Friday, September 19, 2025

Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blue #23

Dear readers, it's time once again for Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, and Something Blue.  This makes our 23nd edition.  For a long time, this was one of our favorite themes and it dates back to FBF's early days as a weekly email sent to co-workers.  It serves as a great way to introduce new and old tunes to new and old blues fans.  

For those unfamiliar with the format, we offer a song from the early days of the blues (Something Old), a song from a recent blues artist (Something New), a blues artist covering a rock song or vice versa (Something Borrowed), and finally, someone who epitomizes the blues.....usually a legendary artist (Something Blue).  Here we go......

For Something Old, let's go way back to 1929, with one of T-Bone Walker's first recordings.  Recorded for Columbia Records, "Trinity River Blues" was the B-side of his recording debut ("Wichita Falls Blues" was the A-side).  The 19-year old Walker was billed as "Oak Cliff T-Bone" on this record, Oak Cliff being the community in Dallas where he lived and T-Bone was a variation of his middle name (Aaron Thibeaux Walker).  Walker, playing acoustic guitar, is backed by Douglas Fernell on piano.  The youngster had already been a working performer on the blues circuit since the age of 15.  Of course, he went on to become one of the most influential blues guitarists and performers with incredible recordings in the 40's and 50's with Black  & Blue Records, Imperial Records, and Atlantic Records.


For Something New, meet Kirk Fletcher, guitarist extraordinaire.  Fletcher has been recording since the late 90's as a solo artist, but he also spent four years with the Fabulous Thunderbirds and also appeared on T-Bird front man Kim Wilson's album Smokin' Joint.  he also collaborated with Charlie Musselwhite, the Mannish Boys, Joe Bonamassa, and many others (including an appearance on William Shatner's blues album in 2020).  He returned to his own recordings around 2010.  He also developed into a very good singer and his recordings show he's a fine guitarist who's not afraid to branch out from the blues, mixing in funk, soul, rock, and jazz.  Fletcher recovered from a stroke he suffered a couple of years ago, but his latest release, the dynamic Keep On Pushing (on the VizzTone Label Group), shows that he's still a wonderful guitarist.  FBF recommends that blues fans track down this excellent release as soon as you can.


For Something Borrowed, we go to K.C. Douglas, born in 1913 in Sharon, MS.  He played around the Jackson, MS area in the early 40's with Tommy Johnson and others, but migrated to Vellejo, California in his late 20's to work in the navy shipyards and was soon playing the blues around the San Francisco/Oakland area.  He was strongly influenced by Johnson, recording several of his songs when he had the opportunity.  His first recording, in 1948 as the K.C. Douglas Trio, was "Mercury Boogie," which was later renamed "Mercury Blues."  Most music fans have heard this song played in one genre or another....David Lindley recorded a great version in the early 80's on his El-Rayo-X album.  Others recording it were Steve Miller, Ry Cooder, and Alan Jackson, whose version hit #2 on the country charts in 1992.  Even today, the Ford Motor Company bought the rights to the song and used it in their TV spots.  Douglas, sadly, didn't get to see much success of royalties in his lifetime...he passed away in October of 1975 at the age of 61.


Finally, for Something Blue, we salute the King of the Blues, who was born 100 years ago on September 16.  There's not much that we can say about B.B. King that hasn't already been said.  He was the first blues artist I ever heard and over the years, I've come to appreciate him more and more.  His incredible, distinctive guitar work and his powerful, gospel-influence vocals have inspired countless musicians since his earliest days.  Every blues fan should visit his museum at Indianola, MS (where he's also buried) if you make a trip to the Mississippi delta.  It's well worth your time.  Happy Heavenly Birthday to B.B. King and thank you for all the great music!


Friday, July 18, 2025

Remembering The Daddy Mack Blues Band

Daddy Mack Orr

Around 25 years ago, I was visiting a record store in search of some inspiring new blues.  The store that I visited was one that usually included a few surprises on the blues aisle....the manager was a blues fan himself and we had many conversations while I was in the store.  On this particular visit, I ran across a CD from The Daddy Mack Blues Band called Fix It When I Can.  

On the cover was this burly middle-aged guy sitting in a chair playing his guitar (the original cover).  The back cover showed ten tracks and a picture of three musician around their cars.  It was from a Memphis label (Inside Memphis/Inside Sounds via High Water Recording Company), and I'm always interested in the Memphis brand of blues, so I picked it up.  When I was checking out, the manager just said, "You'll love that one.  It's great!!"

It was great, a whole album's worth of gritty, gutbucket blues with a healthy dose of Memphis grease in the terrific rhythm section work.  Daddy Mack was a strong vocalist and guitarist and he wrote eight of the ten tracks.  It was familiar and fresh at the same time.  I listened to it all the time for a long time and I still listen to it frequently, several of the tunes remain among my favorite blues tracks.  

As I usually do when I hear a new (to me) artist, I dug into his background.  I discovered that Daddy Mack was Mack Orr, born in Como, Mississippi in 1945.  He spent his early years working in the cotton fields until he was 18.  He grew up listening to many of the blues greats at the time like B.B. King, Albert King, and Little Milton.  He hung out around the local juke joints around Como listening to whoever happened to be playing.

Eventually, Orr moved north to Memphis, got married and worked as a heavy machine operator until he opened his own business, Mack's Auto Repair, where he settled in as a mechanic and helped raise his four kids.

In his mid 40's, he heard Albert King's "I'll Play The Blues For You" on the radio and decided to start playing music himself.  He went to a pawn shop after work one day and bought a guitar and amplifier on layaway and, determined to practice and make a name for himself, he was able to listen to the styles of his favorites and develop his own unique style that combined his favorites' sound with his own.

Several of those favorites played in Memphis' premier blues band at the time - the Fieldstones.  Though there are only a couple of recordings by the Fieldstones, they are regarded as one of the best, if not the best, blues bands in Memphis......many of the city's best blues musicians played in the band at one time or another.  

The Fieldstones at Green's Lounge  (Eric Lindahl)

The Fieldstones played regularly at the South Memphis nightclub Green's Lounge and it was there, in the early 90's, that Fieldstones guitarist Earl "The Pearl" Banks invited Orr to play with the band.  He soon became part of the Fieldstones family, and a few years later, he was invited to take over residency at Green's.  At that time, Orr formed the Daddy Mack Blues Band with two Fieldstones vets - Harold Bonner on bass and James Bonner on guitar, with Wilroy "Wolf" Sanders Jr. on drums.

In 1999, the band released Fix It When I Can.  By that time, William Faulkner had replaced Sanders as drummer.  Later that year, the band played a party for the Rolling Stones at the Rendezvous, during the Stones tour stop in Memphis and Keith Richards and Ron Wood joined them onstage.  The Daddy Mack Blues Band was drawing attention almost immediately from the right people.  

Daddy Mack with a couple of rock n' rollers from Britain.

Before he started playing the blues, Orr had only visited four places - Wisconsin, Chicago, Kansas City, and Jackson, MS.  The blues enabled him to travel all over the world.  Despite the extensive travel, he still spent a lot of time in Memphis, playing locally on Beale Street and at the Center of Southern Folklore, plus he still worked on cars in his spare time.


The Daddy Mack Blues Band released seven other albums over the years.  There was about a six year gap between his first and second releases, but the band released two albums in 2006, the first being Slow Ride, an interesting concept in which the group covered a number of blues rock classics from Foghat, Eric Clapton, Led Zeppelin, Santana, the Rolling Stones, and others (I remember reading, maybe in the liner notes, that Orr wasn't even familiar with most of the songs prior to recording them).  



The second 2006 release was Bluestones, which added keyboardist Charlie Wood and was a great mix of originals and soul/soul blues covers.  Subsequent releases included Bluesfinger (2010), Pay The Piper (2012), Blues Central (2014), and A Bluesman Looks At Seventy (2015).  Over time, there were some personnel changes....the Bonner brothers remained stalwarts, but Faulkner passed away in 2011.  He was replaced by Fast Eddie Lester (Brian Wells played drums on Pay The Piper). 

Other major contributors on the music end and the songwriting end included Matt Isbell, Wally Ford, and Inside Sounds chief Eddie Dattel.  Ford and Dattel had spent a lot of time with Orr and their songwriting captured the essence of the man as well as if Orr had written the songs himself.  Of course, Orr and the Bonners continued to contribute songs as well.  I bought each of these albums upon release and it amazed me that the quality of each subsequent release topped its predecessors.  There are usually a few misfires on most blues artists’ albums from time to time, trying to do something new or different, but that was not the case with the Daddy Mack Blues Band.  They knew what they did well and they did it  

Around 2008, Dattel and Inside Sounds released a documentary about Orr's life, Plain Man Blues - Daddy Mack Orr's Inspiring Story of Struggle and Triumph.  The DVD featured scenes of Orr visiting his hometown and remembering his working in the cotton fields and listening to the blues in the local clubs (now vacant lots), working in his garage, playing local clubs, and a deep dive into the recording process during the making of Bluestones.  It was very enjoyable and certainly presented Orr in a positive light - as a man that everyone would want to meet and talk to.

After his 2015 release, I assumed that Daddy Mack was not going to record any more albums, really just basing it on the A Bluesman Looks At Seventy title more than anything.  However, I heard via the internet that the Daddy Mack Blues Band had returned for a recording in late 2024, called Doctor's Orders.  

Of course, it's difficult to find information on some releases now and that was the case with this album when I started looking, so I went to Inside Sounds website and managed to connect with Dattel. I ordered the new disc and a copy of the DVD, which I had been meaning to get for years.  The new CD was very good and included songs from his longtime bandmates (the Bonners and Lester), songs from his current band (Charles and John Gage, drums and organ respective), plus contributions from Brad Isbell (guitar) and Andrew McNeil (drums) from Ghost Town Blues Band, Brad Webb (bass) and longtime contributor, harmonica player Billy Gibson.



The additional musicians give Doctor's Orders a slightly more modern feel, but most of them have been guesting on Orr's previous albums, so it's been a gradual move toward the contemporary.   However, it doesn't diminish the power of Daddy Mack Orr by any means.  That greasy, gutsy Memphis guitar is still present, as are Orr's good-natured vocals and that funky backbeat.  

I can't describe how excited I was to see a new Daddy Mack Blues Band release hit the racks, especially one that's so good and includes so many other Memphis artists that I admire taking part.  Doctor's Orders was just what the doctor ordered for this blues fan.

Sadly, this will be the last Daddy Mack Blues Band release.  A couple of months ago, Orr was in the hospital with some issues for a few days, was discharged but had to return for some medication adjustments.  He suffered a heart attack unexpectedly while in the hospital on June 16.  He was 80 years old.

Despite the fact that he didn't pick up guitar until he was 45 years old, Daddy Mack Orr ended up being a Memphis mainstay for the next 35 years, as well as one of the best of the current blues scene worldwide.  If you're not familiar with his music and you are a blues fan, I highly recommend any of his recordings.  They are all excellent, downhome blues.



Friday, May 30, 2025

A Blues Journey from the Past

I apologize for the lack of activity on the blog over the past few months.  I'm in the process of retiring from my day job and there's been much to do to get things in order....I've worked there for almost forty years (which seems astonishing to type), so there have been a lot of loose ends to tie. 

Hopefully, retirement will allow me to work on the blog on a more regular basis.  I can't believe I actually kept this up on a weekly basis for so long.

In the meantime, I wanted to share a post that I contributed to another site, The Mt. Zion Memorial Fund.  Several years ago, I met T. Dwayne Moore, who oversees the site and the foundation.  He actually commented on this blog and made some recommendations to improve it and, hopefully, attract more blues fans.  How this post came about is discussed on the linked post to the Mt. Zion site.  I sent the write-up to him several years ago and I think it got lost somewhere along the way.  Dwayne contacted me a couple of weeks ago and told me he was going to run it, so it's now live.  

If you're a fan of the early blues, be sure to check it out.  The post is a look at the roots of the blues in Bolton, MS, home of several significant pre-war blues artists.  Also, while you're there, please donate to their cause if you're able.  It's a worthy one for blues artists of the past and present who didn't get the flowers (or other items) they deserved when they were alive.

Hopefully, you will see more activity at Friday Blues Fix in the near future.  Stay tuned.



Friday, March 7, 2025

Living Chicago Blues (Volume 2)


Well, it's not exactly in the "near" future as promised (I actually started working on this post in mid-November), but this week, Friday Blues Fix will look at Volume 2 of the Living Chicago Blues series.  Our look at Volume 1 can be found here.

As previously mentioned, this was originally a six-volume series when released on LP in the 70's.  Volume 1 of the LP series featured Jimmy Johnson, Eddie Shaw, and Left Hand Frank and Volume 2 included Carey Bell, Magic Slim, and Big Moose Walker.  When shifting to the CD format, Bell's set was added to Volume 1 and two artists from the Volume 3 LP (Lonnie Brooks and Pinetop Perkins) were added to the Volume 2 CD, so only one group from the first three volumes didn't make it onto the first two CD volumes - nothing like "not making the cut" or anything like that....they would get their chance in the next CD volume, which was released at the same time.  There was no two-year gap, like the LP's....three in 1978 and three in 1980. 

So, Volume 2's artists were The Lonnie Brooks Band, Johnny "Big Moose" Walker, Magic Slim and the Teardrops, and Pinetop Perkins featuring Sammy Lawhorn (Lawhorn was billed on the LP, for some reason, but not on the cassette or CD format issued in the early 90's).  Each act got four songs to show their talents, and each act took full advantage and made an impression.

Louisiana native Lonnie Brooks (born Lee Baker, Jr.) got his start in the 50's, where he was billed as "Guitar Jr." and recorded for Eddie Shuler's Goldband label, focusing mostly on R&B rockers and ballads.   His first single. "Family Rules," was a regional hit in 1957 and earned him some appearances on tours throughout the southeastern US, mostly in Texas and Louisiana.  His later Goldband recordings were less successful, so after a 1959 tour in Atlanta, he decided to follow Sam Cooke, who was on the same tour, up to Chicago to try his luck in the Windy City.

Growing up in Louisiana and Texas, Brooks got to hear many of the great blues bands at the time, including T-Bone Walker, Gatemouth Brown, B.B. King, and others, but he got his first job as a guitarist with Clifton Chenier, the King of Zydeco, and he really loved the New Orleans R&B of Fats Domino and Little Richard.  Once he got to Chicago, he began to add more blues to his repertoire and managed to combine aspects of all the music he loved into his brand of blues, giving him a unique sound.  

Brooks recorded a couple more sides as Guitar Jr., but changed his stage name to Lonnie Brooks since there was already a Guitar Jr. in Chicago (Luther Johnson, Jr., who we'll hear from later in the series), and formed his own band, playing regularly on the South and West sides of the city and into Indiana, cutting sides for various labels, and eventually an album that's now a collector's item.

Brooks' band for the Alligator session included Bob Levis (second guitar), Rob Waters (keyboards), Harlan Terson (bass), and Casey Jones (drums).  The opening track is a pretty faithful cover of "Don't Answer The Door," originally recorded by Jimmy Johnson in 1964 on Magnum Records, and later covered by B.B. King, Phil Guy, and Melvin Taylor, among others.  The remainder of his tracks are all originals, a couple of which remained part of his act for most of his life, "Two Headed Man," "Cold, Lonely Nights."  The closer, "Move Over Little Dog," was reminiscent of his earlier recordings - a mix of blues, R&B, and rock n' roll.  

Brooks would go on to work for Alligator for the rest of his career, recording eight albums for the label, beginning with 1979's Bayou Lightning and wrapping up with 1999's Lone Star Shootout, a collaboration with Long John Hunter and Phillip Walker.  He passed away in 2017 at 83, but his sons, Ronnie Baker Brooks and Wayne Baker Brooks are fine blues guitarists in their own right, with Ronnie recently releasing his own album on Alligator, the excellent Blues In My DNA.

Johnny "Big Moose" Walker was born at Stoneville, MS in 1927 near Leland.  He learned to play several instruments as a youth.....organ, guitar, vibraphone, bass, tuba, and piano.  He got his stage name as a child from his long, flowing hair.  He got his start as a piano player backing such luminaries as Ike Turner, Sonny Boy Williamson II, Elmore James, Lowell Fulson, and others.  

After a stint in the army during the Korean War, he recorded several sides that didn't sell, but still worked a lot over the next 20 years behind Earl Hooker, Elmore James, Otis Rush, Sunnyland Slim, Muddy Waters (playing bass), Ricky Allen, Howlin' Wolf, Eddie Shaw, and Junior Wells, backing him on "Messin' With The Kid."  He played on memorable tracks with Muddy Waters ("You Shook Me") and Elmore James ("Shake Your Moneymaker") in the 60's.  He also recorded with Earl Hooker, Son Seals, and Rush and, in the 70's, he backed Jimmy Dawkins, Mighty Joe Young, and Louis Myers, and released his own album on ABC Records in 1970.

On his Alligator sessions, Walker was backed by Myers on guitar, Bob Stroger on bass, and Chris Moss on drums.  Walker was a master on the keyboards and his vocal style was warm and relaxed.  His set list included a Willie Dixon track (the rollicking "Would You, Baby"), one from Joe Josea and Jules Taub (the driving "Sunnyland Blues") and two Walker originals (the slow blues "Worry, Worry" and "Cry, Cry Darling").  The latter two feature some nice fretwork from Myers as well as Walker's stellar piano.

Walker continued to record and perform, his second album was released in the mid 80's, but he suffered a stroke in 1991 and subsequent strokes left him unable to perform.  He died in a Chicago nursing home in 1999 at age 72.  Despite his lack of recordings, the ones he did release are all worth hearing and it's sad that he wasn't better known than he was, but his appearance here did increase his standing in the blues world for sure.


Believe it or not, there was once a time when Magic Slim and the Teardrops had not recorded very much at all.  At the time of these sessions for Alligator, Slim had only released a few 45's and one album for the French MCM label.  He had only been a full-time bluesman for a couple of years, having quit his construction job in 1976.  

Slim was born Morris Holt in Torrence, MS in 1937, where he first picked up the guitar at age 11.  His family later moved to nearby Grenada, where he learned more guitar from a schoolmate named Sam Maghett.  Later, he followed Sam, now known as Magic Sam, to Chicago and became his bass player.  Sam gave Holt (who was tall and skinny at the time) his nickname of Magic Slim, but Slim soon became frustrated with his lack of opportunity...he wanted to play guitar and lead his own band and just wasn't good enough at the time.

Slim moved back to Grenada, where he drove a truck and worked on his music, teaching his brothers Nick and Douglas to play.  They formed a band and played throughout the Grenada area.  In the mid 60's, he returned to Chicago and reformed the Teardrops, the band he had been playing with before he moved back to Mississippi and began working a number of clubs in the Windy City, becoming one of the tightest bands in town.

The 1978 edition of the Teardrops included Slim's brother, Nick Holt, on bass, Coleman "Daddy Rabbit" Pettis on second guitar, and  Joel Poston on drums.  Their four-song setlist included several songs that became regular selections on Slim's future albums, "Stranded On The Highway," "Dirty Mother For You," and "Spider In My Stew."  The last tune was Jimmy Reed's "Don't Say That No More," which was as good as those tunes that preceded it.  

Slim went on to become one of Chicago's most prolific blues recording artists, with albums on Rooster Blues and Blind Pig Records in the U.S., Wolf Records and Black and Blue in Europe, and even a collection of French recordings that ended up on the Alligator album Raw Magic not long after these sessions.  I probably have more Magic Slim recordings that any other blues artist and they are always top notch...his musical repertoire was amazing and his live sets are always entertaining.

Slim moved to Lincoln, Nebraska in the mid-90's, home of the Zoo Bar, which was the source for five excellent live releases for the band, and continued to record and perform until his death in 2013 at age 75.  

The final act for Volume 2 was the piano legend Pinetop Perkins.  Born in 1913 in Belzoni, MS, Joe Willie Perkins had been performing since the 1920's, getting his start as a guitarist.  However, a knife fight with a chorus girl in Helena, AR in the mid-40's left him with severed tendons in his left arm and prompted his move to the piano.

In Helena, Perkins eventually joined Robert Nighthawk's radio program on KFFA before switching to Sonny Boy Williamson's King Biscuit Time radio show, where he stayed for a while.  He did continue to play with Nighthawk and backed the slide master on his 1950 Chess side, "Jackson Town Gal."  He soon joined Earl Hooker and toured with him, recording Clarence "Pinetop" Smith's "Pinetop's Boogie Woogie" for Sam Phillips' Sun Records in 1953).  Perkins learned to play piano by listening to Smith's old records, and his association with "Pinetop's Boogie Woogie" earned him his nickname.

Perkins moved to Illinois and left the music business for a number of years before he rejoined Hooker, backing the guitarist on an Arhoolie Records album in 1968.  Near the end of the decade, he joined Muddy Waters' band after Otis Spann left in 1969.  He backed Waters for ten years before forming the Legendary Blues Band with Waters drummer Willie "Big Eyes" Smith in the late 70's, and they played together through the early 90's, recording several albums for Rounder Records.

Prior to Perkins' association with the Legendary Blues Band, the piano man had released an album for the French Black & Blue label in 1976 and these superb four tracks for Living Chicago Blues in 1978...a terrific cover of Willie Love's "Take It Easy, Baby," Avery Parrish's slow burning "Blues After Hours," Memphis Slim's "Little Angel Child," and J.B. Lenoir's boisterous "How Much More Long."  

Perkins' amiable vocals and nimble keyboards are backed by a fine band of Waters alumni - Sammy Lawhorn and Luther "Guitar Junior" Johnson on guitars, Calvin Jones on bass, and Willie "Big Eyes" Smith on drums.  

In 1980, Perkins, Smith, Jones, and Johnson (with guitarist Bob Margolin and harmonica player Jerry Portnoy) quit Waters' band over a salary dispute and all except Margolin and Johnson formed The Legendary Blues Band.  Perkins eventually became a solo artist and recorded multiple albums over the next 25 years, remaining active until his death in March of 2011 at the age of 97.

So there you have Volume 2 of Living Chicago Blues.  Three of the four artists featured on this set went on to have lucrative recording and performing careers....sadly Walker's subsequent health issues rendered him unable to capitalize like the others.  Looking back, it's hard to imagine that prior to this volume's release, Lonnie Brooks, Magic Slim, and Pinetop Perkins would have had to have been considered underrecorded.  Thanks to this release, their fortunes changed.  Stay tuned for a future post looking at the third volume of this indispensible series.