Dave
Alvin Pays Tribute to Earl Hooker in
the third release of the series:
"Variations
on Earl's Rumba" AVAILABLE NOW only at YepRoc.com and DaveAlvin.net
VARIATIONS
ON EARL'S RUMBA is The Guilty Men's Tribute to one of our favorite
guitarists, Earl Hooker. He's a legend among blues musicians,
for peerless technique, his clean slide guitar style as well
as his fluid single string picking (his playing is also respected
outside the blues community - master Celtic/Folk/Rock guitarist
Richard Thompson told me that Earl Hooker was one of his favorite
guitarists - Now, that's high praise!). From his earliest recordings
at Sun Records, through the many tracks he cut for King, Chess,
Argo, Checker, Chief, Arhoolie, Blue Thumb, both as a solo artist
and as sideman (for Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Junior Wells,
Charles Brown and Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee to name a few),
Earl Hooker displayed how he was, in writer Bill Dahl's words,
"an endlessly inventive fountain of ideas that other guitarists
drank from regularly." He could also bring his hard blues
chops to jazz, country and, as his original version of the instrumental
(GUITAR RUMBA) shows, latin music. Unfortunately, Earl Hooker
died too young and never got the kind of "guitar God"
acknowledgement he rightly deserved.
I
only saw him play live once at The Ash Grove Club in the early
seventies when I was a kid. Sadly, I got there late for whatever
reason (I probably had trouble that night getting the ride the
twenty miles up to the club - this was before I was old enough
to drive) and only heard his last two songs. Oh well. Right
place, almost the right time.
This
recording features the 2007 Guilty Men line up and we cut it
with Craig Parker Adams doing the engineering at his Winslow
Court Studio in Los Angeles. Chris Miller is on the slide guitar
(doing a damned fine recreation of Earl's slide style), Gregory
Boaz on the laid back bass, Joe Terry playing the "Havana
after midnight" piano and Steve Mugalian supplying the
drums and persuasive percussion. We were fortunate to be joined
in the studio by mi amigo Chris Gaffney on the seductive accordion
and my hometown hero, Dale Spaulding, blowing some exotic harmonica.
I love playing this song and every now and then it'll pop up
in a live show when the mood strikes. I hope you enjoy it and
then go out and get some Earl Hooker records.
I'd
like to give credit to my good friend (and fellow Earl fan),
the soulful Mister Hudson Marquez for the use of his evocative
portrait of Earl Hooker. Thank you very, very much brother.
Dave
Alvin – 9/20/2007
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