I first became aware of Bobby in 1964 when Ain't Nothing You Can Do reached number 3 in my personal top ten and Yield Not To Temptation reached number 1 the next year. I think at the time he was primarily a soul singer for me and I associated him with James Brown in my mind, yet blues was always at the heart of his work. But Bobby was, and is, unique. I love his famous grunt and I could listen to great LPs like Two Steps From the Blues over and over again. I've seen him quite a few times over the years, including New Orleans Jazzfest. in London at the Astoria in the mid 90s (pictured) and at the House of Blues and he remains, at the age of 79, someone who I will not miss if he is appearing in any town I'm in. Many of his recordings were made with Wayne Bennett on guitar and my picture shows Wayne playing in New Orleans in 1991, a year before he died.
Before the Bland programme, the BBC's blues weekend featured a series of blues performances shown on BBC between 1964 (John Lee Hooker) and 1991 (Buddy Guy). In between there were some great performances from blues originals such as Champion Jack Dupree. T Bone Walker, Son House. Freddie King, B B King and Pops Staples, plus white artists such as the Kinks, Pretty Things, Long John Baldry, Delaney and Bonnie, Tony McPhee and Eric Clapton. It was followed by some more great blues from various Jools Holland programmes over the years with performances by among others, B B. Albert King, Katie Webster, Jimmie Vaughan and Bo Diddley.
Bobby Blue Bland is one of the greatest to ever do blues at its purest.
ReplyDelete