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WSWS : Arts
Review : Music
The passing of a blues legend: John Lee Hooker
By Philip Sprake
29 June 2001
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John Lee Hooker, the gifted, charismatic blues guitar player
and singer, died in his sleep at his home in Los Altos, California,
aged 80, on June 21.
Survived by eight children and 19 grandchildren, Hooker was
born August 22, 1922 in Clarksdale, Mississippi, the fourth in
a family of 11 children. Hookers father was a sharecrop
farmer and Baptist minister who strongly discouraged his sons
early interest in the blues. Like so many other singers of his
generation and background, his first musical experiences were
of singing gospel music in church. His introduction to the blues
guitar came via his musician stepfather, Will Moore.
At the age of 14 he ran away from his home to Memphis, Tennessee
where he met and played with Robert Lockwood, a close relation
to the legendary blues guitarist Robert Johnson. Hooker and Lockwood
played together in and around the Memphis area for a couple of
years before the young musician moved to Cincinnati where he spent
10 years as a blues/gospel singer playing in local groups.
In 1943 he moved to Detroit, hoping to supplement his music
income with a job in the auto industry. After various jobs he
eventually found work as a janitor in one of the citys auto
plants. Detroit became his home for many years and he became a
regular act at blues clubs and bars in the citys Hastings
Street area. In 1948 he made his first recording, Boogie Chillin,
which rose to number one on the US rhythm and blues charts and
became a big commercial success for Modern Records, his recording
company. Most of Hookers early recordings were performed
solo or with a second guitaristonly one or two of his early
albums were with backup bands. This was not typical of his live
performances, which generally featured piano, drums and guitar
backing.
Hooker recorded prolifically and successfully for Modern Records
during the late 1940s and early 1950s, producing some of his classic
songs such as In The Mood and Crawling King Snake.
But he became increasingly unhappy with low royalty payments from
Modern Records and started to record under other names such as
Delta John, Texas Slim, Little Pork Chops, John L. Booker, John
Lee Cooker and various others to avoid contractual obligations
and raise extra revenue.
By the late 1950s the market for Hookers music had begun
to wane, encouraging him to look for new audiences. He began performing
at folk clubs and festivals, including the Newport Folk Festival,
where audiences of mainly young white listeners began to appreciate
what black audiences had long recognised. In the 1960s his reputation
grew among younger up-and-coming rock musicians. Many British
groups, such as The Rolling Stones, The Animals and The Yardbirds,
regularly cited him as a major influence. In fact, Hookers
work was more widely recognised outside the US at this time and
he toured Britain and the continent every year during the 1960s.
But popular interest in blues music continued to decline throughout
the late 1970s and early 1980s, affecting Hookers career.
This hiatus ended in 1989 with The Healer album. Described
by many as a revival for John Lee Hooker, The Healer
was not so much a revival as an extension of the base he had
built up in the preceding decades. The album gathered together
musicians and close friends such as Carlos Santana, Bonnie Raitt
and Robert Cray and became a catalyst for renewed interest in
the veteran artists work. It sold more copies than any previous
Hooker album and won him a Grammy Award for the best blues album.
Similar recordings followed, including Mr Lucky, which
had Ry Cooder, Van Morrison and Albert Collins as guest musicians
and became the first blues album to reach the top three in the
British charts. The best album from this period is Boom, Boom
(1992), featuring the classic title track along with nine other
Hooker originals, including solo tracks Im Bad Like Jessie
James and Sugar Mama.
Much of the blues of Hookers birthplace was played on
acoustic steel-stringed guitars, often open-tuned to produce a
single chord when strummed. Combined with raw and emotional vocals
capturing the harsh life facing blacks in the Mississippi Delta,
it became known as the Mississippi Delta Blues. This was John
Lee Hookers style and none played it better. But Hooker
gave this earthy sound an almost free-form musical structure and
combined it with non-rhyming blank verse to create a new urban
sound, later known as the Detroit blues.
Many of Hookers early recording sessions were played
solo because few other musicians could follow him. As San Francisco-based
blues musician and producer Roy Rogers explained: It may
sound easy to play, but its not. He takes the music as far
as he can and he leads with his voice, and much of it is improvised
on the spot. Blues is really a music about how you feel and John
embodies that.
Hookers sound is unmistakable. His sparse guitar work,
accompanied only by his constantly tapping foot and deep, almost
growling, voice encapsulate the sound of contemporary blues with
its deeply emotional mixture of good times and deep sadness. As
Hooker once explained: Sometimes on stage, when Im
singing them, it gets so sad and deep and beautiful, I have to
wear dark glasses to keep the people from seeing me crying. Im
not kidding. The tears just start running. With the words that
Im saying and the way that I sing them, sometimes I give
my own self the blues.
Hookers standing among fellow musicians and artists is
of the highest order. As blues guitarist and singer Bonnie Raitt
commented last week: John Lees power and influence
in the world of rock, pop, R & B, jazz and blues are a legacy
that will never die. Getting to know and work with him these last
30 years has truly been one of the greatest joys of my life.
While this giant of post-war blues threatened to retire on
a number of occasions in the last few years of his life, he did
not give up performing. In fact, on the weekend before his death
he had played two concerts in northern California, receiving standing
ovations.
John Lee Hooker, who was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame in 1991 and given a Lifetime Achievement Award at last
years Grammy presentations, leaves behind a recorded legacy
of over 100 albums and countless others under various pseudonyms.
The musical world is certainly the lesser for his passing.
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