Taj Mahal – Taj Mahal
It is often instructive to remember just how hard, how tough, how raw, how funky Taj Mahal’s blues were when he came on the scene in ’68 with debut. This LP is tough as fuckin’ nails, and don’t you forget it.
It is often instructive to remember just how hard, how tough, how raw, how funky Taj Mahal’s blues were when he came on the scene in ’68 with debut. This LP is tough as fuckin’ nails, and don’t you forget it.
Leave a comment | tags: Album Recommendations, Blues, Debut, Taj Mahal | posted in Album Recommendations
Q: Where does the name Preacher Boy come from?
A: Well, it started out essentially as a demi-derisive nickname a good friend used to call me when I’d get to soapboxing too much; sort of a Hazel Motes call out.
Q: How many Preacher Boy albums are there?
A: 6, if you include the 4-song Tenderloin EP:
Q: Best gigs ever?
A: Too many to count! How about favorite acts I’ve gotten to perform with? Some highlights:
Q: How old is your National?
A: 1936! And actually, I’m so fortunate, I have two now, both from 1936!
Q: What tunings do you use on your Nationals?
A: Well, as I said, I have two, and I use them differently; what I call “The National” (the one my Grandpa gave me) is my slide instrument, so on that one, I use primarily Open G and Open D, and the minors of each as well. My second National (the one that belonged to my Grandpa, and was passed down to me when he passed) I keep mainly in standard, though I’ll occasionally do Drop D or something like that. I have one tune for which I use a really strange tuning (Open C, essentially, but with no 3rd: CGCGCC), and I generally do that on this second National as well.
Q: What do you think about all the Tom Waits comparisons you’ve received over the years?
A: Well, two things, I suppose: 1) High praise, and 2) A lot of people need to go listen to Blind Willie Johnson, Bukka White, Charley Patton, Dave Van Ronk, Lemmy, Louis Armstrong, and Captain Beefheart.
Q: What’s the most successful song you’ve ever recorded?
A: Depends on the criteria for judging, really, so, four answers:
Q: What got you into this music in the first place?
A: Simple. Side 1, song 1, of a Vanguard Twofer that collected all the great country blues performers who had performed at the Newport Folk Festival in the 60s. I put it on my record player with NO idea what to expect, and along came the first song: Mississippi John Hurt playing “Sliding Delta.” And that was it, man. I heard it, and I said, “I’m sorry Joe Strummer, but THAT! I want to be able to do THAT!”
Leave a comment | tags: AJ Croce, BImbo's 365, Blind Pig Records, Bob Dylan, Bob Geldof, Buckwheat Zydeco, Charlie Musselwhite, Chris Isaak, Chris Whitley, CJ Chenier, Clarence Gatemouth Brown, Coast Road Records, Cracker, Crow, Demanding To Be Next, Eagle-Eye Cherry, Glastonbury Festival, Great Bluesmen At Newport, Gutters & Pews, Jimmy Vaughan, JJ Cale, John Lee Hooker, Los Lobos, Manifesto Records, Mississippi John Hurt, National Steel Guitar, Nick Cave, Peter Wolf, Portishead, Preacher Boy, Preacher Boy & The Natural Blues, Shane MacGowan, Sliding Delta, Slim's Sonny Landreth, Taj Mahal, The Catalyst, The Devil's Buttermilk, The Great American Music Hall, The Tenderloin EP, The Texas Tornadoes, The Warfield, Tom Waits, Wah Tup Records | posted in Performance Stories | Tales From The Road, Preacher Boy: General News, Recordings | Albums
No Instagram images were found.