Santiago Jimenéz, Jr. performs with La Familia Peña-Govea at Berkeley’s Freight & Salvage Coffeehouse in February 2011 |
On November 3, 1960, Arhoolie Records released their first LP. LP stands for Long Play because these records ran at 33 1/3 revolutions per minute and contained a lot of music, compared to what had been available before. These days people fill up 80 minutes of a CD with remixes and ‘bonus tracks’ (many of which we could live without) or create interminably long downloads for their iPods. But in the sixties, it was the LP, or album (so called because they replaced the actual ‘album’ collection of 78s which made available long music pieces on a set of 10” records that had to be changed one after the other). I digress. On November 3 1960, Arhoolie Records released their first LP. It wasn’t the first LP ever, but it was an important one, 250 copies of Mance Lipscomb’s Texas Sharecropper and Songster. The records had arrived. It was a big moment for Chris Strachwitz and his partner Wayne Pope who sat around the kitchen table gluing printed cover slicks onto black jackets, stuffed the discs into the jackets and inserted a booklet of notes and lyrics: 250 copies.
The whole project
had been a labour of love. Blues
songster Lipscomb had been recorded in the field in Texas. Blues writer and historian Mack McCormick, had introduced Strachwitz to
Lightning Hopkins (via Sam Charters) with the intention of a live recording
which never took place, but Mance Lipscomb was a major substitute. Strachwitz pulled together the financing and
named the label Arhoolie which means something like a “field holler” – an
appropriate name for the kinds of authentic Americana music the label would release over
its fifty years. From first recording
Country Joe McDonald’s famous “Fixin’ to Die Rag” to discovering (or at least
making known) Mexican performers, sacred steel players, and down home blues
singers, Strachwitz remained true to his vision right up to They All Played For Us, the soon-to-be-released recording
of their 50th anniversary celebration at Berkeley’s Freight & Salvage Coffeehouse.
The package is a
thing of beauty, visually and aurally. I
pre-ordered mine, so it arrived early with several bonuses: including a programme
from the original shows, an Arhoolie 45rpm record, and the book signed by Chris
Strachwitz and Mike Melnyk. The CDs
follow the original playing order, but are limited to only a couple or three
tracks per artist. There is still a wealth of
great music on these discs.
Nick Spitzer is a
folklorist and radio broadcaster who served as host for the three nights. His introductions are brief and to the point,
and served to move things along during shows that were packed with music. He appears only briefly on the discs,
introducing each evening’s concert. The
shows are presented chronologically. First up is Santiago Jimenéz Jr. accompanied by La Familia Peña-Govea. Their two tracks set the
tone for the whole weekend. Mexican
music played on accordion. Strachwitz,
in his notes, gives a short history of the arrival of the squeezebox in Texas and Mexico,
brought by German beermakers. Fantastic
bouncy polka-cum-conjunto tunes accompanied by cajon, bajo sexto, stand up bass
and a second accordion. If you don’t
dance to this stuff you might be asleep!
Next it’s Los
Centzontles from San Pablo,
CA., a family group who have recorded with David Hidalgo, Taj Mahal and The
Chieftains. They are string based
featuring jarana, guitar and requinto playing behind the close singing of the
female singers. Again, they make your
feet move with their energy and zeal – one feature of Los Centzontles is the
dancing, which of course you don’t see on a CD, but you can hear the applause
that accompanies the dancing, which is represented in a series of photographs in the
book. It’s worth following along with
the pictures and text as you listen.
Ry Cooder
introduces himself by picking a few notes on his slide guitar. He starts a moody and very bluesy rendition
of Woody Guthrie’s “Vigilante Man” which lasts nearly seven minutes. He’s accompanied by his son Joachim on drums
and Joachim’s brother-in-law Robert Francis on bass. They make a lot of noise for a three-piece. They pick things up on a joyous version of
“Wooly Bully” which leads into more guitar play. Lots of guitars appear next in the hands of
Any Old Time String Band. A couple of
fiddles, a banjo, stand-up bass and a guitar or three along with some loose
harmony singing brings mountain music into the Freight & Salvage. This group gets four tracks, and they are so
filled with joy you can’t help but love them.
Bruce Batton and Peter Arnott of Goodtime Washboard 3 |
Disc 2 provides washboard songs (Goodtime Washboard 3), Creole music (The Creole Belles), blues (Terry Garthwaite), Cajun (Savoy-Doucet Cajun Band), and more. Then Disc 3 brings out the Treme Brass Band for a touch of New Orleans Jazz, some Sacred Steel by the Campbell Brothers, and Country Joe McDonald. And finally Disc 4 continues the Campbell Brothers gospel, more Centzontles, the Savoy Family Band and Taj Mahal’s blues until Chris Strachwitz joins the whole gang for Huddie Ledbetter’s “Goodnight Irene”! There is such a wealth of great music on these four discs a review like this can only point to a highlight or two.
The book is over
250 pages of pictures and text that will keep you going through the music and
bring you back as a resource. The four
discs are a history lesson of American music from the hills and rivers of three
coasts and past all borders. People like
Chris Strachwitz do this kind of thing for love, they spend their own money,
they work incredibly hard, they deserve to be celebrated. They
All Played For Us pays justified tribute to a man with an amazing
vision. More than that, it pays tribute
to each of the artists represented at the concerts, as well as all the
musicians playing in their own yard, who just play music for the love of a good
song. Long may they stand.
– David Kidney has reviewed for Green Man Review and Sleeping Hedgehog. He published the Rylander Quarterly (a Ry Cooder-based newsletter) for 8 years before turning it into a blog, at http://rylander-rylander.blogspot.com. He works at McMaster University as Director of Learning Space Development and lives in Dundas, Ontario with his wife.
– David Kidney has reviewed for Green Man Review and Sleeping Hedgehog. He published the Rylander Quarterly (a Ry Cooder-based newsletter) for 8 years before turning it into a blog, at http://rylander-rylander.blogspot.com. He works at McMaster University as Director of Learning Space Development and lives in Dundas, Ontario with his wife.
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