Time: 34:10
Size: 78.2 MB
Styles: Jazz-blues vocals
Year: 2015
Art: Front
[2:48] 1. Ain't No God (Feat. Ricky Fataar)
[4:05] 2. It's All In The Game
[3:53] 3. Funny How Time Slips Away
[4:27] 4. Life
[3:17] 5. And I Love Her
[2:21] 6. Nuits Blanche
[5:41] 7. On The Banks Of The Ohio
[3:57] 8. Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me
[3:37] 9. When You're Young (Feat. Ricky Fataar)
I was born in Bakersfield, California, and lived there one entire month. So much for the Bakersfield sound, I suppose. My father and two uncles were evangelists in the San Joaquin Valley, and my first exposure to music was in the funky, four-square, hellfire-and-damnation Churches of Christ up and down Highway 99. No musical instruments were permitted because none are mentioned in the New Testament, so it was four-part gospel—vocals only. There was a weathered old fiddler in one congregation who looked like he’d emptied many a bottle before his conversion, but he wasn’t permitted to fiddle during service—he’d play soulfully at the Sunday after-meetin’ picnics. I was never religious, never baptized, but I loved the singing, and those gospel songs still sound in my mind. “Are your garments spotless, are they white as snow, are you washed in the blood of the lamb?” Did that lamb have bleach in its blood?
When I visited the Mississippi Delta, it reminded me of the flat, crop-filled San Joaquin Valley, which was in fact populated in the twenties and thirties by migrants from the South. My parents’ families headed west from Arkansas and Oklahoma. I’ll credit my mother for my sinful ways—here was dancing, drinking, and smoking, recordings of Tommy Dorsey, Louis Armstrong, Frank Sinatra. One day she and I walked into the house and the floor was littered with shattered 78s. Her piano was upended, her sheet music in shreds. Fundamentalist wrath is nothing new. Maybe my passions for wine, women, and song were reactions to my dad’s church? Their communion beverage was Welch’s grape juice. I developed a thirst for the fermented fruit of the vine. And sex, of course, was not created by God. That was the devil’s work.
In the fifties, pop music and high school dances—Wolfman Jack on my radio under the covers at midnight—and my first live shows: Fats Domino rocking for hours at the Pismo Beach Auditorium and then Bill Haley and the Comets at a school dance, but I didn’t get the bug to sing until I moved from San Luis Obispo to Berkeley in 1962. My wife at the time came home one day with the double LP, Jimmy Reed at Carnegie Hall, a life changer. A close friend played a fine guitar, another was skilled on the bass, and we started jamming.
I took up harmonica, guitar, and piano, but never developed into much. Playing an instrument seemed to get in my way—singing was all I wanted to do. By the late sixties I had a band called The Roaches — see the obvious Beatles connection — and we were getting sub-survival gigs at bars and school dances. Drugs took their toll, but, luckily, cocaine gave me nosebleeds. When yet another drummer bit the dust, I couldn’t bear the idea of auditioning to replace him.
I could not believe it when someone offered to buy my little handcraft business making handbags out of Oriental rug scraps. I used the money to bum around Europe for four months. I intended to form a new band when I returned — instead, I borrowed five thousand bucks from my girlfriend and opened a hole-in-the-wall wine shop. It was to be a part-time gig, maybe make enough profit to buy a new harmonica, but the shop took off and took me with it.
When I visited the Mississippi Delta, it reminded me of the flat, crop-filled San Joaquin Valley, which was in fact populated in the twenties and thirties by migrants from the South. My parents’ families headed west from Arkansas and Oklahoma. I’ll credit my mother for my sinful ways—here was dancing, drinking, and smoking, recordings of Tommy Dorsey, Louis Armstrong, Frank Sinatra. One day she and I walked into the house and the floor was littered with shattered 78s. Her piano was upended, her sheet music in shreds. Fundamentalist wrath is nothing new. Maybe my passions for wine, women, and song were reactions to my dad’s church? Their communion beverage was Welch’s grape juice. I developed a thirst for the fermented fruit of the vine. And sex, of course, was not created by God. That was the devil’s work.
In the fifties, pop music and high school dances—Wolfman Jack on my radio under the covers at midnight—and my first live shows: Fats Domino rocking for hours at the Pismo Beach Auditorium and then Bill Haley and the Comets at a school dance, but I didn’t get the bug to sing until I moved from San Luis Obispo to Berkeley in 1962. My wife at the time came home one day with the double LP, Jimmy Reed at Carnegie Hall, a life changer. A close friend played a fine guitar, another was skilled on the bass, and we started jamming.
I took up harmonica, guitar, and piano, but never developed into much. Playing an instrument seemed to get in my way—singing was all I wanted to do. By the late sixties I had a band called The Roaches — see the obvious Beatles connection — and we were getting sub-survival gigs at bars and school dances. Drugs took their toll, but, luckily, cocaine gave me nosebleeds. When yet another drummer bit the dust, I couldn’t bear the idea of auditioning to replace him.
I could not believe it when someone offered to buy my little handcraft business making handbags out of Oriental rug scraps. I used the money to bum around Europe for four months. I intended to form a new band when I returned — instead, I borrowed five thousand bucks from my girlfriend and opened a hole-in-the-wall wine shop. It was to be a part-time gig, maybe make enough profit to buy a new harmonica, but the shop took off and took me with it.
Down In Heaven