Friday, March 28, 2008

Elmore James Jr. Video from Tamms Show at the Hideout

Here's a video from our March 15 show at the Hideout in Chicago. It was shot by videographer/filmmaker Gretchen Hasse and a Loyola University student to promote the Tamms Prison protest mission, championed by yearten.org.

Ms. Hasse was quite inspired by the evening, saying she "thought the music was so powerful and appropriate to the Tamms cause - the whole blues philosophy of finding beauty in the worst situations, and using that beauty to help you through and inspire others to the same - I was really re-educated that night as to where the blues come from and what they mean."

Nicely said.

The first half of the video is an eloquent, heartfelt speech by Mary L. Johnson, mother of a current Tamms prisoner. The second half is Elmore James Jr. and the Broomdusters playing Cummins Prison Blues.

Enjoy the video below.

--blue dave

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Sunday, March 23, 2008

Elmo Raises the Roof at the Hideout for Prison Protesters


Well, it's been a week since our March 15 show at the Hideout in Chicago. Better get some thoughts down while I can still remember it!

Kent Lambert of the TAMMS Prison Coalition organized a great event, and from what I understand, it was a great fund raising success for the group whose mission is to dramatically turn around or ultimately shut down the maximum security prison in downstate Illinois.

One of the best moments was the heartfelt, eloquent speech from Mary Johnson, mother of a TAMMS prisoner.

Our band played two sets of hard driving blues. The musical highlight was probably Cummins Prison Farm Blues, due to its obvious relevance to evening's theme. Elmore James Jr. set up the song with a personal recollection of the Cummins Prison's impact on him and his community.

Rupert, the opening act, performed some amazing avant guard jazz, led by trumpeter Jamie Branch. Cool stuff!

The place was packed all night. The crowd was enthusiastic and appreciative. Thanks to everyone who came out and participated in a truly remarkable event. And thanks to Tim and the Hideout for hosting a most excellent evening. (Great job on the sound, Mike!)

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Friday, February 22, 2008

Chicago Blues Hall of Fame Videos


The Chicago Blues Hall of Fame website has a few cool videos worth watching. You'll find a couple by Elmore James Jr., recorded a few years back at The Big O bar and the Keynote Lounge (Chicago Southside clubs). Also Sexie Jamie, a featured artist with the Broomdusters Blues band, singing Wang Dang Doodle. Plus, vids with Vance Kelly and Magic Slim.

They're pretty good quality -- decent sound and lighting. I think you'll enjoy them.

Here's the link:
http://www.bluesgonecyber.com/video.html

I don't know what's going on with the Chicago Blues Hall of Fame organization and their website. The last updates were over a year ago, so it's a little neglected.

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Sunday, February 17, 2008

Blues Benefits Tamms Prison Protest Group

On Saturday, March 15 2007, The Hideout, one of Chicago’s best kept entertainment secrets, will host a benefit for the Tamms Year Ten Coalition. Music includes our own Elmore James Jr. and Rupert.

Tamms Ten Year Campaign is a coalition to publicize and protest the conditions at Tamms C-MAX prison in Illinois. To mark the tenth anniversary of the prison’s opening in downstate Illinois, the group has scheduled a series of events to raise funds and awareness of the prison conditions.

In their own words…

"The Year Ten coalition asks the people of Illinois to join our coalition of prisoners, families and concerned citizens in protesting the IDOC’s misguided and inhumane policies, and in calling for legislation to end the torture of prisoners in Illinois."
Curious, I did a little Google research on the facility. This looks like an awfully bad place. I don’t really know enough to take a position on it, but I thoroughly support the efforts of the Ten Year Coalition to bring attention to the situation.

The Hideout is located just east of Elston and north of North Ave. As they say, “The Hideout is a regular guy bar for irregular folks who just don’t fit in, or just don’t want to fit in.”


They host a lot of benefits there, and definitely have a strong political point of view. That’s so unusual for a commercial operation, but the risk has gained them a strong following of bands and music fans who share this way of looking at the world, and wish to celebrate it together.

We’re looking forward to performing there on the Ides of March.

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Saturday, January 26, 2008

Growing up Elmore James Jr.

The Kalamazoo Gazette ran an article just before we performed in their fine town on Jan. 18. The article is based on a telephone interview the writer did with Elmo, so there's some good, personal material to enjoy.

Elmo talked about his childhood, what Elmore James was like as a father, and his life after moving from Mississippi to Chicago (There's some exclusive stuff here that we haven't heard before.)

View the Growing Up Elmore James Jr. Newspaper Article

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Liner Notes from "Daddy Gave Me the Blues" - Elmore James Jr.

The liner notes from Elmore James Jr.'s latest CD also tell a pretty good story about the artist's history. (Written by noted blues journalist & author, David Whiteis.)

It's pretty difficult to get diehard blues aficionados to agree about anything, but few dispute the genius of Elmore James. Born in Richland, Mississippi in 1918, he was the rootsy yet forward-looking guitar innovator who updated and intensified Robert Johnson's trailblazing slide style and made Dust My Broom (which some have claimed that he originated) into a modern blues classic; he was the cagey stylist who converted Tampa Red's It Hurts Me Too from a lugubrious ballad into a wracked testimonial of anguished devotion; he was also the ribald Lothario whose fierce slide ululations sounded like the lust-choked wails of Eros himself as he pleaded, cajoled, and rasped Shake Your Moneymaker to a hot-bodied lady, and the impish trickster whose buoyant fretboard zips and keening tenor vocals brought toughness and ironic wit to such erstwhile laments as Done Somebody Wrong and Sunnyland Train. And, not incidentally, he was the hard-drinking, free-loving bluesman whose [mis-]adventures, already the stuff of legend in his lifetime, became elevated to near-sacred myth in the years since his death in 1963.

In the late '30s James, still a scuffling local musician, entered into a romantic liaison with Nora Mae Johnson, a Richmond, Mississippi restaurant owner. That union produced Earnest Johnson, who was born on August 21,1939. Although hardly your typical stay-at-home dad, James remained in contact with the family; when he passed through Richmond he'd drop in, maybe spread some cash around, and sometimes play and sing while he was there. As Earnest grew up, his father's music became imbedded in his mind; he also remembered the Cadillac his dad bestowed upon the family in the early '50s, after his first recorded version of Dust My Broom (on the Jackson, Mississippi-based Trumpet label) became a hit. Music was the career he wanted to pursue.

By the late '50s, Johnson was working with such Delta-based notables as guitarist Johnny Temple and drummer Willie Nix. Like countless others, though, he hungered for the brighter lights and more lucrative opportunities on offer in northern cities like Chicago. In 1965 he made the trip north. Temple had given him the address of Willie Dixon, the famed bassist/songwriter/A&R man who masterminded so many of the legendary postwar Chess sides. Dixon urged him to change his stage name from 'Earnest Jr. - Mr. Soul' to the more eye-catching “Elmore James Jr,” and set up a recording date, but the session never occurred. After that, Earnest/ Elmore Jr. did what most of his contemporaries had to do -- he took a day job and tried to insinuate himself into the competitive South Side club scene. He remembers such luminaries as the Aces, featuring Louis Myers on lead guitar, as being among the bands he worked with. But until the mid-'70s, when he cut a series of sides for Johnny Vincent's Ace label in Jackson, his dream of becoming a recording artist eluded him. (An earlier session for the obscure Chicago-based CJ label remains unissued.)

And that, until now, is pretty much the Elmore James Jr. story. This CD is that rarest of artifacts - a genuine blues “discovery,” an album featuring an artist who, until recently, was virtually unknown outside his community, and whose roots extend back into the very earth from which modern urban blues arose. The full range of Elmore Jr.'s talents are on display - rough-hewn evocations of his father's legendary 'broomdusting' style, surprisingly elegant, jazz-tinged uptown songcraft; and, of course, that unmistakable from-the-heart blues sensibility that can't be faked or approximated.

Listening to this music, you can smell the whiskey, perfume, and cigar smoke in a hard-rocking juke on a Saturday night; you can feel the voluptuous flesh of the big, fine lady who's swaying back and forth in your arms; you can see, out of the corner of your eye, the hipsters slipping a reefer back and forth in a dark corner as they toss cards onto a battered wooden table and guard their money stashes with nonchalant, ominous intensity. In short, this is the 'real thing,' the kind of blues that's often advertised but seldom delivered. And the best news is that Elmore James Jr. is still active, still delivering, and - in the wake of this CD - has expanded his touring schedule to the point where he may well blow into your town sometime soon. Don't miss him when he does.

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New CD: Daddy Gave Me the Blues

Elmo's new CD, "Daddy Gave Me the Blues," will be released soon. Elmo traveled to California this past summer to record it with Cadillac Zack.

I got an early release copy, and it's fantastic -- can't stop playing it! We'll be adding the new tunes into our performances, so please come out and catch the new material.

More Info About the New Recording:

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Kalamazoo State Theater - January 2008

On Friday, January 18, we were honored to appear at the Kalamazoo State Theater in Kalamazoo, MI. The headliner was Larry McCray, who was absolutely fantastic!

The venue seats about 1,500, and it looked pretty full, although it's hard to see the audience clearly with all those stage lights shining down. The crowd was enthusiastic, friendly and very responsive to Elmo's brand of deep Chicago and Delta blues.

It was a long drive from Chicago, but far longer on the return trip. We encountered freaky icy conditions for the first 40 miles. Thank God our drummer Harvey was at the wheel -- that was some intense shit!

The event was part of the WRKR Bud Blues Series. Upcoming artists include Tommy Castro, Magic Slim, Lurrie Bell, Coco Montoya, Tab Benoit, and E.C. Scott.

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Welcome

I'm Dave Lenef, guitarist for the Elmore James Jr. & the Broom Dusters band. I'll be posting to and moderating this blog.

Look here for news, event announcements, opinions, comments related to Elmo and our world of deep Chicago blues.

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