“Corrina, Corrina, Gal Where Did You Stay
Last Night?”-With Blues/Folksinger Taj Majal In Mind
2008
1968
By Music Critic Lance Lawrence
CD Review
Shoutin’ in Key, Taj Majal, 2000
Seth Garth the old time music critic
for the now long gone alternative newspaper The
Eye who had followed all the trends in the folk world in the old days once
his friend from high school, Jack Callahan, had turned him on to the genre
after having heard some mountain music coming on from a fugitive radio station
one summer Sunday night still was interested in what was left of that world.
More importantly who was still left still standing from that rough-hewn folk
minute of the early 1960s. An important part of that interest centered on who
still had “it,” who could still sing and not embarrass the stage, from among
those who were still standing.
That was no mere academic question but
had risen quite sharply in the early part of 2002 when Seth, Jack and their
respective wives had attended a Bob Dylan concert up in Augusta Maine and had
come away disappointed, no, more than disappointed, shocked that Dylan had lost
whatever voice he had had and depended increasingly on his backup singers and
musicians. Dylan no longer had it, both agreed that they would have to be
satisfied with listening to the old records, tapes, CDs, and YouTube. That
single shocking event led subsequently to an earnest attempt to attend concerts
and performances of as many of the old-time folkies as they could before they
passed on. They have documented elsewhere some of those others some who have
like Utah Phillips and Dave Van Ronk subsequently passed on but one night
recently, a few months ago now, they were discussing one Taj Majal (stage name for
a folk and blues singer not the famous wonder of the world in India) and how
they had first heard him back in the day since in anticipation of seeing him in
person up at the great concert hall overlooking the harbor at Rockport on the coast
of Massachusetts.
Naturally enough if you knew Seth and
Jack they disagreed on exactly where they had first seen Taj after Jack had
hear him do a cover of the old country blues classic Corrina, Corrina on that fugitive folk program out of Rhode Island,
WAFJ. Seth said the Club 47 over in Harvard Square in Cambridge and Jack said
they had gone underground to the Unicorn over on Boylston Street in Boston
(that literally the club was below ground and you went down via a door in the middle
of the sidewalk). Of course those disputes never got resolved, never got final
resolution. What was not disputed was that they had both been blown away by the
performance of Taj and his small backup band that night. His blues mastery
proved to them that someone from the younger generation was ready to keep the
old time blues tradition alive, including playing the old National Steel guitar
that the likes of Son House and Bukka White created such great blues classic
on. The highlight that night had been The
Sky Is Crying which has been covered by many others since but not equaled.
The track record of old time folkies
had been mixed as one would expect as the shocking Dylan experiences pointed
out. Utah Phillips by the time they got to see him had lost it, David Bromberg
still had it for two examples. The night they were discussing and disputing the
merit of Taj’s case both agreed that he probably had lost it since that
rough-hewn gravelly voice of his had like Dylan’s and Willie Nelson’s taken a
beating with time and many performances. Needless to say they should not have
worried since Taj was smokin’ that night (although they did when old be-hatted
Taj came out and immediately sat down not a good sign for prior experiences
with other old time performers). Played the old Elmore James Television Blues on the National Steel
like he was about twenty years old. Did his old version of Corrina proud and his version of CC Rider as well. Yeah, Taj still had it. But if you don’t believe
a couple of old folkies and don’t get a chance to see him in person out your
way then grab this album Shoutin’ In Key
from the old days and see what they meant when bluesy guys played for keeps.
Got it.
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