Showing posts with label Toby Walker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toby Walker. Show all posts

October 13, 2022

The Catch-back, vol. 3 : Herb Ellis - Pat Boyack - Buckwheat Zydeco - Doug MacLeod - Eddie Kirkland - Johnny Cash - Toby Walker - Lost Bayou Ramblers - Mercy - Robert Cage - Shawn Pittman & Jay Moeller

...some that deserved to be featured here…


Herb Ellis - Texas Swings (1992)

Get the album at the usual place...

When Herb Ellis celebrates his native Texas
A
t times, when the violin and the guitar are talking together, it almost sounds like the unforgettable pair Django Reinhardt-Stéphane Grappelli. The two French gypsy jazz musicians actually used to play some of the standards featured here : "Undecided", "It Had To Be You", "Sweet Georgia Brown". But no, here it's Dallas native Herb Ellis with a group of fine Western swing-Country music instrumentists : pianist Floyd Domino, pedal steel guitar master Herb Remington, fiddlers Johnny Gimble and Bobby Bruce, and… Willie Nelson on guitar, not forgetting the two Tommys' rhythm section, Aslup on bass and Perkins on drums.

This 10-song all-instrumental album features mainly Western swing and jazz standards, with only two Ellis compositions. If the final "America the Beautiful" is a disputable choice in my view, the nine preceding tracks are cheerfully swinging without being wild. The exciting sound of Remington's pedal steel is sometimes reminding that of Buddy Emmons on Danny Gatton's two "Redneck Jazz Explosion" 1978 live albums, and the fiddles bring a vintage Country & Western sound on some tracks.

May 29, 2022

Little Toby Walker - Little Toby Walker (2001)




The album

Little big (blues) man
I
n 2001, Toby Walker, well known here (1), was still "Little". Since then he rightfully dropped down this nickname for the simple reason that he is one of the most talented contemporary acoustic country blues (slide) guitar picker. A simple listen to the first track of this debut album, the jokingly titled "Take A Little Walk With Me" (little walk, Little Walker… he he he), would be enough to be convinced. But you just don't want to stop to this opening track. The 16 following songs are all in the same vein : a treat of finger-picked and slide old-time Delta country blues !

Like the pre-war bluesmen, Walker loves to sing and write story-telling songs, preferably humorous and if possible filled with sexual connotations. The album is full of them.

The tracklist features originals from Walker ("Take A Little Walk With Me", "Who's Gonna Be Your Sweet Man Tonight ?", "Full Figured Women" with "a nod to Taj Mahal" "Big Legged Women"), and personal versions of both old traditionals ("Stack O' Lee", "Irish Fiddle Medley", "Monkey In The Pool Room", "Sitting On Top Of The World" and "Catfish Blues") and songs from renowned bluesmen (Big Bill Broonzy, Blind Willie McTell, Scott Joplin, Sonny Boy Williamson II) or less famous artists (Bo Carter, Tampa Red, Sam Chatmon, Jack Owens).

The fourteen covers are seriously revisited by Walker. The case of "Kismet Rag" is a good example of Walker's talented adaptation work : Scott Joplin, who wrote this instrumental, was not playing guitar but… piano ! Still Walker, helped by the arrangement of Dick Fegy, makes it sound so natural on guitar.

Among the traditionals picked up by Walker, some have an interesting history. "Stack O' Lee", also known as "Stack-a-Lee", "Stagger Lee", "Stagolee" and other variants, is a traditional field holler about the shooting of Billy Lyons by a bad tempered mobster pimp and gambler named "Stag" Lee Shelton, in St. Louis (Missouri), at Christmas 1895. The blues rebel tradition has always shown an ambiguous fascination for outlaws and Walker sings it with very expressive intonations over a devilish guitar picking, insisting on the chorus phrase  "he's a baaad man, yes a baaad man Stack O' Lee".

Sonny Boy Williamson II
"Born Blind", better known as "Eyesight to the Blind", was recorded first in 1951 by Sonny Boy Williamson II aka Aleck "Rice" Miller. In 1957, he re-recorded it, this time under the title "Born Blind" backed in particular by Otis Spann (piano), Robert Lockwood and Luther Tucker (guitars), and Willie Dixon (bass). The song was covered later notably by B.B. King, Mose Allison, Mike Bloomfield, David Bromberg, Eric Clapton, and used by Pete Townshend in a musically much transformed version, for the Who's famous rock opera "Tommy". 

"Sitting On Top Of The World", was first recorded in 1930 by Walter Vinson & Lonnie Chatmon, from the Mississippi Sheiks, and later covered by numerous artists in different genres : blues (Big Bill Broonzy, Charley Patton, Howlin' Wolf in a Chicago blues styled electric version), folk, country (Milton Brown, Bob Willis, Willie Nelson), bluegrass (Bill Monroe, Doc Watson), rock (Cream). With such coverage the song became a standard of American folk music.

Note that the Chatmon (or Chatman) family, known as The Mississippi Sheiks from the 1930s, is very well represented on the album : in addition to "Sitting On Top Of The World", "All Around Man" was created by Bo Carter whose real name was actually Armenter Chatmon. His brother Sam would be the author of "The Lead's All Gone".

Jim Jackson
"Catfish Blues" a perfect example of the double-entendre art mastered by blues singers, is a famous traditional Delta blues song whose lyrics appeared for the first time in 1928 in "Kansas City Blues Part 3" sung by a popular black medicine-show entertainer and songster named Jim Jackson. Charley Patton recorded it as “Going To Move To Alabama” in 1929. A blues song actually titled "Catfish Blues" was recorded by Robert Petway in 1941. In the early 1950s, Muddy Waters adapted it as "Rolling Stone". Later, in the late 1960s, it was again covered by Jimi Hendrix.

Walker manages the "tour de force" of making these revisited covers sound as "new" as his own originals. His light hoarse singing is highly expressive. In finger-picking style as in slide, on regular acoustic or steel resonator guitar, the man's skills are impressive but without any showing-off which is the mark of a great guitar master. This first strike was indeed a master one. 


Toby Walker's web site  (https://www.littletobywalker.com) features several videos from his 2019 concert at the Our Times Coffeehouse, Garden City, NY. : https://www.littletobywalker.com/recent-concert-videos.html
Videos
Links to Walker's live shows are available on the page : https://onurblues.blogspot.com/2022/03/toby-walker-shake-shake-mama-2011.html
I invite you to visit them, if you haven't already.
I just add this one, previously unreleased on this blog : On line concert, 2020 : https://youtu.be/Di4ZLrYClnY

Following are live performances of songs from the album, sometimes completed with original versions by their creators :
"Texas Tornado" : → https://youtu.be/eQKQgWkPnVo
"Savannah Mama" : https://youtu.be/Py7uNXdxwIM
"Kismet Rag" : → https://youtu.be/QL8ITP3kbvA
"Full Figured Woman" : → https://youtu.be/38UP_9kV0s0
"Irish Fiddle Medley" : → https://youtu.be/QfcB9yhThnc
"Monkey In The Pool Room" : https://youtu.be/Laj8vNOWvK4
"Boogie Woogie Dance" : → https://youtu.be/2m6aoucWMLQ
"Born Blind" + "Keep your Lamps Trimmed and Burnin'"  (with wife Carol on upright bass): https://youtu.be/Xj49Y-tTUsk
As "Eyesight to the Blind"
by Sonny Boy Williamson II :
by B.B. King with ex-Pink Floyd David Gilmour : https://youtu.be/2ieI49hlOUw
by Eric Clapton : https://youtu.be/D6Td2BPrTbw
by Johnny Winter : https://youtu.be/KmkoH64h4Z8
by the Who in "Tommy" under the title "The Hawker" :
- in the 1969 album : https://youtu.be/iKCXGFn0Abg
- in the 1975 movie, by Eric Clapton : https://youtu.be/3FjPt1fZsSs
Incredible how much a song can evolve !
Johnnie Temple
"The Lead's All Gone" : https://youtu.be/glvwxz2JhgA
by Bo Carter (1931) as "My Pencil Won't Write No More" : https://youtu.be/Wdwu0I_vhXk
by Johnnie Temple (1935) as "Lead Pencil Blues" : https://youtu.be/Sfab0BHgkSo
"Sitting On Top Of The World" : https://youtu.be/n1PR5x7Mxzs
by Sam Chatmon : https://youtu.be/ueEQKZcXfjc
"Catfish Blues"
by Robert Petway : https://youtu.be/E9z7eCCRAtY
by Jimi Hendrix (1967) : https://youtu.be/ovieyGdSaig




Robert Petway

Sam Chatmon

The Mississippi Sheiks


Big Bill Broonzy

Howlin' Wolf
Johnny Winter



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May 05, 2022

Toby Walker - Hand Picked (2008)

Walkin' with Master Walker
The old red tractor on the front cover sets things straight and clear : we're bound for a tour of rural American music : country blues, rag, folk and countryfied bluegrass (or maybe the opposite). And, as the title "Hand Picked" double-entendre announces, we're invited to a harvest of great ripe finger-style guitar. Toby Walker, who lost his nickname "Little" long ago for good reasons, is rambling around his musical orchard with his acoustic guitars, backed on some tracks by a minimal drumless band featuring excellent fiddler Jay Ungar and upright acoustic or electric bass by Molly Mason or Tom Griffith.

We already talked about the man's career in our review of his 2011 album "Shake Shake Mama" (1), so this time let's concentrate solely on the musical content of this album.

When you hear the amazing sound of Walker's National Steel guitar on "Hey Good Lookin'" or on his incredible version of "Mind Your Own Business", two Hank Wiliams covers, his extraordinary Piedmont finger-picking style on "Better Luck Next Time", or his slide technique on his original "Little Dixie", you know you're hearing a master at work. Nothing being more difficult to record than an acoustic guitar, be it a steel one, you understand he was brilliantly served by the two sound engineers, Larry Moser and Gilbert Hetherwick. Moreover when you listen to half of his lyrics, or those of the songs he adapted or chose to cover, you realize the guy has a serious sense of humor ! On top of that he's not only a top guitarist but also a great story teller, and an excellent singer. What else do you need to enjoy fifty memorable minutes of acoustic music ?!

Walker's guitar wanders through blues, rag, folk and bluegrass-tinged country music with equal talent, enhanced by the beat of the bass on six tracks, and on four tracks conversing with the old-time earthly sound of the fiddle that transports you in some backforests and mountains of the Appalachians.

The jumping bluegrassy tempo of the opening "Big Meat Shakin' On The Bone" announces the general tone of  the album : steel guitar, upright bass, nimble fiddle and funny lyrics. The two Hank Williams songs are outstanding pieces of American rural folklore, especially the fantastic "Mind Your Own Business", again such an incredible lesson of finger-picking style that it would discourage any guitar beginner ! Tracks like "Central Islip Jail Blues" or "Mama Keeps Her Kitchen Clean" illustrate the man's humorous storytelling talent worth that of a real short story writer.

With his version of the traditional "Work Holler", Walker takes us right down in the cotton fields of the Mississippi Delta, which is also the land of Skip James for whom Walker has a strong admiration that he shows  through his unusual melancholic versions of "Hard Time Killing Floor" and "Special Rider Blues".

The album closes with two delicate Walker's creations : the instrumental folk "Leon's Little Girl" and the beautifully moving country ballad "The Secret". When this marvelous album ends and silence suddenly leaves you with a sad feeling of loss, the only way to regain a joyful mood is to play it again. 

 
Toby Walker Web site
 :
https://www.littletobywalker.com

Videos
Lots of links to live Walker's full shows were already proposed on this blog on the page mentioned above, I invite you to visit them, if you haven't already.
Following are the only live performances of songs from the album available on YT.

"Big Meat Shakin' On The Bone" : https://youtu.be/ZiR_LHk-wKk

"Better Luck Next Time" :
https://youtu.be/tbQq0-iF2d4
https://youtu.be/epb8mfVDH5M

"Hey Good Lookin'" : https://youtu.be/-KdtxGds20M

"Bootlegger's Blues" : https://youtu.be/qTYE3VhCBP8

"Mind Your Own Business" : https://youtu.be/_f6lusq-b7k

"Special Rider Blues" : https://youtu.be/X6uqCUgWy8s

"Leon's Little Girl" : https://youtu.be/gsPNruTbrJs














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March 18, 2022

Toby Walker - Shake Shake Mama (2011)

> The album

The roots finger style wizard

Toby Walker is as much a keeper of the old acoustic blues traditions, in their different regional styles, as a passer on to younger generations through his guitar teachings, and as a full creator able to transform old songs through his personal creative style.
A guitar virtuoso, wearing an eternal cap and tropical shirts, who confesses he probably has some 50,000 hours of training in his fingers, he went down many times to the Mississippi Delta or the North Carolina and Virginia Piedmont to meet and learn blues styles of elders like Etta Baker, Eugene Powell (Sonny Boy Nelson), Jack Owens and Bud Spires, James 'Son' Thomas, R.L. Burnside, Turner Foddrell, Wade Walton... He won the prestigious International Blues Challenge Award-Solo Category in 2002.

A humorous hijack of Jimmy "Duck Holmes Blue Front Cafe
juke-joint in Bentonia

 For six tears, he was a regular contributor at the famous Fur Peace Ranch guitar-workshop of Jorma Kaukonen (Jefferson Airlane, Hot Tuna…), and is still teaching blues guitar to high school kids or through videos or DVDs published by Happy Traum’s Homespun Music. As if it was not enough, between two album's recording sessions, he tours the U.S. and abroad, and is now referred to as the "finger-picking guitar wizard".
And he really is. To achieve such a status he had to leave his 20-year long job at the U.S. Postal Service, and later endure a divorce, but the result, as can be heard on this great 2011 album, was worth those sacrifices. At least for the listener.

These 16 tracks give a good idea of Walker's taste : the featured songs are signed by Mance Lipscomb, Blind Willie McTell (2 tracks), Robert Johnson, Blind Boy Fuller (2), Blind Blake, Blind Willie Johnson, Muddy Waters (3), Huddie Ledbetter (aka Leadbelly), Big Bill Broonzy, Fred McDowell and Bo Carter (*). 

With Etta Baker

His study of old-school blues with guitar players from whom he learned special finger-picking and slide style techniques, rhythmical syncopation and open tuning secrets, allowed him not only to master but also to synthesize a wide range of styles (Delta, Piedmont, Chicago or Texas, rags, folk…) into a personal blend that makes him unique. His use of rare vintage guitars, benefiting at the same time from modern recording techniques, produces a superb sound.

On stage with wife Carol

His versions of the swinging "Shake Shake Mama", of "Mama Tain't Long For The Day" and "Travelin' Riverside Blues", of the superb "Midnight Special", of "Can't Be Satisfied" and "Broke Down Engine", or of the rocking "Cigarette Blues" are amazing. If Walker's raspy voice obviously doesn't sound Afro-American, he's still managing elegantly, and the swinging upright bass played by Mrs Walker (probably before the divorce) adds a welcome depth that underlines Walker's exceptional guitar style.
His synthesis between Piedmont elaborate finger-picking technique and Delta raw style, spiced with a bit of Texas or Chicago touch, is just a treat for the ears !

(*) Who created what : "Shake Shake Mama" : Mance Lipscomb - "Crazy 'bout An Automobile" : Trad. - "Mama Tain't Long For The Day" : Blind Willie McTell - "Travelin' Riverside Blues" : Robert Johnson - "Keep On Trucking Mama" : Blind Boy Fuller - "Tootie Blues" : Blind Blake - "Keep Your Lamp Trimmed And Burnin'" : Blind Willie Johnson - "I Got To Love Somebody" : Muddy Waters - "Midnight Special" : Huddie Ledbetter - "Shuffle Rag" : Big Bill Broonzy - "Can't Be Satisfied" : Muddy Waters - "What's The Matter Now" : Fred McDowell - "Meat Shakin' Mama" : Blind Boy Fuller - "Broke Down Engine" : Blind Willie McTell - "She's 19 Years Old" : Muddy Waters - "Cigarette Blues" : Bo Carter.

The disciple
With Eugene Powell

Check up Walker's web site: https://www.littletobywalker.com/, you'll find interesting things, especially in the "Learning from the Masters" and "How I Got The Blues" sections.
"Chasin' The Blues" a documentary by Toby Walker about his field trips to Mississippi and North Carolina to meet and learn from Eugene Powell, Jack Owens, James 'Son' Thomas, Etta Baker... : https://youtu.be/LavKk0rH-YI
Interview before Walker's UK Tour in 2019 : https://youtu.be/tRaHdCmr4Mw
Interview with Happy Traum : https://youtu.be/jWyLMd3xPus
"Canned Heat Blues" with Jorma Kaukonen: https://youtu.be/XVQjNVFU2cs

The teacher

The "Toby Waker in the Studio" & "Blues Time With Toby Walker" series : https://www.youtube.com/user/tobywalker123

The performer
Live at Jorma Kaukonen's Fur Peace Ranch (entire set) : https://youtu.be/6tPDV6KVvYE
At the Long Beach Barrier Blues Fest.in 2015 : https://youtu.be/ojQXT440ri8

Toby Walker with Jorma Kaukonen
Private concert in Merritts Path (Long Island, New York), in 2021 : https://youtu.be/jTB5DLdmQ1o
At The Brick Box in Rutland (Vermont) in 2019 : https://youtu.be/12GpR4aMdsg
On the Folk Project Television in 2020 : https://youtu.be/nA66zUKgdQM?t=348
Toby Walker & Ken Korb (harmonica and banjo) who used to play together as Toby & The Rocket reunite after 15 years for a performance at the Long Island Blues Warehouse : https://youtu.be/VqQaibmiOq0

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