Blues cats dont retire, they just drop, says Buddy Guy.
That explains why the 72-year-old guitar legend and the genres elder statesmen, 83-year-old B.B. King, have banded together for yet another tour, which stops at the Ryman Auditorium on Thursday, February 12.
What theyve dropped recently is a pair of albums that push these sometimes laissez-faire performers out of their comfort zones. Kings One Kind Favor is a return to his roots shepherded by über producer T-Bone Burnett. And Guys Skin Deep, an album he calls his most personal, has several songs that deal with race an issue rarely covered in modern blues despite its role in the styles origin.
Burnett applied some of the same formula he used for Alison Krauss and Robert Plants 2007 sensation Raising Sand to Kings disc: double drum kits, low-end rumble and plenty of open air. The other essential ingredient was King, who Burnett asked to play in the tightly phrased, ringing, eloquent style that marked his ascent in the 50s. And a songbook plucked from some of Kings deepest influences and closest friends Blind Lemon Jefferson, the Mississippi Sheiks, T-Bone Walker, Lonnie Johnson, Howlin Wolf, John Lee Hooker prompted inspired vocal performances.
Guys Skin Deep is his best recording since his duo of North Mississippi hill country fueled discs, 2001s Sweet Tea and 2003s Blues Singer. Its a brawny, big-toned affair with guest guitarists Eric Clapton and Derek Trucks, plus pedal steeler Robert Randolph, playing counterpoint to Guys torrential solos. The disc hits its highest notes with the incendiary slow blues Out in the Woods and the title track, which is plucked from Guys childhood.
When I was a boy, it was okay for the little white kids to play with us, Guy relates, explaining Skin Deep. As soon as they got 12 or 13, their parents would stop it. Theyd said, You got white blood, and you got black blood, when my white friends and I would ask why. So one night me and another kid got a flashlight and put our hands over it. We could see that under our skin we both had red blood. We knew we were being lied to.
Although Guys been recording more than 50 years, Skin Deep is his first disc of all-new songs. For that Guy thanks Tom Hambridge, the other Nashville connection besides the Ryman date between himself and King. The locally based producer and songwriter whos crafted albums for Susan Tedeschi, George Thorogood and Johnny Winter rode Guys tour bus in the months before the Skin Deep sessions at Berry Hills Blackbird Studios, listening to the Chicago blues kingpins stories and turning them into tunes.
Hambridge relates that while recording in November 2007, Guy confided, My whole life I show up at the studio and dont know half the songs. I dont know who brought them in. Im reading lyrics that make me just go through the motions. But Ive lived these songs.
Guy is so smitten with Hambridges approach which included plugging Guys guitar into a half-dozen different amps, all blasting wide-open simultaneously that theyre beginning work on another album. But theyll return to the studio before that to record a cut for The Soul of Disney, a compilation of numbers from the studios films.
Recently Hambridge traveled to Las Vegas, where he recorded Youve Got a Friend in Me from Toy Story with B.B. King for the same album.
I cant believe Im working with both Buddy Guy and B.B. King, Hambridge says. Theyre the worlds leading blues figures and yet they have no ego and do astonishing things in the studio all time.
Buddy is very spontaneous. We did only one take of Everytime I Have the Blues. It was supposed to be three minutes, but Buddy closed his eyes and started to solo. By the time he was done hed encompassed everything from Robert Johnson to Sun Ra. When Buddy and the band faded out, he opened his eyes and asked, Whaddya think? Nobody said a word.
B.B. will sing a line six different ways and each one is melodic and perfect, Hambridge continues.
Although Kings swinging soulful style was developed in the juke joints around Memphis and Guys blustery approach honed on Chicagos west and south sides, Hambridge sees their common ground.
They both come from a time when you just stood up and played from your heart, he says. As artists and people, theyre very deep. Im constantly impressed by their graciousness, humility and work ethic. When they play or sing, the music comes from a unique place, like Charlie Parkers did. Everybody tries to copy them, but nobody really can.
There are five living Presidents, Hambridge observes, but only one B.B. King and one Buddy Guy.
Thu., Feb. 12, 7:30 p.m., 2009
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