Tuesday 15 December 2009

Urbane Before It Was Fashionable To Be Urban

It's fair to say that while Lonnie Johnson is not exactly neglected these days, he does not really have the stature in the blues hierarchy that he deserves. My guess as to why would be that he is a little too sophisticated, urbane before it was fashionable to be urban and willing to mix styles and genres outside of a strict twelve bar. The four disc box set "Lonnie Johnson The Original Guitar Wizard" is a real bargain. Johnson was a native New Orleanian who also spent much time in New York and Chicago during the musical part of his career. So he isn't in any way country blues, despite being an early exponent and playing largely acoustic guitar. There is much solo work here, the songs often have a misogynistic bent like much blues but the lyrics are clearly sung and easily understood. They return often to common themes like the cheating woman, the lazy woman, the venality of pimps and natural weather related disasters. The guitar fills and solos are jazz inflected and pre-shadow much of Django as well as later electric bluesmen like T-Bone Walker. Johnson's much more raw violin style features on a couple of tracks and he is often accompanied by piano. There are some songs backing lady masters of the double entendre such as Victoria Spivey and also sides which feature him as a member of Louis Armstrong's Hot Five era combo. Perhaps the most rewarding tracks are the duets with white jazz guitarist Eddie Lang which showcase masterful interplay. Towards the end of the final disk, Johnson has turned to an electric guitar in an early version of an r'n'b band though the amplification is used purely for volume and not to investigate any special effects. The box set doesn't feature anything from Lonnie Johnson's sixties re-discovery but it provides much enjoyment and justifies the title.

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