Pictures from Porretta
Here is a selection of photos taken at the Porretta Soul festival - some of me with the stars followed by some action shots. First, here is the wonderful Toni Green.
Blues, rock and roll, soul, fifties and sixties pop, cajun, jazz, folk, vinyl records, LPs, EPs, singles, New Orleans, Memphis, UK rock, nostalgia, girl groups, ska, rocksteady.
Here is a selection of photos taken at the Porretta Soul festival - some of me with the stars followed by some action shots. First, here is the wonderful Toni Green.
This year's Porretta Soul Festival has to be the best yet - certainly the best of the ten or so that I've been to. The quality of the artists performing was just superb, with a whole load of stand out performances by legendary Memphis soul men and women, great weather and fantastic backing once again, in most cases, by Austin Delone's band with Sweet Nectar.
If anyone can be called a living legend of New Orleans music then Allen Toussaint must surely be that person. He produced, composed and played brilliant piano on numerous New Orleans R and B classics in the late 50s and 60s by the likes of Lee Dorsey, Ernie K-Doe, Benny Spellman, Irma Thomas and Chris Kenner, moved on to be the godfather of N'Awlins funk in the late 60s and early 70s, and made his mark as a solo performer, along with numerous later collaborations with the likes of Frankie Miller and, a couple of years ago, Elvis Costello.
This time we have a selection of photos taken in 1998. The first half dozen were on a trip to the US, kicking off with Jimmie Vaughan at the Grant Street Dancehall in Lafayette.
This is Mavis Staples pictured in the Gospel Tent at the Jazzfest in New Orleans.
Quite a few of us Brits travelled up to Memphis for the Beale Street Festival and the Handy Awards. Here are Woodies John Howard, Lee Wilkinson, Tony Papard and Keith Woods pictured in the Rum Boogie Cafe in Beale Street. Anyone remember the name of the guy on the right?
Here's a photo of me with Jimmy Denson, who claimed to be a childhood friend of Elvis, taken outside the Shangri-La record shop in Memphis. Jimmy said that Elvis was a 'dope fiend' and a 'baby'.
This photo shows Anson Funderburgh and Sam Myers at the Beale Street festival. Sadly, Sam died in 2006.
Bobby Rush's show at the Daisy Theatre on Beale was one of the highlights of the trip. Here he is inspecting the backsides of some of his female dancers. Unfortunately his un-PC act didn't go down so well when he played at the Barbican in London a few months later.
Returning to London, here's a photo of British soul singer Lynden David Hall at the Borderline in Soho. Lynden had amazing talent, but sadly died of Hodgkin's Lymphona in 2006 aged just 31.
Finally we move to the Porretta Soul Festival of 1998. Here's a shot of excellent soul/blues singer Barbara Carr.Allen Klein, one of the most influential and controversial figures in music history, has died aged 77. An accountant by profession, he had a long and varied career and created tension and distrust in most of the roles he had. He advised Bobby Darin after meeting him at a friend's wedding, became Sam Cooke's business manager, briefly
managed the Rolling Stones and was blamed for the break up of the Beatles, after Paul McCartney refused to accept him. Along the way he bought Cameo Parkway records, helped John Lennon and George Harrison after the Beatles split, bought the rights to Phil Spector's Philles records, produced a series of spaghetti Westerns and won a bitter legal
battle against the Verve. Was he a force for good or bad? Difficult to tell, as at heart he was just an uncompromising accountant, but he certainly helped Sam Cooke become the first successful black music business man, so perhaps he wasn't all bad. Here are a couple of his obits: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article6643671.ece http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/allen-klein-notorious-business-manager-for-the-beatles-and-the-rolling-stones-1732780.html