Tag Archives: rock guitar

JON DEE GRAHAM & JESSE SUBLETT & TERRI LORD at EVANGELINE 1.16.10

JANUARY 2010: Saturday Jan. 16th at Evangeline Cafe: Jon Dee Graham & Jesse Sublett’s Murder Ballad Show. We’ll be doing the usual murder ballads, blues and new songs, plus the very unusual… that is, you never know what we’ll pull out of the hat. Jon Dee has a great new CD out. Catch up with other news about Jon Dee here.

Jon Dee & Jesse after the Austin Public Library Foundation show.

And get this: Terri Lord will be playing drums with us! Terri was around when we were around back in the Raul’s days. Some people would call this a reunion. Some would call it a supergroup. What I say is cool. Supercool.

I’ve been working on the French compilation of Jesse Sublett short stories, non fiction, serie noir and murder ballads for the French publisher 13e Note Editions, to be released in 2011. The book will feature excerpts of my crime novels, my memoir (Never the Same Again: A Rock N Roll Gothic), a selection of lyrics, a true crime essay, and a general essay, plus an afterword by my good friend, Michael Connelly.

Other upcoming gigs: To be announced. I’m still on a light playing schedule until I get closer to finishing a couple of labor-intensive book projects.

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KICKING OUT THE JAMS

Elvis Costello, far right (and far skinnier than today)jams with the Skunks at Rauls.

Elvis Costello, far right (and far skinnier than today)jams with the Skunks at Rauls.

This is a continuation of the Backstage History page I began a while back. I’ve already written about playing at Raul’s and it was covered in the 2000 Austin Chronicle story about the Skunks, which you can read on that page.

The Skunks always had the philosophy that if it’s rock n’ roll, it’s not brain surgery. We usually worked up new songs in the van or during sound check. Show the other guys the riff, give it a shot, bang it out that night at the gig. This usually worked fine. Really.

Before starting the Skunks in 1978, Eddie Munoz and I played one gig at an outdoor festival near San Antonio with a band after only an hour’s rehearsal. We played a weird collection of covers, including “My Boyfriend’s Back,” a couple of Beatles songs, something by the Young Rascals, and other eclectic stuff like that. The singer had just gotten out of rehab, probably by escaping. He was on thorazine. It sounded kind of like the New York Dolls crossed with the MC5.

By the time we started the Skunks, Eddie and I knew dozens of covers between us. We were fearless. Friends came to gigs to jam with us. Often touring bands stopped at our gigs and joined us. Elvis Costello came up to play “Mystery Dance” and then never left. He played on cover tunes, he played on our originals. We did “Pushin’ Too Hard,” by the Seeds, several covers from the Who in their early days, including “My Generation,” lots of Stones and Chuck Berry. … Wait, wait, there’s more. We covered the Kinks and I’ve always had a half dozen Lou Reed or Velvet Underground covers to pull out (in those days it was “Sister Ray,” “Waiting for My Man,” “Heroin” and “White Light/White Heat.”). The Count Five’s “Psychotic Reaction” was a great song for us, and we loved Mose Allison — “I’m Not Talkin’” and “Young Man Blues.” We also knew a Twyla Gang song or two, plus some Dr. Feelgood, Bo Diddley and of course, Willie Dixon.

Oh, yeah, and the Yardbirds… but nope, no Led Zeppelin, no “Freebird.” We were capable of slamming out “Gloria,” “Route 66,” “Dirty Water,” “Shotgun” and even “Louie, Louie” with our heads held high, our amps turned up to eleven, but we never considered ourselves a “cover” band because we didn’t play the Top 40. We were playing the real shit, we thought. It was rock n’ roll.

Costello knew them all, of course. even came back up for our second set and played a bunch of hard core country songs, including “The Night the Bottle Let Me Down” and “Honky Tonkin’”. I wasn’t too keen on country music at the time and was anxious for him to get off, so I kept turning up the volume on my bass amp and using the fuzz box. Finally he got the message. I hate to sound ungrateful, because the fact that Elvis Costello jammed with us got us a lot of publicity and respect. More people came to our gigs to check us out. I just felt I had heard enough country music when I was growing up in Johnson City, Texas. Typically, the people who loved George Jones and Merle Haggard hated black people and wanted to kick my ass because I had long hair and wore mod clothes.

Lois Richwine and Debbie Harry, backstage 1978

Lois Richwine and Debbie Harry, backstage 1978

As I’ve mentioned elsewhere, I met Debbie Harry and Chris Stein of Blondie when they were in town before their first gig here. I had a feeling the band might drop in at Mother Earth, which was really the only rock club in town at the time, except for Raul’s, which may have been having conjunto that night. The introduction was easy because I was carrying a pet skunk, which a fan had left with me for the weekend (Actually, the fan never came back for little Flowers, who had been de-scented but was still rather smelly at best and was not terribly cuddly most of the time and was definitely NOT house broken, as the fan said). Debbie and Chris came up to me and Flowers and petted flowers and received a gig flyer and an invitation to be on our guest list at Raul’s that night.

So the band came to see us at Raul’s. By mid-set, we had Clem Burke on drums and Frank Infante on guitar. We also may have had Jimmy Destri playing the keyboards left by the opening band, but I don’t remember for sure. No Deborah Harry, sorry to say, but they were all really nice people. We had lots of beers with them afterward. Besides being one of the greatest drummers of all time, Clem is a world class gentleman. Years later, our paths crossed often, when I was living in LA. He and Frankie jammed with the band I was in, which happened to include Kathy Valentine, his paramour at the time.

My then-girlfriend/now-wife, Lois Richwine, had been a major Blondie fan since forever. Years earlier, living in NYC, she used to go see the Ramones, Television and the Stilettos (the pre-Blondie band with Chris Stein) at CBGB. So it was only fair that she got the snapshot with Debbie Harry and her souvenir Skunks T-shirt.

One of the craziest nights at Raul’s was when Patti Smith came to jam with us. This was in 1979 and she was in town to play her first Austin concert the following night. I had been a fan of hers ever since her first single, produced by ex-Velvet Underground John Cale (“Piss Factory” and “My Generation”, if I remember correctly), followed by her debut LP, Horses, also produced by Cale. Cale was a real hero of mine (Later we got to open for him at the Armadillo). I had read a story in CREEM magazine about her jamming with a local band in Detroit, I think it was, so I knew it was possible. I showed up at her poetry reading at the university that afternoon and introduced myself and gave her a flyer for the gig. She said, “The Skunks, huh? I have a poem called ‘Skunk Dog’” I said, “I know, I like your poetry a lot.” Which was more or less true.” I said, “Why don’t come down and play with us?” She said, “I can only play in the key of E, you know.” I said OK, having read that, too, in CREEM. Actually, she couldn’t play a lick. She just strummed and wanked and made noise with the guitar.

So we spread the word that Patti Smith was coming to Raul’s to jam with the Skunks. She showed up. The place was packed tight. You could barely move in there and the temperature was about 120 degrees. She came up during the first set and we jammed. Eddie and Billy and I started this jungle thing and she chimed in with the noise and started chanting, “Have no fear! Have no fear! Tell God the Skunks are here!” There was more to it than that, but I forget. I had a cassette of it for a long time, but finally it disappeared.
The Skunks give Patti Smith (in hat) room to chant "Have no fear! Tell God the Skunks are here!" as she rips the strings off Lois' guitar. That guitar was later stolen from our van in New York City, after our second night at CBGB.

The crowd went nuts. We finished out set after she left, playing “My Generation” toward the end and during the chorus, she’d grab the microphone and sing along.

It was a pretty cool night, except I found out that just because Patti Smith jammed with us, it didn’t mean she wanted to be pals. I tried to strike up a conversation but got nowhere. She was wearing this shortbrim hat and at one point, after she had irritated me, I patted the crown a bit and said, “Nice lid, Patti,” and she scowled and walked off.

We played the last set without her. By then everybody was so happy and loaded they didn’t give a shit.

The following year, Lois and I went to NYC, trying to get bookings for the band. Nobody would talk to us. One night we ran into John Cale at the Mudd Club. He recognized me from when the Skunks opened for him at the Dillo. We caught the band at their San Antonio show, too, and became pals with some of them. I gave him a demo cassette. Guess what? He liked it! He said to call his manager, Jane Friedman. We went to see her and five minutes after we walked into her office, she had booked a half dozen shows, starting with a Friday and Saturday at CBGB. She didn’t even listen to the tape or the record.

By then we were friends with the late George Scott III. George, formerly of James Chance and the Contortions, played bass for Cale and Lydia Lunch’s band, 8-Eyed Spy (a really great band!) and stayed in his apartment whenever we were in NYC. It was just around the corner from CBGB and after our second night there, we got drunk and left all our equipment in the van. The door locks didn’t work (hell, the thing barely ran). Jon Dee’s only guitar got stolen, Billy’s snare got stolen and I lost two Fender basses, my amp head and Lois’ little black Fender Music Master guitar. The one Patti Smith ripped the strings from. Boy, we were hung over that day. Hung over all the way back to Texas!
We opened for the Clash and Joe Ely at the Armadillo World Headquarters in 1979. Now that was a hell of a night. Ely was in his “Live Shots” era and the Clash were white hot. After the Dillo gig we had a gig at the Continental Club, which was right around the corner. A lot of the crowd from the concert came down to the Continental so we had a full house. Ely and Topper Headon and Mick Jones joined us onstage. I looked around and said, “Well, what do you wanna play?” Nobody said anything, nobody had any ideas. So I got to sing, which was fine with me. “You Keep A Knockin’”, “Route 66,” and a few others. We also did Ely’s “Fingernails.” I didn’t know any Clash songs and nobody suggested it anyway.
Big Dave, the door man, came up to the stage with Ely’s fancy cowboy hat. Seems like it was more like a mariachi hat or something, I remember it was decorated somehow and really, really big. In any event, I had always detested cowboy hats, going back to my time growing up in Rednecksville, Texas, and I always believed that cowboy hats were OK if you were riding a horse, roping cows and pigs. But not if you were supposed to be playing rock n roll. So when Big Dave tried to hand up Joe’s hat, I shook my head and said, “No way, no hats on my stage.” Big Dave was flustered. This was a big dude, one of the old Austin Opera House employees, if I remember correctly, a guy who looked like one of the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers, cosmic cowboy all the way. He didn’t understand. His face got red. How could I forbid Joe Ely his hat? I could, I said, because it was my band, my stage. No cowboy hats allowed.
I explained to Dave later on and he understood.

Maybe this will help explain a little better. The Continental had recently been taken over by a partnership of guys from the old scene, Wayne Nagel, Roger One Knite Collins, Robin, Summer Dog, and another guy or two. They were all longhaired and bearded guys. The kind of guys you saw mixing with the Willie Nelson entourage. They were great guys, generous, hearty, funny, and they liked to party all night long. And then some.
Roger, whom I had met back in the days of the One Knite Saloon, was the most colorful of the bunch. (The One Knite, by the way, was more or less a biker bar located in the same building now occupied by Stubbs Barbecue on Red River; a small, dark, dank, dusty, smoky joint with a ton of weird junk attached to the ceiling and a coffin lid door and man, it was one of Austin’s greatest joints of all time.) Roger was a gambler for real and a kind of gunslinger-type personality. Long hair, beard, cowboy boots, gruff voice and a serious prankster. He never went anywhere without his cowboy hat. Nowhere. He wore it everywhere and he never took it off. It wasn’t just part of his image, it was his statement to the world.
But after seeing the Skunks that night, blasting our industrial strength rock n’ roll, flexing our muscles with the Clash and Joe Ely, Roger underwent a change.
Roger hung up his cowboy hat after that night. He even cut his hair.

PS. 10.3.09. The info on the jam with Costello has been added to this fan site. These things are pretty weird, one of the odd little gems of unknown value on the internet. I’ve seen sites devoted to Mick Taylor, cataloging all of his gigs, including many of those from the period when we had the Carla Olson Band featuring Mick on guitar. (I used to tell people that Mick was the only guitarist to quit the Rolling Stones and live to tell about it… until it got old and it didn’t seem funny anymore). More on those fan sites later.

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Mick Taylor: I’m Fine, not suing Stones

Jimi Hendrix & Mick Taylor, two of the greatest

Jimi Hendrix & Mick Taylor, two of the greatest

Three days ago, I posted a story with a link to a piece in the Daily Mail which quoted Mick Taylor saying that he was about to hire a lawyer to sue the Rolling Stones for back royalties on six albums he played on, having received no royalties since 1982. Now comes a denial from the Guardian UK. The Daily Mail story also claimed MT was living in a down-at-the-heels dump in Suffolk, but the story says he’s staying in Holland with his girlfriend while his place is being remodeled.

Before joining the Stones, Mick played with John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, one of the seminal white blues outfits who helped usher in the great blues revival of the sixties.

I played with Mick Taylor in the Carla Olson Band in the 1990s, when I was living in LA. Besides being a lifelong Stones fan, I became particularly fond of Mick and I remain awed by his talent. He’s long been one of the world’s truly great guitarists. Mick played on the studio albums Sticky Fingers, Exile on Main Street, Goat’s Head Soup, and It’s Only Rock n’ Roll, and several live albums, too. Many Stones fans still believe that Mick Taylor’s contributions brought the band to its pinnacle of greatness. Remember the solo on Moonlight Mile? How about Sway and Soul Survivor? Whatever the real story is, I wish him well.

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Stones in my Passway: The Other Mick (Taylor, that is)

Thanks to Tex Edwards for bringing the story in London’s Daily Mail about ex-Rolling Stone Mick Taylor. The headline says it all: The Rolling Stone who’s stony broke: Why Mick Taylor lives in a rundown Suffolk semi with a shabby car. I hate to drop lines like this, but I have very fond memories of playing with Mick (Taylor, that is) when I lived in LA in the late 1980s and early 1990s. I was playing with Carla Olson and one day her husband and manager Saul Davis said, “How do you feel about doing a record and a tour with Mick Taylor in the band?” I was all for it, of course. Any misgivings about how we would get along flew out the window when I handed him a copy of my first novel, Rock Critic Murders, and he read it over the weekend and said he liked it very much. “Raymond Chandler was really the best, wasn’t he?” Mick said, and I agreed. That made two things we agreed on whole heartedly: Howlin’ Wolf and Raymond Chandler. It’s one thing to play with a great guitarist. There’s a lot of those out there. But to play with one of the greatest guitarists who ever lived, a guy who can spin a whole orchestra out of his instrument, who can conjure up epic walls of sound in a 30 second solo, that’s another thing. Then you have that undeniable sound from all those classic Stones LPs, plus those Hubert Sumlin licks from songs like “Little Red Rooster” and “Killin’ Floor,” which Mick could do like no one else. It was a real life changing experience. There were nights when I actually found myself dropping out of the song because I couldn’t believe some of the stuff he was playing and I just wanted to listen instead of playing my bass. Mick also liked the songs I wrote in Carla’s band, “Who Put the Sting on the Honey Bee” and “World of Pain.” If that sounds self-serving, oh well. It sure made my day.
We recorded both those songs with Mick, “Honey Bee” appearing on the live CD, “Too Hot for Snakes,” released on Watermelon Records in 1990 and “World of Pain” on “Within An Ace,” the follow-up studio CD.
We always played a few Stones covers on those shows. “Silver Train” and “You Gotta Move” were favorites, but “Sway” was always a show-stopper.
I’ve written about all this already in my memoir, Never the Same Again: A Rock n’ Roll Gothic, so I am covering old ground again, but reading the Daily Mail piece brought it all flooding back. Mick has put on quite a few pounds since I last saw him. Maybe he’s put on weight because he’s stopped doing drugs. I don’t know. It’s none of my business, but if that’s the cause, maybe it’s a good start, a fair trade for now. Anyway, I wish him well.
When I first started playing seriously in the mid-1970s, it was with Eddie Munoz, who later formed The Skunks with me and Bill Blackmon here in Austin (After the Skunks, Eddie joined the Plimsouls; now he’s playing bass in a band called Magic Christian). (Oh yeah, Blondie drummer Clem Burke is in the band, too. Which is cool.) Carla was Eddie’s girlfriend at the time and whenever we were around each other, we’d end up jamming on Stones songs. We must have played 50 or 100 different Stones songs. We idolized the Stones. We cut and sprayed our hair like Keith Richards. We imagined we WERE the Stones.
When we did the tour with Mick, we had Ian McLagan on keyboards. Ian had done many tours with the Stones. We had two saxophonists, 3 backing singers, and Barry Goldberg (Electric Flag) on keyboards (as well as McLagan) and Juke Logan on harmonica. It was a helluva band. It wasn’t the Stones, but it was cool as shit.
Oh yeah, one of the saxophonists was my cousin, Joe Sublett, who also played with a little blues band from Austin called Paul Ray & The Cobras, sometimes referred to as the band Stevie Ray Vaughan was in back when he was Austin’s little secret.
Odd that after all those years in Austin, where people constantly got Joe mixed up with me and me mixed up with Joe (Let’s see, we’re both tall, we’re both musicians, we have the same last name & first initial, but still…), we had to move to LA before we ever played any gigs together.
A couple of weeks ago I was in Nordstrom’s picking up a new suit. The salesman there mentioned that he used to be a musician long ago, too. In fact, he had gone to high school with me and Lou Ann Barton in Fort Worth.
I said, “That’s cool… yeah…” Someday, I guess I will have to grow a mustache start playing the saxophone. That will really screw people up!

Playing with Mick Taylor and Carla Olson at the Roxy in LA 1990; that's the headstock of my bass in the lower left. Don't expect to get in many photos if you are playing with a rock star, even an ex-rock star.

Playing with Mick Taylor and Carla Olson at the Roxy in LA 1990; that's the headstock of my bass in the lower left. Don't expect to get in many photos if you are playing with a rock star, even an ex-rock star.

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MUSIC: Murder in the Worst Degree

Thanks again to Austinella for providing me with the clip that follows this blurb. A couple of weeks ago, Jon Dee Graham and I brought our Murder Ballad Show (with Kory I. Cook on drums) to Evangeline Cafe. Charlotte Shafer did a great short review and photo essay. For this show, we pull from our joint repertoires of dark songs of murder, madness and despair. Some are traditional covers, like “St. James Infirmary,” “Back Door Man,” and so forth. We don’t do “Stagger Lee” or “Frankie & Johnny,” at least not yet. The tradition behind songs like these goes back at least 400 years or so. Ballads about crimes of passion, killers and outlaws were printed on broadsheets and posted in public. A very good book about the tradition, “The Rose & the Briar,” edited by Greil Marcus and Sean Willenz, collects a bunch of essays on the subject, each essay devoted to a single song. I have not read the graphic novel, Stagger Lee, by Derek McCulloch, but I’ve just ordered it. I have, however, read “Stagolee Shot Billy,” by Cecil Brown and I can’t recommend it highly enough. Most people don’t realize this but the person known as Stagger Lee (also Stagolee, Stack Lee, etc.) was a real person, and although a Stetson hat was involved, the killing was largely over political passions. It’s a great story. Read some details on Wiki.

The song captured on video at the Evangeline show was “Murder in the Worst Degree.” The clip runs out during the last verse, which is about the Houston woman who ran over her philandering husband with a Ford Navigator and then, as the song says, “backed over him again and again… her lawyer was Dick DeGuerin / the jury was on her side / called it justifiable homicide.” I know Dick and I sent him a copy of the lyrics but did not get a thumbs up or down from him on it. But that’s OK; he’s a country singer anyway.

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8.19.09: Rock ‘N Roll, Rock Critics, Diddly Bo

Lady Bo, Queen of Rock Guitar

Lady Bo, Queen of Rock Guitar

Yes, it’s true that my first novel was titled Rock Critic Murders, but I don’t and never have hated rock critics. Oddly enough, even when it seemed that most of the music press in Austin was expressing their disapproval of my band in the late seventies/early eighties (which would be The Skunks), I didn’t hate any of them. In fact, that was the time I began hanging out with them more often, one reason being that two of the best and brightest in Austin at the time, Ed Ward and Louis Black, were fans of my crime writing, which was then in its early, formative period. Ed Ward is now in France, writing about music, food, art and whatever else strikes his huge imagination. Louis is still at the Austin Chronicle, where he’s the editor but he also pursues other interests, including of course, film and SXSW.
My friend Mike Hoinski recently blogged about the upcoming film, It Might Get Loud, which gets up close to three of the world’s leading guitar heroes, Jack Black of White Stripes (also Raconteurs and The Dead Weather), Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin (as if you didn’t know) and The Edge of U2 (better known as the guy with the hat and all the echo on his guitar standing next to Bono). I’m looking forward to seeing that. One scene in the trailer I caught shows Jack throwing together a primitive guitar, of the type that used to be called the “diddly-bo“, which dates back to Africa and, as you may have guessed, was one of the chief inspirations for the stage name of one Ellas McDaniel, better known as Bo Diddley (and I bet you thought it was about screwing; well, it’s that, too, but…). When you watch this clip, check out the hot guitarist Lady Bo, tuff and sexy and way ahead of her time. Watching this statuesque babe on this clip makes me really wish I’d been there, up front, when this band was at its peak. Mercy! And while sadly, Bo Diddley has passed on, Lady Bo is still alive, kicking and rocking. For a little more info on the diddly bo and other homemade instruments, check this out.
Rock critics never die these days, their blog just stops getting new posts. There were times when the critics hated Zeppelin, too, but the band’s appeal seems to have outlived all of that. The funny thing these days is that no band, no matter how minor or fluffy or silly, seems to ever go away these days. Have you checked myspace.com lately (as if anyone ever does) to see what Flock of Seagulls is up to lately? Go ahead, I dare you, you people who are strong of stomach. Last night, we watched Pat Benatar going through the motions, but only because they happened to be sandwiched between the Donnas and Blondie. Blondie was transcendant. Unfortunately, we missed the Donnas. Oh yeah, The Skunks are still around, too.

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