T-Bone Walker: Blues Guitar Godfather II
by Johnny Harper
T-Bone Walker: Blues Guitar Godfather II
Virtually
every tune on the Capitol set offers brilliant examples of T-Bone's guitar
soloing -- by turns driving the band hard on the fast, swinging "jump"
numbers, caressing the lines emotionally on slow tunes, telling his story
with lively authority at medium tempos. Among the guitar techniques he
pioneers here is his trademark use of 9th-chord (and 9th-add-6th) voicings,
and his style of "walking" those 9ths into the chord change through half-steps
above or below; this would lead directly to Jimmy
Nolen's use of the same techniques to define funk rhythm guitar in
James Brown's band 20 years later (and in fact, early, pre-James, Nolen
recordings show him as a blues player doing letter-perfect renditions
of T-Bone's style). These sides also display T-Bone as the source of a
number of guitar moves that would become later become signature licks
of Chuck Berry's playing: his uses of bent-note double-stops; the classic
trick of sliding or bending to the 5th of the scale on the G string, and
then immediately playing the same note unslurred on the B; and the way
he cycles repeats of the same figure against different parts of the beat
to build rhythmic tension and excitement. (Check out the first chorus
of his great solo on the driving uptempo "That's Better for Me" -- it
could almost be Chuck playing.) There are occasional, perfectly executed
uses of sweet tremolo-picked parallel thirds, and of surprising jazzy
dissonances -- dig that edgy, almost Monk-ish, raised-tonic lick he hits
in "I Know Your Wig Is Gone"!
And of course, there are those subtle, swinging, single-note
melody lines, with their instantly recognizable use of the 9 and sharp-9
as alternating high points in snaky, spiralling descending figures --
always unmistakably T-Bone, but somehow always fresh, expressive, and
fun to hear. In fact, one of the most remarkable things about T-Bone's
soloing is the way he holds your interest while working within a limited
number of licks and techniques. There are many now-well known blues guitar
moves that are not part of his repertory; his melody lines are shaped
almost entirely within one left-hand position (the movable E or F configuration
with the root note voiced on the first string, moved to whatever key he
is playing the song in), and he makes no use at all of sustained whole-step
bends or sustained-and-vibratoed notes, to name just two examples of blues
techniques that would become standard by the late '50s. Yet despite the
restricted technical vocabulary, T-Bone's solos always fascinate and delight
the ear. You know he's playing the same moves in many of the solos, but
he always phrases them in a way that's fresh and fascinating, expressive,
and beautifully swinging. Again and again, you find yourself moved and
captivated by the flow of his lines.
Part of what makes this possible is his superb use of dynamics:
he's a real master of the art of shifting through fine degrees of louds
and softs within the development of a given chorus, sounding very much
like a jazz horn player breathing a little harder or softer to subtly
shift the mood. I can't think of another blues guitarist who comes close
to equalling him in this respect. Another factor is of course his marvelous,
seemingly effortless, sense of swing and syncopation, the way he always
plays with and around the beat. And another, harder to pin down but just
as real, is the feeling in the lines; up or down, celebrative or
contemplative, you always believe the story he's telling with his instrument.
These same qualities of rhythmic swing and expressive nuance
are also the hallmarks of T-Bone's warm, satisfying singing style. For
one of many brilliant examples, listen to the way he sings the title phrase,
"This is a mean old world," in lines 1 and 2 of that great song: he sings
the same note on almost every word of the line, but swings or syncopates
it a little differently against the beat each time he hits it.
It's classic, essential swing, classic African-rooted rhythmic sophistication.
It's exactly what he does in his guitar phrasing -- and it sounds
like a real person just talking to you about his hard-won experience
of the world. This is the greatness of T-Bone's singing. He hasn't got
the huge vocal tone and overwhelming dramatic impact of gospel-based shouters
like B.B. or Freddie King, but his fabulous time, and the subtle, understated
emotional authenticity of his delivery, make him an utterly believable
and moving vocalist. His husky, gentle, voice, with its wonderful smoky,
jazzy, after-hours tone, can convey effortless sly humor on wry, upbeat
numbers like "I Know Your Wig Is Gone," and deep, world-weary resignation
on the slow, lowdown blues tunes. "So tired I could cry, I could lay right
down and die," he sings in "I'm In An Awful Mood," and we feel the weight
of every word. (And then in the last verse, summoning an ounce of hope,
he offers a poor man's modest prayer: "Give me food, give me strength,
so I can make just one more day." Brothers and sisters, this is the blues.)
A few of the songs T-Bone recorded in this period have gone on to become
much-covered blues standards -- "T-Bone Shuffle," "Mean Old World," and
of course his all-time classic "Call It Stormy Monday," heard here in
its very first performances. But all of the songs -- some of them penned
by Walker himself, others by sidemen and musical colleagues, including
many fine lyrics by John "Shifty" Henry who also wrote for Louis Jordan
-- are excellent, filled with memorable, punchy lines and solid, concise
songwriting craft. The lighter tunes are packed with down-home, common-speech
wit and humor; all of the songs, funny or sad, ring true to life. Some
are particularly creative in their lyric structure, with intriguing, subtle
narrative development built into unusual songs like the spare, cinematic
"You're My Best Poker Hand" and the ingenious "Long Skirt Baby Blues".
Song after song yields up those pithy blues aphorisms that are a T-Bone
trademark: "Have fun while you can, 'cause Fate's an awful thing," he
cautions us in his hard-partyin' "T-Bone Shuffle." And I love the down-to-earth
poetry in his words, as he tries to shore up a failing relationship in
"Description Blues": "I'm on the side that's doing the building," he reminds
his woman, "not on the wrecking crew."
Great as T-Bone always sounds, the album wouldn't be nearly
the masterpiece it is without the brilliant support he gets from his superb
crew (or crews) of backing musicians. The light, swinging, and utterly
solid feel of pianist Willard McDaniels and drummer Oscar Lee Bradley
(both present on almost all of these sides) is a complete delight: they
not only lay down a definitive groove to support every song, but answer
T-Bone's guitar syncopations with adventurous fills and off-beat accents,
matching him so perfectly they seem almost psychically locked in with
him. There are also marvelous solos from Teddy Buckner on trumpet, and
from tenor sax aces Bumps Myers and Jack McVea. And dig the way T-Bone
works with them, integrating his guitar into the horn section for ensemble
riffs, becoming the section himself to lay down the hot riff behind Myers'
solo on "That's Better for Me," weaving his lines through McDaniels' piano
part on "Hard Pain Blues." These are wonderful, mostly under-recognized
musicians, and it's a joy to hear them working together so beautifully.
Another great aspect of the Capitol set is the inclusion,
on about a third of the tunes, of one, and in a few cases two, alternate
takes. On some reissue sets the presence of alternates may seem irritating
or redundant, but in this case the very opposite is true: T-Bone and his
cats generally play very different solos on the unissued takes, and in
many cases the alternates (which I suspect are usually the first takes)
are actually substantially hotter than the released versions, with the
band playing a little wilder and more freewheeling even if there's a slight
glitch in the ending or the lyric line. "Midnight Blues," "Triflin' Woman,"
"Long Skirt Baby Blues" are all examples of notably hotter alternates;
and notice how different T-Bone's wonderful solo is on the out-take of
"Go Back to the One You Love." It's also fascinating to hear the group
try different versions of the arrangement on the three takes of "Lonesome
Woman Blues"; again, the alternates are very exciting even though the
issued take is cleaner.
Switching labels in 1950, T-Bone went on to record about
the same number of sides for Imperial in the early '50s. This material
has now been collected together on the 2-CD reissue set, T-Bone Walker:
the Complete Imperial Recordings 1950-54 (EMI CDP 7-96737-2), and
it is practically as wonderful as the Capitol package -- filled with lots
more great songs, arrangements, and solos, and very highly recommended
if one wants a companion volume to follow up on the Capitol set. There's
also a very interesting and satisfying single CD, T-Bone Blues (Atlantic
8020-2), made up of material cut for Atlantic in the mid- to late '50s,
and including an unusual three-guitar session on which T-Bone trades guitar
leads both with jazz stalwart Barney Kessel and with his nephew R.S. Rankin,
whose style is uncannily close to his own. But the Capitol/Black & White
material still stands as his greatest and most essential work.
T-Bone was by all accounts a wild, flamboyant entertainer
whose razor-sharp appearance and onstage performance tricks (doing splits
on stage, playing behind his head, etc.) prefigured the later styles of
blues and R&B showmen as diverse as Chuck Berry, James Brown, and even
Jimi Hendrix. It's a great loss that his live performances of those early
years have not been preserved on film; but with a little imagination we
can almost believe we are seeing him strut his stuff in those jumping
Central Avenue clubs, when we hear his music brought to life in these
wonderful, high-spirited, and deeply soulful recordings.
T-Bone Pt. I
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