Page 67 - Blues Festival Guide Magazine 2015
P. 67

By Tim Parsons                                            The  self-titled  Paul  Butterfield  Blues
           The first blues band Elvin Bishop watched live included Muddy            Band debut album brought blues to
                                                                                    the attention of white America
        Waters, Otis Spann, Willie “Big Eyes” Smith, James Cotton and
        Pat Hare.                                                                   have picked Northwestern University
           “I’ve been in the right place at the right time a lot in my life,”       or the University of Chicago. Bishop
        Bishop said. “I’m a lucky guy.”                                             didn’t know the difference, but as luck
           The right place on April 18, 2015 for the 72-year-old was                would have it, he picked University of
        Cleveland, for his induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame,           Chicago.
        along with the other surviving members of the Paul Butterfield   “It was ground zero for Chicago blues,” Bishop said. “Within a
        Blues Band.                                           week, I was in the clubs meeting friends, black dudes that worked
           Bishop spent just five years with the group, which helped open   at the cafeteria at the college, and they were taking me out to the
        the  eyes and ears of white  audiences  to blues  music. Bishop’s   blues clubs…It’s a lot easier to learn how to play something when
        influences were blues, gospel, rock and, as a native of Tulsa, OK,   you can look at a guy’s hand instead of trying to listen to a record.”
        country music, too.                                      Bishop met Paul Butterfield his first day in town. “I was just
           After  he  moved  to  Marin  County  in  Northern  California  in   walking around trying to check things out, and he was sitting on
        the late 1960s, Bishop’s sound, which straddles a line between   some steps drinking a quart of beer playing guitar, playing blues,”
        country and blues, fell into the burgeoning genre called southern   Bishop  said.  “It  amazed  me  because  white  people  who  were
        rock. “Calling All Cows” was a hit song, and Charlie Daniels   interested in blues in those days were extremely rare.”
        claimed him for country music when he sang, “Elvin Bishop’s sitting   "The  rare  cadre  of  blues-loving  Caucasians  was  quite
        on a bale of hay/He ain’t good lookin’ but he sure can play.”   conspicuous," said lifelong Chicago bluesman Billy Boy Arnold,
           The  1970s  were  the  most  commercially  successful  years   whose  career  started  on  sidewalks  with  his  friend  who  he
        of Bishop’s career. That’s when he had his biggest hit, “Fooled   nicknamed Bo Diddley.
        Around and Fell in Love,” sung by Mickey Thomas. In the last 35   “Most  of  the  people  in  the  clubs  looked  at  them  strangely
        years or so, Bishop has cranked out records and played shows as   because  white  people  didn’t  come  in  the  black  clubs,”  Arnold
        an amiable, avuncular bluesman in bib overalls. When he’s not   said. “These guys were there because they liked the music and
        playing on the road, Bishop plays on the porch of his rural Marin   heard the records. The musicians were glad to welcome them.
        County home surrounded by his vegetable gardens.      They appreciated them. They let them sit in and play. And that’s
           As one of the members of the newest group of Rock and Roll   how it started.”
        Hall of Fame inductees, he remembers a time when the celebrated   Bishop  adds,  “Muddy  Waters,  Howlin’  Wolf,  Magic  Sam,
        music wasn’t even around.                             Junior Wells, Buddy Guy, Hound Dog Taylor and Otis Rush – all
           “For the first 12 to 14 years of my life, the best you’re going   these guys you could go out any day of the week and see them for
        to  do  was  Frank  Sinatra  or  ‘How  Much  is  that  Doggie  in  the   two bucks. There were literally over a hundred blues clubs.”
        Window?’” Bishop said. “There wasn’t any rock; it wasn’t invented   Bishop was befriended by the bluesman Smokey Smothers. “I
        yet. I was born in 1942. And then Elvis, Fats Domino, Chuck Berry   didn’t have much of a clue and he kind of showed me the life that
        and Jerry Lee Lewis came in and it was great. It beat the hell out   went with blues,” Bishop said. “I’d heard the records and I knew
        of Tony Bennett and Perry Como. Then when I heard blues, I went,   blues to that extent, but I didn’t know the life it was sprung out
        ‘Ahh – this is where the great part of rock ’n’ roll is coming from.   of and what all was really involved in the feeling and the exact
        This is the real deal. This is the pure stuff.’”      meaning of the words.”
           Bishop earned an academic scholarship and moved to Chicago   Bishop played with Junior Wells, Hound Dog Taylor and J.T.
        to pursue a degree. “That was my cover story,” said Bishop, who   Brown before he joined the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, a rare
        chose the city because it was the nation’s blues hub. He could   integrated group which included Arnold’s younger brother, Jerome,
                                                              a bass player. The band not only was loved by white audiences, it
                                                              captured the attention of black listeners, too.
                                                                 “I was like Elvin,” Arnold said. “I always did like the blues.
                                                              But most black people looked down on blues, and then they’d
                                                              say, ‘You mean white people like the blues?’ They’d see Elvin and
                                                              them in the club and they’d say, ‘They like the blues?’ Well the
                                                              blues must be all right then.’ And I said, ‘Yeah, the blues always
                                                              was all right.’”
                                                                 With its self-titled debut album and the follow-up East-West,
                                                              the  Paul  Butterfield  Band  inspired  new  white  blues  players,
                                                              including  Curtis  Salgado,  who  learned  of  the  songwriters  by
        Billy Boy Arnold and Elvin Bishop relax backstage  Photo by Kurt E. Johnson  reading liner notes.



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