When The Blues Was Dues- The Classic
Alligator Records Compilation
CD Review
By Zack James
Classic Alligator Records, many blues artists
Long before Seth Garth became back in
the day, the 1960s day, the music critic for the now long gone The Eye published in those day out of
Oakland, California he had been bitten by the blues bug. Of course in the 1960s
if one was to be a successful and relevant music critic one had to concentrate
on the emerging and then fading folk music minute (of which the blues was seen
as a sub-set of the genre especially the country blues wings with the likes of
Skip James, Son House, Bukka White, and Mississippi John Hurt) and then
post-British invasion and the rise of the counter-cultural movement what was
called “acid” rock. So Seth’s blues bug, except for an occasional sneak-in was
cut short by the needs of his career. Even then though Seth would keep up with
the various trends coming out of places like Chicago and Detroit and of the
artists who had formed his first interests.
Strangely Seth had come to his love of
the blues almost by accident. Back in the 1950s he had been like many teenagers
totally devoted to his transistor radio to shutout the distractions of parents
and siblings around the house. In those days though he was drawn to the fresh
air jail breakout of rock and roll, guys like Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Chuck
Berry. One Sunday night though almost like a ghost message from the radio
airwaves the station he usually listened to WMEX was drowned by a more powerful
station from Chicago, WABC. The show Be-Bop
Benny’s Blues Hour (actually two hours but that was the title of the show).
The first song Hound Dog Taylor’s The Sky
Is Crying. He was hooked, hooked mainly because in those days the blues
coming out of Chicago sounded like a very primitive version of rock, like maybe
it had something to do with that beat in his head whenever a serious rock song
came on WMEX like Chuck Berry’s Sweet
Little Rock and Roller. He couldn’t always get the Chicago station on Sunday
night, something to do with those wind patterns but he was smitten.
Like a lot of things including his
later interest in folk music and acid rock Seth always wanted to delve into the
roots of whatever trend he was writing about. That was how he found out that a
lot of the songs that he heard on the Be-Bop Benny show were the genesis of
rock. Also that rock had eclipsed the blues as the be-bop new thing leaving
many of the most popular blues artists, overwhelming black artists, behind to
pick up the scraps of the musical audience (only to be “discovered” later by
some of the more thoughtful rock stars like the Stones just as the old time
country blues artists from the South had been “discovered” by folk aficionado
in their turn).
Seth also dug into the technical
aspects of the industry, who was producing the music. Those where the days when
there were many small, small by today’s mega-standards, essentially mom and pop
record companies producing blues material. In Chicago, with the huge migration
of blacks from the South during the previous two generations there were a
myriad of labels. But two stuck out, two were the ones who grabs the very best
artists around Maxwell Street and made them stars, from the many one hit
wonders to classic stars like Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, and B.B. King.
Of
course most people have heard of those artists who worked out of the Chess
Record label. But the other big label, the one under review, Alligator, also
produced a shew of stars. So that very first night Seth had heard the legendary
Hound Dog Taylor doing The Sky Is Crying
he was under contract with Alligator. For more artists check out this two CD
compilation of those others who also graced that label. Then you will be up to
date on the genesis of the Chicago blues explosion that changed blues from
acoustic to electric back in the day.
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