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After Hastings Street disappeared, the Motor City blues scene dwindled to a handful of bars in rough neighborhoods where stalwarts like Little Sonny,
Washboard Willie, Boogie Woogie Red, and Little Mac Collins & the Partymakers continued to entertain their friends and patrons well outside the mainstream of modern entertainment. In the early 70s Little Sonny had a
shot at blues stardom via several fine albums for Stax Records' Enterprise imprint; a wild collection of Motor City blues artists was spotlighted at the 1973 Ann Arbor Blues & Jazz Festival; and bluesman Bobo
Jenkins and deejay/entrepeneur Famous Coachman established a series of free Detroit Blues Festivals, a Detroit Blues Society, and a weekly blues radio program on WDET-FM, but these were at best shots in the darkness of
American life in the 70s. More than a decade would elapse before a new crop of Detroit bluesmen would emerge from the gloom of the city's post-industrial landscape. The advent of the 1990s brought to light
well-seasoned veterans like Eddie Burns, Louis "Mr. Bo" Collins, and Sir Mack Rice, whose music was documented by a fledgling little record label in Toledo called Blue Suit Records. Another intrepid local
label, Blues Factory Records, issued intriguing albums featuring previously unrecorded Motor City bluesmen like the Butler Twins, Willie D. Warren, Harmonica Shah, Uncle Jessie White, and Johnny "Yard Dog"
Jones (who went on to make an excellent CD, "Ain't Gonna Worry," for Chicago's Earwig label and won the city's first Handy Award in the process).
Now guitarist Johnnie Bassett, who got his start on
Hastings Street, is issuing albums on a variety of labels and touring the world to wide acclaim. Vocalists Alberta Adams and Joe Weaver, fellow Hastings Street survivors, are following closely in Johnnie's footsteps,
and blues from Detroit is beginning to be heard wherever music lovers congregate. One of the most hopeful documents of the turn-of-the-century Motor City blues scene was issued earlier this year by John Rockwood and
Bob Seeman of Blue Suit Records, which continues to lead the way in providing an outlet for what's happening today. "Hastings Street Grease: Detroit Blues Is Alive, Volume One" presented music by eight vital
modern bluesmen with deep roots in the Hastings Street era, including Eddie Kirkland, Piano Fats, Eddie Burns, Willie D. Warren, Harmonica Shah, Emmanuel Young and Leon Horner. On "Hastings Street Revisited"
(Part 1) Detroit Piano Fats shares his memories of the old stomping grounds with Harmonica Shah, and Kirkland looks back in sorrow on "I Walk Down Hastings Street."
Yet the raw energy and drive of the
Detroit blues remains intact throughout, as fresh and exciting as ever, almost as if the musicians had come straight to the recording studio from their gigs at some of the little joints on Hastings. There's nothing of
nostalgia here, nor the hokey kind of "tribute album" ambience that's so popular with the big-label blues producers of today. This is the low-down Detroit blues at its most elemental, and it's as precise and
effective as a JVB 78.
Now Blue Suit brings forth Detroit Blues Is Alive, Volume 2, a second generous helping of modern-day Motor City sounds gathered from the same relaxed, sympathetic sessions that produced the
first Hastings Street Grease collection. Piano Fats takes Harmonica Shah way back in the day on "Hastings Street Revisited" (Part 2) and goes "Strolling Through Paradise Valley," the downtown
entertainment mecca from which the music spread north along Hastings.
Emmannuel Young and Leon Horner pay tribute to Detroit blues giant John Lee Hooker with "I'm in the Mood" and "Boogie
Chillen," respectively, while Harmonica Shah salutes Jimmy Reed on "Have Mercy, Mr. Reed" and contributes the chilling Motor City anthem "Bring Me My Shotgun." Willie D. Warren adds a new
dimension to the Memphis Slim favorite simply by pointing out that "Everyday We Have The Blues" and then reveals "What Goes On in the Dark" with a special dedication to Shah.
Eddie Kirkland,
the Hastings Street bluesman who began his career 50 years ago backing up John Lee Hooker, continues his contemporary resurgence with a pair of strong tracks in "Going Back to the Backwoods" and the ominous
"There's Got To Be Some Changes Made." Eddie Burns is in typically fine form on a live treatment of "When I Get Drunk," the dynamic Griswold brothers, Art & Roman, of Toledo, Ohio, romp and stomp
on a great live cut titled "Daddy, Daddy," and the venerable Uncle Jessie White's distinctive approach is nicely showcased on the classic "Bad Luck Is Falling."
Hastings Street may have been
laid to rest lo these 40 years ago, but its sound and spirit live on in the performances recorded here and in the music of the Detroit bluesmen who have managed to survive the cruel vicissitudes of time and social
deterioration to keep on moving forward, all the way into the 21st century. That's definitely something Detroit can be proud of, and it's all right here on this compact disc. Put on your bibs and tuckers, ladies and
g's, and dig into these musical ham hocks and chitlins cooked to funky perfection with plenty of that old-time Hastings Street Grease.
—New Orleans July 2, 1999 |