One of my all-time favorites! RIP.
One of my all-time favorites! RIP.
Know any other musicians that did the splits during their performance?
"The paths of experimentation twist and turn through mountains of miscalculations, and often lose themselves in error and darkness!"
--Leslie Daniel, "The Brain That Wouldn't Die."
Some tunes: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCa1...SV2qtug/videos
I don't know if it's true, but it was in the movie "Great Balls of Fire".I read an anecdote that one time way back in the day ('50s), JLL opened a show for Chuck and was a little miffed about it (the opening spot), so he threw everything he had into his number and ended by setting the piano on fire. Then he sauntered backstage where Chuck was waiting in the wings to come on and said nonchalantly, "follow that, sir!" or words to that effect.
One of my earliest memories is riding in the car with my Dad and hearing "Maybelline"for the first time. I knew at the tender age of five that I was hearing something unique.
I read his auto bio. He wasn't perfect, but he was a heck of a guitar player and entertainer. Hard to believe his only #1 hit was "My Ding-a-Ling."
Living’ in the Mitten
I lived in that central Ill. area where Chuck used to tour. He would roll in with only Johnny Johnson the piano man in a big Caddy. If there was an opening act he would practice them and keep them on stage for his show. If not, he would get musicians through the musicians union hall and pay scale for a bass and drums. I can't tell you how many guys were later. introduced as "having backed up the legend Chuck Berry." Great man and may he RIP. MMc
Heard today that his last album will be released this June - he was still rockin' at 90! Once a rocker, always a rocker, I guess...
Jerry Lee was quoted as saying how much he'll miss the times the two had together on the road. I can't imagine the trouble those two would be able to get into! I once interviewed Chuck on the phone. Not a bad guy. A bit jaded, but he was honest and told me some things I wouldn't dare repeat (and Scott wouldn't appreciate me posting them here). One friend wrote on Facebook that he saw Chuck at Studio 54 years ago, from the VIP room, and Keith Richards was sitting in the corner intently figuring out exactly what Chuck was playing and how he was doing it. It wasn't just talk, he was a devoted student of Chuck's work.
Eastman 605, Strad-o-lin, and Kentucky 300e mandolins.
Mandolinist, Stringtopia, the Long Island Mandolin and Guitar Orchestra
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A couple of Chuck Berry recordings that go especially well on mandolin for playing along:
"You Never Can Tell (C'est la Vie)" is in C. The piano melody between verses makes for a good double stop run in C.
"Promised Land" - also in C.
I used to play "Memphis Tennessee" in a band - Chuck did this in Eb which is not so mando friendly but I think we played it in A.
You might wanna try Johnny Rivers recording in E , Lonnie Mack's in G or (my favourite) The Faces in C.
Bren
Here’s my Chuck Berry story:
For a while I was in an independent back-up band – a promoter putting on an oldies show would hire us to play behind the famous ’50s & ’60s vocal acts. Chuck Berry was on a few of these shows, but I never got to play with him because he needed a separate back-up band just for him (so the promoter would have to hire two back-up bands). We’d play with, say, Brian Hyland, Shirley Austin Reeves of the Shirelles, and Little Anthony, and then Chuck would headline the show, with the other band behind him.
So, we’re all having lunch together, and I don’t recognize the guy sitting across from me, so I asked him what he does. He was there to rent the Fender amp that Chuck was going to use that night to the promoter. (Chuck was picky about his amp – at that same concert he walked onstage right before the show, full audience watching, pulled out a tape measure and measured the amp to make sure it was legit.) Turns out, this guy was spending his whole summers doing this, going from venue to venue, following Chuck around, and renting the same amp to different promoters. He told me that he’d won the amp in a poker game.
And yes, I got to see and hear some great legendary music, from the side of the stage.
Yes I play Chuck on my mandolin. Good music is good music whatever it's played on.
Its not a backwards guitar.
Just got my copy of "Brown Eyed Handsome Man" Its an unauthorized biography of Chuck. Pretty interesting so far. By far my favorite Berry song is "Nadine". The cover, by John Hammond was undoubtedly perfectly done, in my much less than humble opinion. The picture Chuck Berry paints of his undying love for this woman, as he stalks her through the city is priceless.
I got on a city bus and found a vacant seat,
I thought I saw my future bride walking up the street,
I shouted to the driver hey conductor, you must slow down.
I think I see her please let me off this bus
(Chorus. Repeat after each verse)
Nadine, honey is that you?
Oh, Nadine. Honey, is that you?
Seems like every time I see you Darling you got something else to do
I saw her from the corner when she turned and doubled back
And started walkin' toward a coffee colored Cadillac
I was pushin' through the crowd to get to where she's at
And I was campaign shouting like a southern diplomat
Downtown searching for her, looking all around.
Saw her getting in a yellow cab heading up town.
I caught a loaded taxi, paid up everybody's tab.
Waved a twenty dollar bill, told him 'catch that yellow cab.'
She move around like a wayward summer breeze,
go, driver, go, go, catch her for me please.
Moving thru the traffic like a mounted cavalier.
Leaning out the taxi window trying to make her hear.
Ray Dearstone #009 D1A (1999)
Skip Kelley #063 Offset Two Point (2017)
Arches #9 A Style (2005)
Bourgeois M5A (2022)
Hohner and Seydel Harmonicas (various keys)
"Heck, Jimmy Martin don't even believe in Santy Claus!"
I remember hearing years ago that Chuck had substituted "diplomat" for "Democrat" (which would have made a more recognisable image) to avoid any political friction. Excellent use of language and imagery and the syllables are very rhythmic - you can see what Dylan got from him.
Bren
Jim and Jesse McReynolds did a whole album of CB songs called "Berry Picking in the Country." They really swing out with the help of Jimmy Buchanan on fiddle. Their love of Chuck Berry's music really shines through on this album. I don't know if this one has made it onto CD, but it's worth seeking out for fans of Jim and Jesse as well as Chuck Berry aficionados.
Goodbye, Johnny B. Goode.
Last edited by Warren H; Mar-26-2017 at 8:34pm. Reason: Spelling
Ray Dearstone #009 D1A (1999)
Skip Kelley #063 Offset Two Point (2017)
Arches #9 A Style (2005)
Bourgeois M5A (2022)
Hohner and Seydel Harmonicas (various keys)
"Heck, Jimmy Martin don't even believe in Santy Claus!"
Began Reading, "Brown Eyed Handsome Man" by Bruce Pegg. The author, describes Berry's Guitar playing on the instrumental break in the first recoding of '30 days' as, "Rapid fire, mandolin-style strumming."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kU_506KSI_s
Maybe a stretch. Middle class kid in the Midwest born in 1926. He would have had to have heard at least a few WSM Barn Dance broadcasts?
Ray Dearstone #009 D1A (1999)
Skip Kelley #063 Offset Two Point (2017)
Arches #9 A Style (2005)
Bourgeois M5A (2022)
Hohner and Seydel Harmonicas (various keys)
"Heck, Jimmy Martin don't even believe in Santy Claus!"
Maybe a stretch. Middle class kid in the Midwest born in 1926. He would have had to have heard at least a few WSM Barn Dance broadcasts?[/QUOTE]
Popular mythology says that the tune Ida Red was the inspiration for Maybelline.
Ray Dearstone #009 D1A (1999)
Skip Kelley #063 Offset Two Point (2017)
Arches #9 A Style (2005)
Bourgeois M5A (2022)
Hohner and Seydel Harmonicas (various keys)
"Heck, Jimmy Martin don't even believe in Santy Claus!"
Orcas Island Tonewoods
Free downloads of my mandolin CDs:
"Mandolin Graffiti"
"Mangler Of Bluegrass"
"Overhead At Darrington"
"Electric Mandolin Graffiti"
I think there's a bit of influence from Bill's style in Rocky Road Blues and Bluegrass Stomp.
But that's two...and I really couldn't say for sure if either one of them influenced C.B. or not.
Double Post.
Sounds like a great gig to have had! I wish you'd been backing him up the one time I heard him, in 1967 at the Oakland Auditorium. He had the shabbiest band ever behind him. Probably the cheapest too, as they were rumored to be the promoter's teenaged kids. It didn't help that he ended his set with about 12 minutes of My Ding-a-ling. Disappointing show, and a shame, because the real headliner that night was Jackie Wilson, who brought in his own excellent band. Also on the bill: Sly and the Family Stone, in one of their first gigs.
As far as country influence goes, I hear more Hank Williams than Monroe. And he was a good steel guitar player early on. As a kid I listened for hours to Deep Feeling, the flip side of School Day:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-NBfhhnL-Y
(Sorry, doesn't seem to want to imbed.)
Just got through with an issue of Rolling Stone I took from the dentist's office. (With my dentist's approval of course.) Dylan said, he was very impressed with Chuck's writing. Article said, Chuck had considered Johnny B Goode being a "Colored" boy at one point, but changes it to Country Boy as an afterthought. Wasn't until I read that article that I realized he was buried with his guitar.
Ray Dearstone #009 D1A (1999)
Skip Kelley #063 Offset Two Point (2017)
Arches #9 A Style (2005)
Bourgeois M5A (2022)
Hohner and Seydel Harmonicas (various keys)
"Heck, Jimmy Martin don't even believe in Santy Claus!"
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