Downhome Blues
Exhibition A
Photographic Exhibition of American Blues Artists and their Home
Towns. The exhibition comprises some sixteen artists including Chuck
Berry, James Cotton, Honeyboy Edwards, Louisiana Red, Coco Montoya
and Hubert Sumlin.
The exhibition was
presented at The Foto Galleria, Colne, Lancashire during August -
October 2014
Copyright Notice:
All photos are
© copyright Alan White 2008 - 2014. All Rights Reserved.
Note for Festival
Organisers:
These exhibitions are portable in that I can set them up to display as
framed prints at
festivals having suitable space (flexible to fit the space
available). I can also include a presentation if required. Please email
me at
alan@earlyblues.com
if you are interested. |
Chuck
Berry
One of the pioneers of Rock and Roll, Chuck Berry was
born in St. Louis, Missouri. He had an interest in music
from an early age but it was not until he was 29 when he
met Muddy Waters in Chicago who suggested he contact
Leonard Chess of Chess Records that his musical career
took off. The rest is history, within five years he was
an established star with several hit records and film
appearances as well as a lucrative touring career. He
had also established his own St Louis-based nightclub
'Berry's Club Bandstand'. Now aged 88 he still performs
and has just clocked up his 205th show at his local
Blueberry Hill Club, St. Louis. |
Gateway
Arch, St. Louis, Missouri
Gateway Arch, the internationally famous symbol of
St. Louis, is a 630ft stainless steel monument to the
westward expansion of the United States, the tallest
man-made monument in the USA and the world's tallest
arch. The arch sits at the site of St. Louis' founding
on the west bank of the Mississippi River. There is
public access to an observation area at the top of the
arch and a visitor centre underground directly below the
arch under its legs with a museum, theatres, cafes and
other tourist attractions. There are over 4 million
visitors annually with over a million travelling to the
top in trams of eight egg-shaped (claustrophobic)
compartments. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
James
Cotton
Born in Tunica, Mississippi James Cotton moved a
short way to West Helena, Arkansas at an early age
to be mentored by Sonny Boy Williamson in blues
harp. He began his professional musical career
playing harp in Howlin' Wolf's band and over the
years has performed and recorded with many more
great blues artists: Muddy Waters, Big Mama
Thornton, Otis Spann, Freddie King, B.B. King to
name but a few. The photograph was taken at The
Chicago Blues Festival 2010: 'Celebrating the
Centennial of Howlin' Wolf', performing with his own
band alongside Matt 'Guitar' Murphy, together with
such other luminaries as Jody Williams, Sam Lay and
Hubert Sumlin. |
Helena, Arkansas
Home of The King Biscuit Blues Festival named after
'King Biscuit Time' radio show on KFFA radio
(which was named after the locally distributed King
Biscuit flour), the longest running blues radio show
in the USA. Sonny Boy Williamson was a regular
performer on the show. The festival came about in
the mid 80's to celebrate and bring greater
recognition to local blues artists and to help
rejuvenate Helena's ailing downtown area. James
Cotton, Robert Lockwood Jr, Pinetop Perkins and Sam
Carr were booked for the first festival to
acknowledge their contributions to the blues world.
The photograph is a mural of blues artists painted
on the Mississippi Levee wall celebrating the
festival. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Omar
Dykes
Kent 'Omar' Dykes hails from McComb, Mississippi, a
town with the distinction of also being the home
turf for Bo Diddley. Weaned on his mother's
collection of country, rock & roll and soul records,
he began visiting local juke joints in his teens,
and after picking up a guitar he returned to these
same clubs to launch his performing career. He then
moved to Austin, Texas where he befriended Stevie
Ray Vaughan and formed his long time band The
Howlers. Omar and The Howlers settled in Austin
releasing some 25 albums over 30 years (including
one with Jimmy Vaughan), also attracting a large
European audience.
Check out the
Earlyblues interview with Omar
here. |
McComb,
Mississippi
Founded in 1872 after Henry McComb, President of the
New Orleans, Jackson and Great Northern Railroad,
who decided to move the railroad's maintenance shops
to a more isolated area away from New Orleans with
the city's saloons and its 'moral temptations'. He
selected the present-day McComb area, purchasing
much of the land and offering low-cost building lots
to employees to build their homes there. The photo
shows 2542, the Railroad Museum's 200-ton steam
locomotive, one of the two largest steam engines in
the Illinois Central railroad fleet. It was not far
from here, in Vaughan, Mississippi where the famous
Cannonball Express accident occurred with one
fatality, Casey Jones. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Honeyboy Edwards
David 'Honeyboy' Edwards was born in Shaw,
Mississippi and at the age of 14 he left home to
travel with Big Joe Williams to begin his life as an
itinerant musician which he led throughout the 1930s
and 1940s. He performed with blues legend Robert
Johnson and they developed a close friendship.
Honeyboy was present on the night Johnson drank
poisoned whiskey which killed him and his story has
become the definitive version of Johnson's demise.
Honeyboy played with many other leading Mississippi
Delta bluesmen including Charley Patton, Tommy
Johnson and Johnny Shines. The photo was taken at
The Chicage Blues Festival 2010 a year before his
death in 2011. |
Highway 61 Blues Festival Poster
A rare photo of the 9th Annual Highway 61 Blues
Festival 2008 dedicated to the headliner David 'Honeyboy'
Edwards. The festival is run in close association
with the Leland Blues Project and Blues Museum, and
is now part of the mighty Mississippi Music Festival
and 'Bridging The Blues', a series of blues events
over several consecutive weeks which aims to promote
the richness of the blues tradition in the
Mississippi Delta region. The photo was taken on a
storefront in Leland Mississippi. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Alvin Youngblood Hart
Whilst born in
California, Alvin spent a lot of his youth with his
grandparents in Carrollton, Mississippi soaking up
Country Blues. In a recent interview he commented:
"Well, the thing was, everybody assumes that
because my parents’ generation left the state of
Mississippi that they didn’t bring anything with
them. They brought everything with them, cultural
things, music, food, so all that was there anyway.
Mostly what I did, soaked up in Mississippi was just
country living. My grandma was still basically
living in the 19th century even though it
was 1966". Alvin is recognised as one of the
world's foremost practitioners of country blues,
even though he has wider musical horizons at times
successfully venturing into western swing, ska and
blues/rock. He has toured with Bo Diddley, Gary
Moore, and more recently The Mississippi Mudbloods.
Check out the
Earlyblues interview with Alvin
here. |
Valley Store, Avalon, Mississippi
Just off Highway 35, about 14 miles north of
Carrollton in Carroll Country, there is this old
derelict country store, representing the Mississippi
country living that Alvin spoke of, except it was on
the front porch of this store that blues legend
Mississippi John Hurt played country style blues
guitar every Saturday night after a week farming in
the fields close by. John had a love for his country
home, writing his seminal 'Avalon Blues' whilst at a
recording session in New York, yearning to be back
in the country. Indeed Alvin is co-author of a CD
'Avalon Blues: A Tribute to Mississippi John Hurt',
along with Taj Mahal and others. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Homemade Jamz Blues Band
Tupelo, Mississippi based blues trio consisting of
siblings Ryan (vocals an guitar), Kyle (bass) and
Taya (drums). They made music history as the
youngest blues band to achieve a record deal when
Ryan was aged 16, Kyle was 14 and Taya was 9, with
their debut album 'Pay Me No Mind' released
in June 2008. They have since played blues festivals
and gigs across North America and Europe (including
Maryport!). Aside from their youth, the band has
been noted for their homemade instruments: the
guitar and bass used by Ryan and Kyle are crafted
from Ford motor parts that still feature the
manufacturer's logo. The photo was taken
autographing their debut album at The Chicago Blues
Festival 2010. |
West
Main Street, Tupelo, Mississippi
Famed for the Tupelo Hardware Company store, founded
by George H. Booth in 1926 and run as a family
hardware store ever since. As the Tupelo community
grew, so did the hardware business, evolving from an
agricultural community store to a 21st century
business where laser technology survey instruments
are sold. It was here that Gladys Presley brought
her 10 year old son Elvis to buy him his birthday
present. Elvis would have preferred a rifle, but his
mother succeeded in persuading him to have a guitar
instead. Elvis strummed the guitar for a while
whilst his mother paid $7.75 plus 2% sales tax. I
wonder if Homemade Jamz have bought parts for
instruments here? |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Lightnin Willie
Originally from Arlington, Texas, Lightnin'
Willie is now based with his band The Poorboys
in Los Angeles, California. They are seasoned
musicians with years of steady gigging, from
Willie Nelson's Fourth of July picnic to the
Royal Albert Hall and everything else in
between. Lightnin' has a love of playing the
"Devil's Music" with a hint of West Coast Swing,
but has not lost his roots - cowboy boots with
cuban heels, stylish hand-stitched black suit,
red neckerchief with a traditional Texas star,
and of course an enormous ten gallon hat, he
looks every inch the Texan country gentleman.
However, oweverHLightnin' Willie can now be seen
gigging all over California! |
Capital Records Tower, Los Angeles,
California
Located in Hollywood, Los Angeles the Capital
Records Tower is one of the city's landmarks, on
the List of Registered Historic Places in Los
Angeles. Home to Capital Records' West Coast
operations, it is also home to the recording
studios of Capitol Studios. The wide curved
awnings over the windows on each storey and the
tall spike emerging from the top of the building
are said to be 'only coincidentally resembling a
stack of records', it remains as the only
building of its kind in the world. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Louisiana Red
Iverson Minter "Louisiana Red" was born in
Bessemer, Alabama in 1932. He lost his parents
early in life, his mother died of pneumonia
shortly after his birth, and his father was
lynched by the Ku Klux Klan in 1937. He ended up
in an orphanage in Pittsburgh and it was on the
streets there that he started his music career.
In one of my interviews with Red he stated:
'My grandmother came and got me out of the
orphanage and I began to hang around these
street players in Pittsburgh and I got in touch
with the music. I’d go to joints which were
dangerous and I’d hang around to hear the
blues. It got to me, inside. My grandmother
bought me a Stella and I started playing on the
streets and I finally got there'. He made
over 50 albums with many guest artists such as
John Lee Hooker, Brownie McGhee, Roosevelt Sykes
and Champion Jack Dupree.
Check out the
Earlyblues interview with Louisiana Red
here. |
Sloss Furnaces, Birmingham, Alabama
Sloss Furnaces is a National Historic Landmark
in Birmingham, Alabama. Now closed, it was the
first industrial site (and only blast furnace)
in the U.S, to be preserved for public use.
Birmingham, Alabama is an industrial and
railroad centre focusing on the iron and steel
industry, and has an urban area (including
Bessemer) much the same size as it's namesake
Birmingham, England. In the 1950s and 1960s it
brought international attention as the centre of
the Civil Rights struggle for African-Americans
and it was even during this period that the Ku
Klux Klan, reflecting the social tensions of
urban industrialisation, continued to be active
in the area. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Coco Montoya
Emanating from Santa Monica, California, Coco
Montoya's 30-year career began in the mid-70s
with a chance meeting with legendary bluesman
Albert Collins, who asked him to join his band
as drummer. Albert took him under his wing,
becoming his mentor and teaching him the Collins
"icy hot" style of blues guitar. In the early
80s, John Mayall asked Coco to join the
Bluesbreakers. This led to Coco touring the
world for ten years with the legendary
Bluesbreakers before moving on to go out on his
own in 1993. Coco averages over 200 tour dates a
year and in August 2009 he appeared at The Great
British R&B Festival, Colne.
Check out the
Earlyblues interview with Coco
here. |
Beach Volleyball, Santa Monica, California
Famed beachfront city on the borders of Los
Angeles, Santa Monica has been a resort town and
beach playground since the early 20th century.
Beach volleyball was first developed here during
the 1920s and of course now has worldwide
popularity. In 1922 permanent nets were erected
on the beach for playing recreational games on
public parts of the beach and in private clubs,
and even today permanent poles and nets are
maintained on the beach year-round. The Santa
Monica Pier is of course the final destination
of the iconic Route 66. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Charlie Musselwhite
Born in Kosciusko, Mississippi, harp player
Charlie Musselwhite is often classed as a "white
bluesman" although claims to be of Native
American descent, being born in a region
originally inhabited by Choctaw Indians.
However, he said his mother told him he was
actually Cherokee. Whilst still a teenager he
took off up Highway 51 to Chicago where he
received much musical education on the South
Side, meeting blues legends such as Muddy
Waters, Junior Wells, Sonny Boy Williamson,
Buddy Guy, Howlin' Wolf and Little Walter. Since
then he has released over 20 albums, has won 14
W.C. Handy Awards and 6 Grammy nominations as
well as several Lifetime Achievement Awards. |
Tupelo-Baldcypress Swamp, Natchez Trace,
Mississippi
Not really noted for its swamps, here is a small
swamp area off the Natchez Trace Parkway, just
south of Kosciusko, Mississippi. There is a
trail that leads through an abandoned river
channel full of water tupelo and baldcypress
trees living in deep water, full of pesky
mosquitoes when we were there! However, its an
interesting diversion from The Natchez Trance
Parkway, an historical path that extends 440
miles from Natchez, Mississippi to Nashville,
Tennessee. Kosciusko was in fact named after a
Polish general who assisted the US military
during the American Revolution. It is also the
birthplace of Oprey Winfrey and the town is now
featured on the Mississippi Blues Trail. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Kenny Neal
Born in New Orleans Kenny comes from a musical
family and has often performed with many of his
six brothers in his band. Kenny preserves the
'swamp blues' sound of his native south
Louisiana, as befits someone who learned from
Slim Harpo, Buddy Guy and his father, harmonica
player Raful Neal. It was Slim Harpo who handed
three-year old Kenny an old harp one day as a
toy, and that was it! At 13 years old he was
playing in his father's band and at 17 he picked
up a bass for Buddy Guy. Neal's guitar work,
harp and 'age-beyond-his-years' gravelly voice
have served him well ever since. He had an
acclaimed stint on Broadway in 1991 performing
acoustic versions of Langstone Hughes' poetry
set to music by Taj Mahal. The photo was taken
when Kenny appeared at the Burnley Blues
Festival 2009. |
Voodoo Blues Sign, Bourbon Street, New
Orleans, Louisiana
Sign outside a souvenir shop, being the epitome
of shops selling New Orleans tourist
merchandise. Louisiana Voodoo (also known as New
Orleans Voodoo) describes a cultural form of
Afro-American religions which developed within
the French, Spanish and Creole speaking African
American population of Louisiana, originally
brought there from Africa and Haiti by enslaved
people. A key aspect is the knowledge of herbs,
poisons and the practice of wearing charms and
amulets for protection, healing, or other harm
of others. Of course, today Voodoo is a major
tourist attraction in New Orleans. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Ben Prestage
Born the grandson of a Mississippi sharecropper
and great grandson of a vaudeville musician who
toured with Al Jolson, Ben Prestage has been
soaked in blues tradition and Mississippi
culture since birth. Growing up in the swamps of
south central Florida, Ben began to mix
Mississippi Country Blues with his own brand of
Florida Swamp Blues. This
muddy-water-meets-black-water stew has led him
to perform throughout America, in large
festivals, every kind of bar, and even on
downtown sidewalks, spending some time as a
street performer outside the New Daisy Theatre
on Beale Street in Memphis.. He uses a cigarbox
guitar, giving him the facility to play bass and
guitar strings independently, adding a series of
foot pedals that can be manipulated by the heels
and toes of both feet to play a drum kit.
Check out the
Earlyblues interview with Ben
here. |
Beale Street, Memphis, Tennessee
The famed Beale Street, a National Historic
Landmark, significant both in the history of
Memphis and in the history of the blues. The New
Daisy Theatre can just be seen on the right (the
red boarding), opposite the original Daisy
Theatre on the left. It was on these sidewalks
that Ben performed as a street musician. Beale
Street today is a major tourist attraction in
Memphis, with blues clubs, restaurants, shops,
festivals and outdoor concerts (the photo was
taken early on a Sunday morning before the
crowds arrived). Interestingly the only
remaining original business on Beale Street is
'A. Schwab' dry goods store. A family owned
store open 7
days a
week with the motto:
"If you cant find it at A.
Schwab, you're probably better
off without it". |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Hubert Sumlin
Born in Greenwood , Mississippi Hubert got his
first guitar when he was 8 years old. As a boy,
he met Howlin' Wolf by sneaking in to a
performance and later was asked by the Wolf to
relocate to Chicago to join Wolf's band as
second guitarist. Two years later Hubert moved
up to primary guitarist, a position he held
almost continuously (except for a brief spell
playing with Muddy Waters) for the remainder of
Wolf's career. After Wolf passed in 1976 Hubert
continued with other members of the band under
the name "The Wolf Pack". He also recorded under
his own name winning multiple blues awards and 4
Grammy nominations. His final solo recording was
in 2004 just before undergoing lung removal
surgery, yet he continued performing until just
before his death in 2011. The photo was taken at
The Chicago Blues Festival 2010. |
City Hall, Greenwood, Mississippi
Greenwood, nicknamed "Cotton capital of the
World" lies at the meeting of the Tallahatchie
River and the Yalobusha River, forming the Yazoo
River. City Hall was built in the Beaux Arts
architectural style. On the day of its grand
opening in 1930, visitors were greeted by a sign
of a Greek Letter Delta with the legend,
"Greenwood, Gateway of the Delta", and in the
centre of the letter, a bale of cotton.
Greenwood was the home of WGRM Radio, a gospel
music station which aired live performances
including in 1940 (some say 1943) the St John's
Quartet of Inverness, Mississippi featuring the
first live performance of a young guitarist
named Riley King, who later moved to Memphis and
become known as B.B. King. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Earl Thomas
Hailing from San Francisco, California Earl
Thomas came from a family of singers, many
singing blues, country but all singing
gospel music. His father, grandfather and
uncle were all bluesmen, his uncle
performing with Buddy Guy in the early days.
Whilst at college he and his friend
petitioned the college to make a record
instead of some classical piece as was the
norm. They followed a book called 'How to
Make and Sell Your Own Record' and
produced a blues record called "I Sing
The Blues" and marketed it themselves.
It was eventually recorded by Etta James. A
lifelong fan of Ike and Tina Turner, Earl
got a call one day inviting him to sing the
credits of a movie remake of 'Soul to Soul'
, featuring Ike and Tina Turner, Wilson
Picket and the Staple Singers. When Ike
Turner passed Ike's band invited Earl to be
Ike's replacement.
Check out the
Earlyblues interview with Earl
here. |
Powell & Hyde Cable Car, San Francisco,
California
The San Francisco cable car system is the
world's last manually-operated cable car
system and an icon of the city. Listed on
the National Register of Historic Places the
cable cars carry 7 million passengers a
year, mostly tourists, and have been running
since 1873. Each car has a capacity of 60,
29 of them seated with up to 31 standing,
some on the open-sided grip sections hanging
on as best they can! The Cable Car Museum is
about seven blocks away from the Biscuits
and Blues Club on Mason Street where Earl
Thomas regularly performs. The photo was
taken on the steep incline of Powell Street,
a few blocks from the Biscuits and Blues
Club. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Gregg Wright
Gregg first took up guitar while
attending high school at Wichita Falls where
his father, a career military man. was
stationed. Gregg's musical career began in
the mid 70s, playing years of one-nighters
in the Texas and Louisiana southern circuit,
including opening several times for Albert
King and Freddie King. In the 80s Gregg
moved from Louisiana to Los Angeles becoming
a "hired gun" touring guitarist doing albums
and major tours with Mick Fleetwood, Michael
Jackson, Spencer Davis and many others (he
spent 18 months touring with Michael Jackson
at the time 'Thriller' was at its
peak). Gregg has been given the accolade
"King of the Rockin' Blues" and is the only
person in music history to have played with
the two biggest record sellers of all time.
Check out the
Earlyblues interview with Gregg
here. |
Britten Water Tower, Groom, Texas
Wichita Falls is currently under
exceptional drought conditions and is
conserving water in every way possible with
emergency action being taken by local
authorities. Coincidentally just north of
Wicheta adjacent to Route 66, there's a
large water tower leaning markedly in a
pasture, maybe spilling their precious
water? Many Route 66 travellers think the
tower's angle is due to having “one leg
shorter than the others.” However, the true
reason is that the tower's central water
conduit, intended to lead below ground, is
longer than any of the legs, and, since it
was never permanently installed in the
ground, causes the structure to lean. Gregg
would no doubt have taken the Route 66 trail
west to Los Angeles when he became a "hired
gun" guitarist. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Zora Young
Born in West Point, Mississippi Zora Young
shares the same hometown as Howlin' Wolf,
indeed she is in fact a distant relative.
Zora's family moved to Chicago when she was
seven years old where she sang gospel at the
Greater Harvest Baptist Church. As an adult
she began singing blues and R&B and over the
course of her career played with Junior
Wells, Bobby Rush, Albert King, and B.B.
King amongst others: also recording with
Willie Dixon and Sunnyland Slim. She has
been the featured performer at six Chicago
Blues Festivals, has toured Europe more than
30 times and played the role of Bessie Smith
in the stage show 'The Heart of The
Blues'. |
West Point, Mississippi
Famed as the hometown of Howlin' Wolf, West
Point had its early beginnings as an
agricultural and railroad town with a rich
heritage, historically the area has a blend of
African-American, White and Native American
lineage. Today it is the home of the Howlin'
Wolf Museum (where the
photo was taken),
sponsored by the Howlin' Wolf Blues Society and
on each Labor Day the town hosts the Howlin'
Wolf Memorial Blues Festival and Praire Arts
Festival. Interestingly previous blues festivals
have included artists featured in this
exhibition: David
Honeyboy Edwards,
Hubert Sumlin, Alvin Youngblood Hart and Ben
Prestage. |
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
Website © Copyright 2000-2014 Alan White. All Rights Reserved.
All exhibition photos and text © Copyright 2008-2014 Alan White. All Rights Reserved.
For further information please email:
alan.white@earlyblues.com
Click on the
logo for more blues history
Click on the logo for the main menu
|
|
|