiste, Dr. John Creaux) - 3:46
3. Mama Roux (Jessie Hill, Dr. John Creaux) - 3:01
4. Danse Fambeaux - 4:58
5. Croker Courtbullion (Harold Battiste) - 6:01
6. Jump Sturdy - 2:23
7. I Walk On Guilded Splinters - 7:40
Songs written by Dr. John Creaux except where stated

Personnel
*Dr. John - Vocals, Keyboards, Percussion
*Dr. Battiste - Bass, Clarinet, Percussion
*Richard "Dr. Ditmus" Washington - Percussion
*Senator Bob West - Bass
*Dr. John Boudreaux - Drums
*Governor Plas Johnson - Saxophone
*Dr. Lonnie Boulden - Flute
*Dr. Steve Mann - Bottleneck Guitar, Banjo
*Dr. Mclean - Guitar, Mandolin
*Mo "Dido" Pedido - Congas
*Dave Dixon - Backing Vocals, Percussion 
*Jessie Hill - Backing Vocals, Percussion 
*Ronnie Barron - Backing Vocals, Percussion
*Joni Jonz, Prince Ella Johnson, Shirley Goodman, Sonny Ray Durden, Tami Lynn - Backing Vocals

Full Album Dr John The Night Tripper Gris Gris

Sunday, February 18, 2024

GUITARS | Jeff Healy - See The Light (with Dr John) / Look At Little Sister (with Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble)

 I don’t quite understand how I have not shared any Jeff Healey before and this is truly extraordinary

Here with Dr John playing perhaps his most famous hit. Known mostly from his rock/blues covers, Healy lost his eyes (literally) as a child to cancer and scarcely made it into his forties as it came back to claim him but in the short time he was with us I don’t really understand how he plays with his affliction [of being unable to actually see what he is doing] but also playing with his left hand approaching the fretboard like a ruddy keyboard!

See The Light*  - Jeff Healy

Jeff Healey in 1988 on the Jools Holland/David Sanborn hosted, 'Night Music'. Dr. John on piano, Marcus Miller on bass, Omar Hakim on drums... quite possibly one of the hottest bands ever assembled! This clip screams pure joy. It's a blast watching Marcus lose it as Jeff takes it to another level.

and here with the legendary Stevie Ray and Double Trouble

Look At Little Sister 1987 
Jeff Healey and Stevie Ray Vaughan perform, 'Look At Little Sister'  Live on CBC with Double Trouble in 1987! 
Official Jeff Healey Documentary Teaser -   

 * SEE THE LIGHT: The Jeff Healey Story ...  
https://youtu.be/TfYmPc997Qo?si=kKRvXJCR83ghXM5n

Friday, December 22, 2023

Irma Thomas San Francisco 1995 - Albums That Should Exist

IRMA THOMAS - SF - ALBUMS THAT SHOULD EXIST - here


Paul he says:

Irma Thomas has had a long career singing soul music, and she's still going as I write this in late 2023. However, she's not considered a big name like, say Aretha Franklin or Etta James, so there are very few good bootleg concerts by her. But I recently came across this one. I was impressed with both the sound quality and the performance, so I'm posting it.

She put out a live album in 1991, called "Live! Simply the Best." I wasn't going to post this for fear that it was too similar to that album. But I checked the set lists, and most of the songs are different, with only her classic hits like "Time Is on My Side," "It's Raining," and "Wish Someone Would Care" being the same. So if you have that, I think you'll still want this.

The lead vocals were rather low in the mix, so I used the UVR5 audio editing program to boost them relative to the instruments for all the songs.

This album is an hour and five minutes long.

01 Intro - Don't Mess with My Man
02 Cry On
03 I Did My Part
04 Ruler of My Heart
05 Hittin' On Nothin'
06 It's Raining
07 I Done Got Over It
08 Iko Iko - Hey Pocky Way - I Done Got Over It [Reprise] 
09 Time Is on My Side 
10 talk 
11 Breakaway 
12 Wish Someone Would Care
13 Baby, I Love You
14 I Just Had to Hear Your Voice
15 Get Here
16 talk
17 We're Gonna Make It 
18 Simply the Best


We love Irma don’t we? I think we do. She’s a Hip Shaking Mama!

Discovering her through the New Orleans roots of Dr John way back I followed her work ever since the ‘Gumbo' was hot (geddit?)

Oh you wanted to hear her sing?! Here this from 1990 . . . . . . listen to hear make this MOR classic all hers  as she sings to her husband!

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Classic stars of the Day | IRMA THOMAS

 Not sure why these have popped up on my scanning horizon but she has been a favourite since discovering her early on after Dr John’s album Gumbo made me really look at Nawleans R n B! From Professor Longhair to Archibald, historian producers like Allen Toussaint, Huey ‘Piano’ Smith, the bands like The Meters, the Neville Brothers et al then I discovered the beauty of the women singers of the region. She is in my opinion, the Queen of New Orleans and her attempt at cross over from RnB to more commercial Soul Music meant she was overlooked at times and never achieved the fame she deserved and her It’s Raining is a stone classic, she was the first to sing Time is On My Side before the Stones cover and 'I’ve Been Loving You Too Long' before Otis covered it. (about whom more later) The rivalry between Stax and Nawleans meant that the R n B stars of Louisiana were often over looked by the much more commercial savvy producers behind the music of Stax for example . . . . . . I’ll shut up now and folks will disagree I am sure but just dig in here and enjoy! I know you will



Saturday, November 04, 2023

Dr John and Thelonious Monk! - [MoJo interview Michael Simmons]


Photograph: Alan Messer/Rex

"A crowning moment came when Dr. John shared a bill with bebop’s high priest Thelonious Monk – a devotee of hip chapeaus – at the Carousel Ballroom in San Francisco. Monk was quoted as digging Mac’s piano playing and saying of the DJTNT sobriquet: “That name is a motherf*cker!”


“He came up to the band room,” remembers Mac, “and put a hat on my head. It was a hat from Africa. And I thought, Wow, I’m honoured, ’cos it was from Monk and I loved that cat! [As part of the show] I walked through the audience – same thing every night – and it was took off my head. Somebody just snatched it. They musta recognised Monk had that brim on. I went and apologised to Monk after the gig.”


Monk wasn’t the only jazz giant Mac met, although one time he was greeted with more than a hat. “I met Art Blakey back in the game, sneakin’ through his pad. I kicked over a metal wastebasket and he cocked a gun. It was a 9mm Walther. I remember his daughter sayin’, ‘You gonna shoot him, Daddy?’ He said, ‘Not yet.’” [sic!]


Rebennack was in Blakey’s apartment with a couple of other junkie musicians, looking to score from a neighbour. Years later he made an album, Bluesiana Triangle, with Blakey and David ‘Fathead’ Newman. Blakey was kind enough not to mention the incident. And 24 years ago Mac Rebennack got clean and has remained clean ever since.


Interview by Michael Simmons / Mojo, 2013



Sunday, October 01, 2023

Dr John on Dancing!

 FEELING A BIT ROUGH HERE

I MIGHT NEED A DOCTOR!!

Dr. John:

 “Comin’ up I listened to everything my pa had. He had a record shop. My pa had four kinds of records he sold, which was race records like Rhythm & Blues and blues, jazz… it was bebop, traditional jazz, and afro-cuban music, and spirituals like hymns and stuff like that, and it was hillbilly music.”


“Most of that hillybilly music was Hank Williams or somethin’ like that. So that’s kind of what I grew up hearin'”


Looking back at those that had influenced him, Dr John had no shortage of incredible stories. “I seen Muddy Waters playing The Last Waltz . He played Nine Below Zero the night before they filmed it. I saw every so-called badass guitar player with his jaw droopin’ and saggin’… I wish they’d filmed that.” he boasts. “And that’s the kind of things I been blessed to see.”


“I remember Gatemouth. I never forget. I said to Gate, ‘I play your song Okie Dokey Stomp for my Theme Song!’ and he says… ‘Don’t fuck it up, kid’. I quit playin’ it as a theme song after hearing you say that! So that’s how much I admire Gate.”


If it could be boiled down to its most basic elements, though, Dr. John says with pinpoint accuracy what making music is about. “Dancin’. Dancing is a very big part of all of what we do. If you don’t make people dance… what the f**k you doin’ playin’ music?”


- By Matt Marshall, American Blues Scene 



Photo: Jay Dickman

Prints available here: