The Hour Of The Wolf-With
Mad Monk Bluesman Howlin’ Wolf In Mind
CD Review
By Zack James
Howlin’ Wolf
Jack Callahan made his old
high school corner boy from in front of Jimmy Jack’s Diner in in growing up
Riverdale Seth Garth laugh one night when they were tossing down a couple of
high shelf scotches, with water chasers after having just seen one James Montgomery,
the famous blues harmonica player who had learned his trade at the feet of
Little Walter and Junior Dean, perform at the Shell and prove once and for all
that he still had “it.” That “it” not just some far-fetched idea that Seth had
as an old-time music critic when he had first started out in journalism,
started first when he was still in college throwing small pieces into the
American Folk Gazette before he got his bigbreak with The Eye in the days when
guys like Trick Stearn and Bones Bennett made names for themselves and dragged
the newspaper along with them before the big ebb tide of the 1970s washed away
the glad tidings of the 1960s that everybody had pinned their hopes. No this
“it” had some spunk, some substance to its core and Jack had gone along with
Seth on this one. See one night Jack and Seht had gone to a Big Bill Bloom
concert at the Garden and had come away angry, angry that they had spent their
good money on expensive tickets when Big Bill could no longer carry a tune,
Back in the day that had not mattered as much because the power of his lyrics
carried day. But that night he was not producing new lyrics, hadn’t done so in
ages and was living off old time nostalgia from the AARP. And the fools had
clapped their hands off giving him yet another false life. Jesus. Seth had
written a scathing article in the prestigious American Folk Review about the
event and had hell rain down on him. After that blast Seth resolved to check
out as many of the old time folk and blues singers who were still standing to
see if they still had “it” and let people know what was what (he did not bother
to check out the old time rock and rollers that had started the great jail
break-out of the 1950s since all that were left except Jerry Lee were one hit
wonders who didn’t make the
cut.
So James Montgomery got his
thumbs up. Funny some guys, guys like David Bromberg still had it, Jim Kweskin
too but before he passed away Utah Phillips was doddering and the late Etta
James was in different planet. Sad.
Now that you know the
score, know what the old corner boys were up to we can get back to what Jack
said that made Seth laugh. Simple he just said, “You know as good as James is
Howlin’ Wolf would have had him for lunch and had time for a nap.” And of
course Seth had to agree. Agree for no other reason that he and jack had been
present in a little side room in Newport, at the big Folk Festival back in 1965
when the Wolf practically blew the walls of Jericho down when he played How
Many More Years practically devouring the harmonica. Now the Wolf always
claimed that he was not a drinking man (had taken the legendary country blues
guys, his “father” to task for showing up drunk and giving the race a bad name)
and wasn’t a dope fiend (his term one time when Seth interviewed him after he
had come back from London after playing on an album with the Stones and Seth
had joked that he probably had been stoned al the time and the Wolf looked at
him with evil eyes like don’t go there sonny boy). But Seth was convinced that
that whiff he smelled was not from some other workshop, the one with the white
kids as Howlin’ Wolf put it (Jim Kweskin and his jug band as it turned out
which was entirely possible as well). But no way that a living breathing man, a
big burly hunk of a man could put that much energy, that much air, that much
bloody sweat (wringing out his handkerchief drawing torrents when he was done)
without some help.
So while Seth and Jack
would never know for sure whether the Wolf man was high that famous Newport
afternoon they knew one thing, one laugh making thing, the Wolf would have had
James Montgomery for lunch. And James still had “it.” So you can bet
six two and even the Wolf had it at the end too. If you don’t believe Seth then
listen to this CD and weep for your not having been there back in the day when
the Wolf mopped up the blues floor, made his bones.
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