Paul Darrow & Paul McGann in Minister of Chance
hope you don’t mind me contacting you but thought this might be of interest to you? Wondered if you’d come across Paul Darrow in the new scifi audio series Minister of Chance - & if not, may I send you a copy ?
‘The Minister’ first appeared in the Whovian audio DEATH COMES TO TIME but this series gives the character a life and universe of his own and also stars Paul McGann, Sylvester McCoy and Jenny Agutter with Julian Wadham in the title role. ”Every review of The Minister of Chance works out the same: it’s fantastic…the actors are brilliant…the story is gripping…this pioneering radiophonic drama has us spellbound.” 10th Planet
It’s the first audiodrama made for direct sale to the public as an mp3, and it has also just been picked up by iTunes as the 1st audiodrama on their sales catalogue. They approached us having watched us release the first instalment via our own site & were so impressed by the innovation & quality that they looked for a way round their system to get us on there.
There’s a (free) 8 min Prologue at www.ministerofchance.com - followed by two 35min episodes at £1.29 each - but let me know if you’d like a review copy of Ep1 and I’ll get one over to you.
thought it might appeal so hope this isn’t just inbox litter..
cheers, Clare Eden (Exec Prod) ”HIGHLY RECOMMENDED” - TARDIS Newsroom”brilliant.. joyous… highly recommended..” Mike Sizemore, Writer. @sizemore”ambitious and innovative…excellent production …gripping.” The Guardian
fewellie asked: When will I - will I - be famous?
I can’t answer. I can’t answer that…
Is Johann Hari a copy-pasting churnalist?
Orwell Prize winning hack Johann Hari has some explaining to do. After reading a recent blog post detailing how he seems to have plagiarised large parts of his interview with Antonio Negri I thought I’d have a closer look at his work.
As a test I picked a recent interview of Hari’s at random and went through his quotes, doing a basic check for plagiarism. The results are pretty damning.
Warren Haynes talks about Little Feat’s ‘Waiting for Columbus’ - you can read the rest of my interview with Warren soon in Maverick (www.maverick-country.com)
And my last interview of the year is….Joanne Shaw Taylor! Out in Maverick soon. Thank you very much and goodnight. See you in 2011.
Unpublished Interview with Delbert McClinton
Last September (2009), I had the great pleasure of chatting with one of the true legends on the Texas/blues music scene, Delbert McClinton. His claims to fame are too numerous to mention. They start with teaching John Lennon how to play the harmonica - put it that way. It never saw the light of day, so I thought I would put it up here.
Jamie: I know you’ve been asked this question a million times, but could we start with the night you met John Lennon?
Delbert: Well, that story has become so incredibly romanticised. I’ve even heard that I played harp on ‘Love Me Do’. The fact of it was I was over in England in 1962 with Bruce Channel when ‘Hey Baby’ was a big song, and the Beatles were the opening act for at least one show with us. They came out to about three or four shows that we did. You have to put it in context. They hadn’t changed the world yet. We were all on common ground. We were over for about six weeks and for the first three weeks we were doing the theatres with a whole roster. The show would start rocking at one or two in the afternoon and go until late at night. Every night, somebody in one of the bands would be backstage, asking me about the harmonica. When we did the show with the Beatles, it was the same thing. Anyway, John mentioned somewhere he was influenced by the harmonica playing on ‘Hey Baby’ and from there it got chiselled in stone that I taught him everything he knew. It was a fun time. We did hang out over a period of a few days, not nobody wants to hear that. They want to hear the romanticised story. I try not to mention the story any more, because that’s probably what they will put on my gravestone! It was one of the best times in my life, because I’d never been out of Texas before. Well, I went to New Mexico once (laughs).
JH: On your new CD “Acquired Taste” you have worked again with legendary producer Don Was. How was that?
Delbert: It was great. Don I and have worked a couple of times before. The first time was with Bonnie Raitt when we did ‘Good Man, Good Woman’. We worked on another record. I hadn’t worked with him since and it had been 16 years. The guy who runs New West Records, Cameron Strang, is a friend of Don’s and he asked if he would do a record with me, and he said he’d love to. He came down here to Nashville. From the time that we agreed to do this, to the time we did it, I had finished off five songs. When we came into the studio, we were prepared. I think we made a good record.
JH: Do you still enjoy going into the studio?
Delbert: When you’re making music, you get an instant thumbs up or an instant thumbs down. It’s a fun thing to do. Writing songs is a whole different world for me. The studio is a whole different world for me. Playing live is a whole different world for me. I have these three places where I live and it’s still exciting.
JH: You grew up in Lubbock and Fort Worth. You used to play in a band called the Straightjackets in Fort Worth and opened for people like Jimmy Reed, Freddie King and Sonny Boy Williamson…
Delbert: I worked with Jimmy Reed and Freddie King a lot, and Sonny Boy, Buster Brown, Junior Parker. I grew up in a very exotic mix of Blues, country and conjunto music from Mexico, which is very provident in south Texas. It was a great time to be into music.
JH: Did those guys treat you quite well as young musicians. Did they pass on some of their knowledge and wisdom?
Delbert: They were great, but you have to put it in perspective. Those guys were not respected by the general public. Those guys could not stay in the same hotels that white folks stayed in. It was a different time. Even though they were making great strides in breaking through in music, they were still relegated to a class of music, which got very little respect in the long run. As far as getting in the public eye, it was tough.
JH: It seems incredible in this day and age that there was so much segregation…
Delbert: Oh, I know. It’s just bizarre. That’s the way the world was then. It was a different time and people were stupid (laughs), or more stupid than they are now…
JH: You hear songs about honky-tonks by Hank Williams and Billy Joe Shaver. They sounded quite romantic in a way…
Delbert: In Texas, you had to be able to play every type of music, because that’s what people wanted to hear. Rock and roll was still kind of a bad word. You had to be able to do country music, Nat King Cole songs, and cover a lot of ground in order to get work. The bands back then were playing eight nights a week just to make a living. You didn’t get much radio play, so your main gig was playing live. They weren’t any huge arenas available. Nobody was super-famous, although they should have been! All those great Blues guys, who died out by the mid sixties, never got their dues as far as I’m concerned. Willie Dixon wrote some of the best songs, ever. The people who are aware of Willie Dixon know that.
JH: You started recording back in the sixties, when producers needed everything done in one take. How do you find working in modern studios with all the latest technology?
Delbert: It’s very convenient, but technology has made it easy to take all the human aspects of recording out and make it perfect. I like to hear human-made music. I like to hear a near fatal crash and then a recovery. I think everyone likes to hear that. One of my favourite CDs is “The Tiffany Transcriptions”, when Bob Wills and his band back in 1946 recorded for two or three days straight. There are parts where people would forget the words and laugh. It makes you feel closer to them. I think that is a beautiful thing about human beings. We’re not perfect and trying to come as perfect is a situation that is untrue.
JH: In the mid seventies you recorded two albums with Glen Clark as Delbert & Glen. Neither of the two records sold particularly well, but they proved to be popular with other singers, like Bonnie Raitt. What do you remember about that time?
Delbert: When that was all happening, I was 30 years old. I was already too old to be rock and roller! We didn’t get the radio airplay. I think we were still doing music that was not suitable for the mainstream. It was the best time of my life, because when you are hungry, those are the good times. When you’re hungry, you can do anything. When you’re not hungry, then you get lackadaisical! I’ve been hungry for a long time and it feels good. They were some of the best times of my life when I was out in California, sleeping on a dirt floor in Topanga Canyon. We were living from hand to mouth, but we had everything we needed to go forward.
JH: The Blues Brothers on their album “Briefcase Full Of Blues” later covered one of those Delbert & Glen tracks, ‘B-Movie Boxcar Blues’. Do you know how they chose that song?
Delbert: We became friends with those guys before they started the Blues Brothers. John Belushi got us on Saturday Night Live, because every time we played New York at the Lone Star Café, those guys would come out and get on stage with us. One day, John called me and said they were going to make a Blues Brothers record and he wanted to use me and my band as the back-up band, but shortly after that it all changed and it was going to be Paul Shaffer and another band. Anyway, John called me and said he wanted to hear all the records I had done. We had a date coming up in New York, and when I got there he was standing in the lobby of the Plaza Hotel. I gave him four or five records, and from that he picked ‘B Movie’.
JH: What did you think of the Blues Brothers version of it?
Delbert: Well, first of all, I think those guys did a great thing for Blues music. They brought attention to it. The arrangement they did on that song, I thought was really good. But it was my song! I guess since it was my song, I had more of a critical view of it than anybody else. It was good, but I didn’t think it was great. I was glad they did it and it brought a lot of attention, not only to my music, but also to a lot of guys who didn’t have a career anymore. They brought them back into the public eye.
JH: You had a pop hit in 1980 when your version of Jerry Williams’ ‘Giving It Up For Your Love’ was released as a single…
Delbert: Jerry Williams was a good friend of mine. I was over at a friend’s house one day and they said Jerry had a new record out. He played it for me and when it came to ‘Giving It Up For Your Love’, it just stuck out like a sore thumb. I couldn’t miss it. Then I forgot about it. Then I was at another friend’s house and he asked me the same thing. I made a note that I wanted to record this song. My life was in such turmoil at that time. I was going through a divorce. I was working eight nights a week and barely making a living. It did a lot for me in getting my name out there, but it didn’t really make that much of a difference.
JH: You’ve played Austin City Limits on several occasions. How important has that show been to your career?
Delbert: It’s been very important. It’s the best live TV show I’ve ever done. Here in Nashville, you do a live TV show and they are more concerned with getting the lighting right. I remember once, we were running through a song and we were really into it. A guy with a clipboard walks up and says “hold it, hold it! You need to stand over here”. He just blew the whole groove for everything. On Austin City Limits they turn it over to the artist. It’s a very comfortable and popular show.
JH: You are also behind the hugely successful Sandy Beaches cruises. How did all that start?
Delbert: I did a cruise with some other guys for two years, before I started mine. It was all Blues music. Now, I love Blues music, but mediocre Blues music will drive you out of your mind. As you know, I’m sure! I was stuck on a ship with what I considered to be pretty uninspired music. The players were trying to be inspired. When you play the Blues, you have to put something new into it. That’s a difficult thing to do. I told a friend of mine that I could have done a better job than this. Now, it has become a great homecoming for a lot of people. It’s a week in the Caribbean with the music going non-stop. It’s a lot of fun. It’s something I would like to keep going. We’ve had people meet their best friends, get married and live their whole lives around that cruise.
JH: What bands or singers really excite you at the moment?
Delbert: Not a whole lot. I wish there was more music that excites me. I don’t know if I’ve become more jaded. I’m sure you have to wade through a lot of stuff, which is just awful. I know a lot of people who don’t need bells, whistles or smoke machines. They don’t have to be a teenage girl with a ring in your bellybutton. They get up there, plug in and blow you away with good music. These are people without radio careers. They are mostly known in a specific area. It usually consists of a two or three state area. It’s been fun for me to bring people on the cruise that nobody has heard of. This cruise has boasted a lot of my friend’s careers.
JH: Sadly, the musician Stephen Bruton, who you worked with on several occasions, passed away earlier this year. What do you remember about him?
Delbert: Stephen Bruton was one of those guys that if he walked into a room, the whole place lit up. He was a very charismatic guy and was always there for anybody. He saved me a thousand times by coming out and playing with me. For most of my career, I have not been able to pay for good players. Keeping guys on the road is very difficult, especially when they are not making money. I didn’t make any money until I was 53 years old. Back in the late seventies, I had a pick-up truck with a camper top on it. The mattress I was born on was in the back, where three guys in the band could lay down. Nobody was making any money. When you can’t pay the guys, you are not in a position to get the better players, so you have to work with knuckleheads!
JH: You’ve had quite a colourful life. Do feel quite lucky to be alive?
Delbert: Oh I do. I went through the same s**t that everyone else did and survived. I know a hell of a lot of people who didn’t. I’ve always a little voice inside my mind, which somehow kept me from going too far. I’ve had a lot of good times. I’ve had a very exciting career. JH
Top 10 Blues Albums of 2010
Allrighty then! It’s time to draw up that list of runners/riders and the best records that I’ve reviewed (and in a lot of cases interviewed too) of 2010. So here we go gang! My thanks are always go to the editors and PR people who let me blag free records.
1.) Joanne Shaw Taylor - Diamonds In The Dirt (Ruf Records)
Without a doubt, Joanne’s record - only her second album - is the best album released by a British artist this year. Produced by Jim Gaines and recorded in the US, it’s a stunning collection of tracks. This woman can seriously play the guitar. She was also the cover star of Blues Revue in the US this autumn.
2.) 24 Pesos - Busted Broken and Blue (Ourgate)
24 Pesos are one of my favourite British outfits at the moment and all the praise they can get. They’re lean, mean and funky. They also don’t murder ‘Sweet Home Chicago’ or rip off Stevie Ray Vaughan on a regular basis. Other bands should take note.
3.) Eli ‘Paperboy’ Reed - Come And Get It! (Parlophone)
Barely an evening goes by on British television without the title track of this album being used as a soundtrack for something. It’s an insanely energetic record, with Eli channelling James Brown, Sam Cooke and Sharon Jones all at the same time.
4.) Oli Brown - Heads I Win, Tails You Loose (Ruf Records)
Make no mistake, it’s been a good year for Ruf Records. They got legendary producer Mike Vernon (Bluesbreakers) out of retirement for this one and it’s a corker. He might be in his early 20s and as British as bangers and mash, but Oli Brown is the real deal.
5.) Various - Hipshakers Volume 1: Teach Me To Money (Vampisoul)
There are millions of blues/R&B compilations out there, but this one is a bit special. It’s a collection of cuts from the vaults of King and Federal, featuring vintage recordings by Johnny ‘Guitar’ Watson, Charles Brown and Willie Dixon, among others. It also comes with some superb liner notes and is damn funky.
6.) Grace Potter & The Nocturnals (Hollywood)
Obviously, this is not a straight blues album, but Grace Potter is one of the finest singers out there at the moment. Tracks like ‘Medicine’ and ‘Tiny Light’ are jaw-droppingly good. I just wish they would come to the UK soon!
7.) JJ Grey & Mofro - Georgia Warhouse (Alligator)
I’ve been a huge fan of JJ Grey since ‘Country Ghetto’ a few years back. His latest album does not disappoint. It’s swamp rock, with plenty of soul and funk. It also features guest appearances by Toots Hibbert and Derek Trucks.
8.) The Ace Story Volume 1 (Ace Records)
Another compilation, but this time is the turn of Ace Records. It’s got 24 classics, by the likes of Frankie Ford, Huey Smith and many more. Blues historians will love the 16 page booklet, which comes complete with a 6,000 word essay on the label.
9.) Oil City Confidential: The Story of Dr. Feelgood (EMI)
One of the finest films of the year was Julien Temple’s documentary on the rise and fall of British legend’s Dr. Feelgood. The soundtrack, which includes some of the Feelgood’s greatest moments is essential listening. There are a couple of Johnny & The Pirates songs for good measure.
10.) Imelda May - Mayhem (Decca)
I think I probably prefer her first album, but there’s no doubt that Imelda May is one of the most extraordinary acts out there. She takes 50s R&B and gives it a 21st century makeover. Her videos rock too.
My interview with the great Shawn Mullins is in issue 101 of Maverick, out soon!
