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KIRK
FLETCHER "SHADES OF BLUE"
Liner Notes by
Scott
Dirks |
Guys
like Kirk "Eli" Fletcher
shouldn't be rare and unusual in the blues,
but as most blues fans already know, they
are. Kirk is a young African-American
man who has embraced and thoroughly immersed
himself in the music of his parents, and
grandparents: the blues sounds of the
1950s and '60s. Inspired by B.B. King's
"Live At the Regal", his investigation
of the blues began, and like a snowball
rolling down a snowy mountain, has been
picking up speed and gaining mass ever
since.
And he's young, VERY young by blues standards
- he's just turned 27. Robert Jr. Lockwood
has been eligible for Social Security
retirement checks almost as long as Kirk
has been on this earth. At a time when
most of those playing traditional blues
are on the far side of the retirement
fence, it's only been in the last few
years that Kirk has only been old enough
to buy himself a beer in most of the clubs
he plays. And he probably still gets asked
for identification.
Yet close your eyes, and you're there.
It's the sound of blues as it was played
when giants like Muddy Waters and Howlin'
Wolf and T-Bone Walker and Little Walter
still towered over the blues landscape.
Kirk not only "gets it", he's
got it, that hard-to-define thing that
makes each note and every phrase he plays
on his guitar come out just right, so
that it all sound exactly like the blues
and nothing else.
Like most blues players who have come
along in the last half century or so,
Kirk didn't learn the blues sitting at
the feet of the masters, or making a deal
with the devil at the crossroads - he
learned in the CD age by listening to
reissues of vintage recordings. But while
the way people learn the blues may have
changed over the years, the foundation
hasn't; as the son of a Baptist minister,
he began absorbing the rhythms and phrases
that lie at the basis of all great blues
at an early age, listening to gospel in
his father's church. His blues indoctrination
started out like many young players, first
with contemporary sounds, then hearing
something in it that led him back a generation.
And once there, finding something else
that led back yet another generation,
another layer deeper, another obscure
recording further into the web of blues.
Picking up the finer points at every step
along the way, mixing and matching and
coming up with something that comes out
sounding fresh and exciting, while unmistakably
and undeniably 100% blues.
In Kirk's relatively short time playing
music, he's made some big waves and impressed
a lot of the right people. Coming up through
the ranks of the West Coast blues scene,
he's spent valuable time with Al Blake
(former frontman of the legendary Hollywood
Fats Band), Richard "Lynwood Slim"
Duran, and Junior Watson among others.
Eventually he was hand-picked for Kim
Wilson's Blues Revue, the modern day equivalent
of joining, say, Muddy Waters' band in
the 1950s. From there he was recruited
for veteran harp man Charlie Musselwhite's
band. Kirk had arrived. Yet up to that
point he hadn't led his own band. That
soon changed, when with help from Wilson,
Blake and Duran among others, he recorded
a CD for England's JSP label in 1999.
Blues producer and promoter Randy Chortkoff
(a talented harp player and bandleader
in his own right) became aware Fletcher's
talents through his association with Kim
Wilson. Chortkoff has played a role in
a number high-profile blues careers -
among them Billy Boy Arnold, Jody Williams,
the late King Ernest, and Finis Tasby,
and his instincts have seldom let him
down. After working with Fletcher on a
number of live projects, Chortkoff put
his money where his mouth was, and decided
to produce a recording that fully showcased
Fletcher's many talents...the recording
you're probably listening to right now.
He pulled together the hottest and most
experienced West Coast blues veterans
to provide support, and began a series
of recording sessions that resulted in
this CD, with guests Kim Wilson, Finis
Tasby, and Janiva Magness on board to
handle the vocals.
Fletcher covers a lot of ground here,
from the bouncing shuffle of "Club
Zanzibar" (named after a Chicago
joint Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf and Little
Walter used to play) to the jazzy organ
trio sound of "Blues For Boo Boo",
to the bare-bones juke joint funk of "Stranded
In St. Louis", with a healthy dose
of West Coast swing thrown in for good
measure, plus a lot more. Along the way
he also pulls off the slippery feat of
capturing the essence of those classic
sounds while always playing with real
fire, excitement, and creativity.
So sit back and enjoy the latest from
a young man blues fans will no doubt be
listening to for a long time to come,
Kirk "Eli" Fletcher.
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