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Tag: Bonnie Raitt

  • Better Late Than Never, Final Recordings from Rock and Roll Icon Johnnie Johnson are Released

    The history of rock and roll is populated with any number of “unsung heroes,” musicians who made  significant contributions to the art form but received little credit or recognition. One such individual is Johnnie Johnson.  Which is why those in the know are excited about the recent release of I’m Just Johnnie, a collection of songs recorded over 20 years ago which have been gathering dust in a closet near St. Louis.

    Johnson was Chuck Berry’s piano player during the ‘50s, when songs like “Johnny B. Goode,” “Maybellene” and “Roll Over Beethoven” were blasting out of transistor radios. While Berry commanded the stage, duckwalking and strutting while playing some really wild guitar, Johnson sat in the background, providing a solid musical foundation for songs that described a life full of cute girls, snazzy cars and fuse-blowing juke boxes in postwar America.

    Not only did Johnson anchor Berry’s band, but it is argued that he contributed mightily to Berry’s revolutionary musical approach that codified much of the rock and roll that came after it. Some (including Chuck Berry scholar Keith Richards) believe that many of Berry’s signature guitar riffs were actually adapted from Johnson’s piano figures. Johnson brought a lawsuit against Berry in 2000, claiming that he was due a cowriter’s credit on over 50 songs. A judge, however, dismissed the case, ruling that too much time had passed since the original copyrights were filed under Berry’s name alone.

    After splitting with Berry in 1973, Johnson played with blues legend Albert King while also performing periodic solo gigs. Eric Clapton and Richards championed Johnson in his later years, hiring him for various musical projects and contributing to his most noteworthy solo release, Johnnie B. Bad, in 1991. Johnson continued to live in his longtime home of St. Louis until his passing in 2005.

    But, thanks to St. Louis musician Gene Ackmann, the Johnnie Johnson story doesn’t end there. Ackmann met Johnson in 1979, when the latter was playing at a small blues club. The two musicians stayed in touch, with Johnson occasionally  playing with Ackmann’s band, notably at St. Louis sporting events, including the Cardinals’ baseball home openers and a parade in 2000 celebrating the Rams’ Super Bowl victory.

    “I was – and still am – a huge fan of Johnnie’s,” says Ackmann, speaking from his home near St. Louis. “Initially, I sought him out because I was a big fan of Chuck Berry, and then I started digging in and realized everything Johnnie was doing on [those records].

    “He would play at these little blues clubs, so I would go out and listen to him. But he also played at this place – it was called the Lemp Mansion – on Sunday nights, and he had a little trio with an upright bass and drums, and he was playing Great American Songbook type stuff. He was playing ‘Sunny Side of the Street,’ ‘Canadian Sunset,’ ‘Misty’ and stuff.”

    After Johnson began to sit in with Ackmann’s band, their friendship truly blossomed when the two discovered that they had not only a love of music in common but also one of fishing. “We were bumming around, he was coming out and playing with my band, and somehow or another I mentioned that I had a lake at my house and that I liked to fish. And Johnnie was so excited to know that. He said, ‘I want to come out and go fishing sometime.’
    “Johnnie lived about an hour and a half away from me, down by the Arch in St. Louis. So I would drive down early in the morning and pick him up, drive back out to my house, and we would fish all day. It was making his day, so it was making my day. It was like getting to spend the day with your grandfather again. I would have done anything for Johnnie.” One day, after another fishing outing, Johnson told Ackmann that he would like to record an album and wondered if Ackmann could produce it. Ackmann quickly assembled a group of local musicians, along with guest stars like Bonnie Raitt, Bruce Hornsby, Johnny Rivers and John Sebastian.

    “I just wanted to put something together that would be really good and represent what Johnnie did,” Ackmann says. “I used some of the guys in my band, and then we used some of the guys who had played with Johnnie for a long time. We wrote some songs, and we did some cover songs.” Work took place primarily in the music room at Ackmann’s house. “Most of what Johnnie and I did, when we put all the arrangements together, was done during rain delays from fishing.”

    Johnson died not long after the album was completed, and this development made it difficult for Ackmann to find a company willing to release the record. So the master tapes sat in a closet at Ackmann’s house. “Then, about a year and a half ago, which would have been Johnnie’s 100th birthday, I was out cutting the grass or something, and I thought, “I need to dig back into this thing and see if we can’t get something going,’” Ackmann recalls.
    After a bit of studio tinkering, Ackmann assembled a collection of songs that included five Johnson vocals, five songs with guest artists and two instrumentals. The music business had changed markedly since the original recordings were made, leading Ackmann to head in a different direction with regard to the release of the album. “I said, ‘You know what? I’m just going to do my own thing. Because I don’t want to give the master tapes to everybody. I don’t want to do all that. I’ll just do it myself.’”  Hence the release of I’m Just Johnnie on Ackmann’s Missouri Morning Records.

    According to Ackmann, Johnson maintained a positive attitude throughout his life, despite an initial lack of credit and later periods when he wasn’t working much. “He was incredibly humble and gentle and just a joy to be around. He could have been a little bit bitter. Could have been. But he was not. He was not. Because as time went on, after [the Chuck Berry documentary] Hail! Hail! Rock ‘n’ Roll, people discovered him, and he started working more. He got better gigs. He got an agent. He started playing better places. And all of a sudden, Johnnie rose to be an elder statesman of the blues.”

    Tom Richards

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  • Houston Concert Watch 2/14:  Eagles, Gipsy Kings and More

    Houston Concert Watch 2/14: Eagles, Gipsy Kings and More

    It has been a few years since the Guinness Book of World Records crossed my mind. However, a news story concerning a record (for the tallest structure made of matches, an Eiffel Tower replica) that was disallowed (bespoke match sticks) and then reinstated (woo hoo!) caused me to harken back to a time when the Guinness book was something like a circus freak show between two covers. The world’s tallest man! The world’s shortest man! The most tattoos! The most cockroaches eaten! The deepest nasal insertion!

    As with many things in this life, pesky concerns regarding ethics and safety have, to a degree, robbed us of our fun and, in this case, neutered a once-great publication. No more records whose pursuit might endanger people, like eating glass or bicycle parts, for instance. And what’s worse, as John Oliver explained to us on “This Week Tonight,” a large portion of the Guinness Book of World Records’ income is derived from working with companies in order to generate publicity for their products. What a scam. The world record for highest-grossing concert tour? Here’s a hint: the artist’s name rhymes with Sailor Rift.

    Ticket Alert
    Justin Timberlake’s public image isn’t the best these days, following an unflattering portrait in Britney Spears’ recent autobiography. And, given what is in the book, it probably didn’t help that his most recent single was “Selfish.” Nevertheless, Mr. “Cry Me a River” should still sell a few tickets when his tour pulls in to Toyota Center on Wednesday, December 4. Presales are up now, and the general ticket sale begins on Friday.

    At this risk of insulting a lady by alluding to her age, I will point out that Bonnie Raitt has built a magnificent career over the past 50 years. All periods of Raitt’s musical journey are worth investigating, from her early exploration of the blues to collaborations with members of Little Feat to her platinum selling records from the ‘90s. Tickets are on sale now for Raitt’s performance at the Hobby Center on Wednesday, November 6.

    And speaking of musicians that just don’t quit, Carlos Santana will be back on tour this summer, on a bill that also features fellow San Franciscan band Counting Crows. Since Santana has previously encountered some troubles dealing with summer temperatures onstage, it’s a good thing that he will be playing indoors, at Toyota Center, on Saturday, August 17. Tickets go on sale Friday morning.

    Concerts This Week
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xkQh11kIU6I The Eagles have announced that this will be the last roundup, and while I am generally suspicious of “farewell tours,” I will cut them a bit of slack since they have named this one after a Raymond Chandler novel (The Long Goodbye) with a wink regarding its duration. Tickets are pricey, but the show features a most generous helping of Eagles hits, plus several Joe Walsh solo tunes, all performed with exemplary musicianship.
    And as a bonus, Steely Dan will open. Kind of appropriate, since both bands have taken good-natured jabs at each other in their lyrics (“Stabbed it with their steely knives” versus “Turn up the Eagles, the neighbors are listening”). You can check in to Toyota Center on Friday, but (natch) you can never leave.
    How to describe the music of the Gipsy Kings? Well, technically their style is referred to as rumba flamenco, a genre that, as you might imagine, combines Cuban rumba and Spanish flamenco. Significantly, “rumba” was initially another term for “party” in Cuba, and that’s what you get at a Gipsy Kings gig. That being the case, get ready to rumba on Saturday at the House of Blues.
    Junior Brown has always marched to the beat of his own drum. Or, in this case, his own guit-steel, an instrument that is a mashup of a lap steel and an electric guitar. The influences are many in one of Brown’s shows, as he skips from honky-tonk to surf music to Hendrix, sometimes during the same song. Brown performs at Main Street Crossing on Monday, so keep an eye out for the “Highway Patrol” on your way to Tomball.
    A double bill featuring Extreme and Living Colour might seem odd at first glance, if you were only familiar with Extreme’s adult contemporary ballad “More Than Words.” However, an examination of the album that spawned the hit (Pornograffitti) reveals a hard rocking band influenced by funk and post-Van Halen guitar theatrics. Which makes the guys in Living Colour perfect tour mates. Though not as well-known as some string slingers, Vernon Reid is renowned among guitar players, and nobody does intense and pissed off like vocalist Corey Glover (see “Cult of Personality”). It will get loud on Tuesday at the House of Blues.

    Tom Richards

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  • Your 2023 Grammy Awards Recap

    Your 2023 Grammy Awards Recap

    For football fans, February 12 marks the Super Bowl. For music fans, February 5 marked their version of the Super Bowl: the 65th annual Grammy Awards. It’s a day where everyone comes together to celebrate their favorite artists…and brutally criticize the Recording Academy’s decisions.


    For three and a half arduous hours, the Grammy’s held viewers captive…delaying the Big Four categories until the very end with Trevor Noah monologues, performances by Stevie Wonder, Lizzo, Harry Styles, and an ode to the 50th anniversary of hip-hop. But, at the end of the day, history was still made.

    Lizzo

    Rob Latour/Shutterstock

    Beyoncé, who arrived late after being stuck in traffic, became the most decorated artist in Grammy history, earning her 32nd Grammy award for Best Dance/Electronic Recording. Fans of Beyoncé, however, were outraged when she lost Album of the Year to Harry Styles. This makes it the fourth year where she was nominated for AOTY and lost.

    But that’s not all…Kim Petras became the first transgender woman to win a Grammy in the Best Pop Duo/Group Performance category for her song “Unholy” with Sam Smith. The catchy song dominated the Billboard Hot 100, which they also performed in Satanic-chic clothing.

    Kim Petras & Sam Smith

    David Fisher/Shutterstock

    One of the most wholesome moments was Adele accomplishing her lifelong dream. It wasn’t to win another Grammy…but to meet The Rock. After Trevor Noah revealed this fact earlier in the show, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson took the stage to present his new best friend, Adele, with the Best Pop Solo Performance award.

    Adele and Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson

    Rob Latour/Shutterstock

    Ticketmaster’s worst nightmare and our queen, Taylor Swift, won Best Music Video for “All Too Well (Taylor’s Version) (10 Minute Version).” Not only that, but she stood and cheered for every act and winner. Drinking wine and just vibing at the Grammys? My exact vibe.

    Lizzo is the first Black woman to win Record of the Year for “About Damn Time” since Whitney Houston for “I Will Always Love You.” She looked equally ecstatic for friend Harry Styles, who won the first and last awards of the night: Best Pop Vocal Album and Album Of The Year, for his album Harry’s House.

    The winners of the Big Four categories:

    1. Album of the Year: Harry Styles, Harry’s House
    2. Song of the Year: Bonnie Raitt, “Just Like That”
    3. Record of the Year: Lizzo, “About Damn Time”
    4. Best New Artist: Samara Joy

    Jai Phillips

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  • ‘Something to Talk About’ songwriter Shirley Eikhard dies

    ‘Something to Talk About’ songwriter Shirley Eikhard dies

    NEW YORK (AP) — Shirley Eikhard, the singer-songwriter who supplied songs for Cher, Emmylou Harris, Anne Murray, Chet Atkins and found lasting fame penning Bonnie Raitt‘s Grammy-winning 1991 hit “Something to Talk About,” has died. She was 67.

    Eikhard died Thursday at Headwaters Health Care Centre in Orangeville, Ontario, due to complications from cancer, said publicist Eric Alper.

    The blues-rock smash hit “Something to Talk About” was written in 1985 and Eikhard had offered it to Murray and other artists, who all declined to record it. Then years later Raitt left a message on Eikhard’s phone saying she she’d just recorded it. Raitt said later she’d discovered the song on a demo Eikhard had sent and admired it.

    The song was the first single from Raitt’s 1991 album “Luck of the Draw” and spent 20 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 5. It would win Raitt the best pop vocal performance at the 1992 Grammy Awards and was also nominated in the record of the year category.

    On Grammy night, Raitt made sure to thank Eikhard and she turned to Twitter after Eikhard’s death to say she was “deeply saddened,” writing “I will be forever grateful for our beautiful connection and friendship.”

    Eikhard earned Juno Awards in 1973 and 1974 for best country female artist and she won several BMI Awards. She was inducted into the Canadian Songwriter’s Hall of Fame in October 2020. Her most recent album was 2021′s “On My Way to You.”

    During her career, Eikhard released 18 full-length albums between 1972 to 2021 and taught herself to play guitar, piano, bass, drums, percussion, chromatic harmonica, sax, banjo and mandolin.

    At age 15, Eikhard’s song “It Takes Time” was recorded by country singer Murray in 1971, and later became a hit in her native Canada. Eikhard released her self-titled debut album the following year in 1972. The title track for Atkins’ 41st studio album, “Pickin’ My Way” was one of Eikhard’s earliest successes.

    She also crafted with Cher the frenetic dance track “Lovers Forever” for the 1994 film “Interview with the Vampire,” but it didn’t make the final soundtrack cut. They collaborated again on “Born With the Hunger,” from Cher’s 2000 album, “Not.com.mercial.”

    Eikhard sang the theme song for Stanley Kramer’s 1976 movie “The Domino Principle” starring Gene Hackman and Candice Bergen, as well as the theme song for “The Passion of Ayn Rand” in 2000.

    ___

    Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits

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  • New Brunswick-born singer and songwriter Shirley Eikhard dead at 67  | Globalnews.ca

    New Brunswick-born singer and songwriter Shirley Eikhard dead at 67 | Globalnews.ca

    Canadian singer-songwriter Shirley Eikhard, whose flirty track “Something to Talk About” gave Bonnie Raitt her biggest hit and a Grammy Award win, has died after a battle with cancer.

    Longtime friend Deborah Duggan says the musician died early Thursday at a hospital in Orangeville, Ont. surrounded by those closest to her. She was 67 years old.

    Read more:

    Second round of East Coast Music Award winners announced in Fredericton

    Eikhard, born in Sackville, N.B., got her first taste of success in her early teens when Anne Murray recorded her 1971 track “It Takes Time,” making it a Canadian chart hit.

    A year later, Eikhard’s self-titled debut album, released when she was only 16, gave her another boost. She went on to win Juno Awards for female country artist in 1973 and 1974.

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    Eikhard released several albums in the years that followed, but Raitt’s “Something to Talk About” offered an unexpected twist.

    Originally intended for Murray, the East Coast singer’s producers vetoed the track in the mid-1980s, saying it wasn’t hit-worthy.

    Several years later, it landed in the hands of Raitt, who recorded it for her 1991 album “Luck of the Draw.”

    “Something to Talk About” peaked at No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 that year and won Raitt a Grammy for best pop vocal performance for a female artist.

    This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 15, 2022.

    &copy 2022 The Canadian Press

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