Credits:
Johnny Rawls - Guitar and Vocals
Roosevelt "Mad Hatter" Purifoy - Keyboards
Kevin Bibbs - Bass
Allen Kirk - Drums
Bruce Feiner - Piano on "I've Been Broken Hearted",
Strings on "Can't Stop Thinkin' 'Bout You" and "That's
Why I'm Goin' Away"
"Fazz" Eddie Gillespie and Greg "Salt Dog"
Allen - Background Vocals on "Lucy"
The Nutmeg Horns:
Jim Hunt - Trumpet
Bruce Feiner - Tenor Saxophone
Robert Feiner - Baritone Saxophone
Produced by Johnny Rawls
Basic Tracks Recorded at Soto Sound, Chicago, Illinois
Engineered by Jerry Soto
Further recordings at Hidden Valley Studios, East Granby, CT
Engineered by Burt Teague
Further recordings at Sounds Unreel, Memphis, TN
Engineered by Dawn Hopkins
Mixed at MARS, London, by Martin Atkinson and John Stedman
All Horn Arrangements by Johnny Rawls and Bruce Feiner
Sleeve Design by Andrew Aitken Design
Thanks:
Johnny Rawls wants to give thanks to the Rawls family, his road
band, "Fazz" and "Salt Dog", Mike Nunno, Burt
Teague, and Bruce Feiner. Also special thanks to John Stedman
for giving me a chance to present my music to the world.
Bruce Feiner wants to give thanks to the Feiner family and Johnny
Rawls. Special thanks to the late Louis Soloway for everything
he taught me about music and life.
Johnny Rawls is dedicating this album to the late Lonzie Lee.
JSP Records
P.O. Box 1584
London N3 3NW England
Liner
Notes:
Its a long way from rural Mississippi in international blues
recognition, but then Johnny Rawls has never yet found a road he
was afraid to travel. Between touring with such legends as
Z.Z. Hill, O.V. Wright, and Little Johnny Taylor and forging a career
of his own on the rough-and-ready southern blues circuit known affectionately
in the African-American blues community as the chitlin
circuit, Rawls spent the better part of twenty years on the
road before most people outside a devoted core of admirers ever
heard of him. As this disk shows, its been worth the
wait; Rawls affirms that its also been worth the dues
but first, we should go back to the beginning.
Johnny Rawls was born in the Mississippi town of Purvis, eight
miles from Hattiesburg, in 1951. His father was a mill worker;
his mother a devoted homemaker; his grandfather played the blues
guitar. By the time he was twelve or thirteen years old, young
Johnny was already learning the rudiments of music. Mere
instrumental virtuosity, however, was never his only focus
his childhood idols included soulful vocalists like Jackie Wilson
and the Impressions, and he remembers that he used to play O.V.
Wrights records whenever he had the opportunity to put a couple
of nickels in a jukebox.
People like Wilson and Wright are usually considered soul
vocalists today, but Rawls love for their music didnt
make him any less of an aspiring bluesman. In Mississippi
in those days, most folks didnt worry much about categories
and labels when it came to good music. Back then,
Rawls attests, they considered everybody blues
James
Brown, B.B. King, whoever had a hit, had a hit. Then Earth,
Wind & Fire came in, then people started saying, Well
thats blues, I dont want to hear no blues.
Rawls began playing behind some of the souths biggest blues
and soul artists when his high school band director, Mr. Carl Gates,
became so impressed with the young mans musicianship that
he asked him to play with his own professional aggregation
a show band that accompanied such stars as Z.Z. Hill, Little Johnny
Taylor, Joe Tex, and the Sweet Inspirations when they came through
the area. In this way Rawls became a full-fledged professional,
with well-honed chops and the sophistication to play in a versatile
band behind diverse and demanding performers, at an age when most
musicians are still beginning to develop their talents.
In 1969, he took a trip to Milwaukee to visit a friend and ended
up moving their permanently. But, although most of the musicians
with whom hed been working were based in the south, the move
didnt curtail his career
it just made the road trips
a bit longer.
In the mid-70s, Rawls saw a childhood dream come true
He
went to work for his old idol, O.V. Wright, as Wrights band
director. After Wright died in 1980, Rawls joined Little Johnny
Taylor and led his band for several years. Restless to strike
out on his own, he eventually began to tour under his own names,
and he also began to record. He cut a 45 for the obscure Rainbow
label in Milwaukee; in 1985, he initiated a label of his own, called
Touch, and issued an LP entitled Youre The One.
Most of his time, however, was still spent on the road
he
continued to work the chitlin circuit, playing his sweet sould
fusion of blues, R&B, and emotion-laden pop stylings for audiences
throughout the south.
Rawls finally came to the attention of what might be called the
crossover audience
the predominantly white listenership
that gets most of its blues from CDs and nightclubs, instead of
black-oriented blues radio and chitlin circuit lounges
when Willie Cobbs (of You Dont Love Me fame) put
him in touch with Jim ONeal of Rooster Blues records.
Rawls, along with fellow soul session stalwart L.C. Luckett, accompanied
Cobbs on his widely acclaimed Rooster blues disk Down To Earth
in 1994. He stayed on with Rooster, arranging sessions and
working as a studio musician with such artists as Lonnie Shields
and the flamboyant Super Chikan; in 1995 he and Luckett released
their own disk for Rooster Blues, Cant Sleep At Night.
He also continued to perform and tour at a pace that would
have exhausted a less-dedicated musician. However it wasnt
until Here We Go, his 1996 debut disk for JSP, that Rawls
really had the chance to put himself out front, performing his best
material. Since then theres been no looking back
which brings us full circle to the present, and to the CD youre
holding in your hands.
These days, as both a recording artists and producer/A&R man
for JSP, Rawls believes hes finally achieved the balance
among musical styles; between vocations; between the security of
home and the musical adventures of the road
that hes
always sought. Still happy as a transplanted Milwaukeean,
he nonetheless proudly attests to his ongoing case of white-line
fever, at least some of which is grounded in his love for the musical
and philosophical approach of his native southland.
The south has an attitude, he avows. I
would describe the attitude as more real, more serious
a lot
of northern musicians are just in a hurry; its about money.
Instead of being off into the music, theyre off into What
am I gonna get for this?. Im on the road, I play
almost three hundred shows a year; most of my time is spent in the
south.
As for his dual roles at JSP: I consider myself a musician
first
Im really a road man! But I like to do both.
Rawls musical tastes are as varied as his professional abilities
are as wide-ranging as his itinerary. My style is between
gospel, blues and good hard soul music, he says; but when discussing
this CD, which is seasoned generously with lush pop-structured melodies
as well as hard-driving rhythmic impetus, that kicks with rock &
roll energy, he eagerly affirms that he wants to test the
water in as many other styles as possible.
Like most musicians, Rawls would rather play music than dissect
it intellectually or wax philosophical about it. Nonetheless,
his thoughts on what constitutes good blues improvisation are almost
as instructive as the impeccably-crafted solos youll hear
throughout this disk.
A solo is what you feel, what a person feels, he acknowledges,
but he hastens to add that this does not mean leaving ones
brains at the door; nor does it mean setting the frets on fire with
speed and flamboyance every time the opportunity presents itself.
I am thinking about what Im doing; I try to get into
the groove of the music. A lot of times, when Im recording,
Ill listen to the playback and I might do a solo over it if
Im not really riding the beat of the music, or if Im
not answering the vocals like I should. I try to let the music
breathe
I dont like it when people run lines all over
the music, all over the vocals. If theyd listen to B.B.
King theyd know how its done.
Youre too modest, Johnny. When people listen to you,
theyll know how its done
and they wont soon
forget it. Music lovers, its our turn to win.
DAVID WHITEIS
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