Guitar Player

THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO TAJ

Chapter Two: From North America to Hawaii

- BY JIMMY LESLIE, WITH JULES LEYHE PHOTOGRAPH BY AMY RICHMOND

Ffrom the ORGET THE GUY old Dos Equis commercial­s — Taj Mahal is the most interestin­g man in the world. When he holds court on his front porch, spinning yarns into a tapestry connecting nearly eight decades of singular experience, there’s no way all that goodness is going to fit into one short feature. Last month we set the stage with the internatio­nal treasure at his home in Berkeley, California, where he reflected on his remarkable career, trusty Regal resonator in hand.

Mahal can circumnavi­gate the globe in one lick, from its African origins to Caribbean adaptation­s, through the American filter and all the way to the Hawaiian Islands, where he amalgamate­s it all with the Hula Blues Band. He can explain each element, including subtle variations in phrasing, timing and articulati­on, and tell how a turnaround can vary from one locale to another. He embellishe­s anecdotes with affable and often hysterical imitations of everyone from a West African griot to Rastafaria­ns, Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson, all with a generous helping of Hawaiian slang or pidgin. Mahal provides cultural context for the instrument­s, the music and his story.

Along the way he’s developed the ability to play “nearly 20” acoustic instrument­s. His current ambition is to learn lap slide. At 79 years into the journey of a lifetime, he still has the zeal of a kid that just got his first guitar. Says the maestro, “I could seriously spend 10 consecutiv­e lifetimes playing acoustic music, and still never garner all of it on this planet.”

What got you going on the 12-string, which first appears along with the slide on “Stagger Lee” and “Country Blues #1” from 1969’s De Ole Folks at Home?

That was because of Blind Willie McTell. Now, I didn’t know that Lead Belly had written “Goodnight, Irene.” In fact, I’d only heard the name Lead Belly; I didn’t know about his connection with Pete Seeger or anything about the Weavers. [Seeger was a Weaver when their version of “Irene” hit in 1955.] I just liked the song. I didn’t know that he played the 12-string guitar or anything about that instrument. I started hearing about the 12-string when I was 19 or 20, working on a dairy farm. A guy who came to test the cow’s milk played a Lead Belly record for me, and the sound of the 12-string stuck in my head. When I finally found one in a guitar store, I realized, “This is some serious shit!” Pardon my French. Then I ran up on Blind Willie McTell — whew! — and Charley Lincoln and Barbeque Bob.

When Leo Kottke chronicled his 12-string roots in the Holiday 2020 Frets feature, he mentioned Barbeque Bob as well as the 12-string’s mysterious origin.

Right, so then there’s figuring out how Lead Belly got it. The story goes that he left Louisiana for Texas and became the lead man for Blind Lemon Jefferson. He and Jefferson went across the Mexican boarder and wound up in Nogales. Hello [Tejano musician] Lydia Mendoza and guitarra de doce cuerdas, which translates to “guitar with 12 strings.”

When Kottke searched his memory, he recalled that his first instrument with coursed strings was actually a bajo sexto.

Yeah, there’s bajo sexto [a Mexican instrument with six coursed strings tuned an octave below standard, incorporat­ing octave strings on the lower three and unisons on the upper, like a bass 12-string], bajo quinto [five coursed strings], and then guitarra de doce cuerdas. And it’s tuned down with the lowest string being B, E or A. [Kottke replies: “The only thing I know of Lead Belly is that the octave on his Stella’s low string was

actually two octaves up. I had a chance to buy his guitar, but it scared me, so I didn’t.”]

So after you discover the 12-string, you get into Blind Willie McTell, and that leads to “Statesboro Blues”?

Exactly. I came from Springfiel­d over to the University of Massachuse­tts when the blues was taking off in the Northeast. “Statesboro Blues” is in the American musical lexicon as a result of my finding a compilatio­n called The Country Blues produced by Sam Charters [1959, Folkways]. A bunch of tunes from that album became staples, and I liked the way Blind Willie McTell played on “Statesboro Blues.” He was a ragtime player, and McTell played the 12-string with a fingerstyl­e that sounded like a piano in the way he made his fingers roll through the licks. Jesse Ed Davis started out on piano, and you can hear it in the way he’d roll through guitar licks with a piano style as well.

McTell was an acoustic slide player and you famously cut a version of his “Statesboro Blues,” but that’s Davis playing the electric slide, correct?

Right. Jesse was the first guy I ever came across that played slide in standard tuning, which is what Muddy [Waters]

did. Muddy did both. The way we worked was whoever played the part best got to do it. I showed Jesse the way I played it, and then he reinterpre­ted it his way with that [dotted-eighth-note]

groove. At first I wasn’t so sure, but I eventually realized that was the right thing to do because we took it far enough away from the older style. The rest is history.

“I’D LIKE TO BE ABLE TO PLAY IT LAP STYLE. I ABSOLUTELY LOVE THE SOUND”

So then Duane Allman gets sick, drinks a bottle of Coricidin medicine, listens to your version of “Statesboro Blues” and re-invents bottleneck slide?

Well, the story is in the documentar­y Muscle Shoals, but here’s my pitch on it: Gregg Allman is Duane’s younger brother, who he calls “Baby Brah.” Gregg convinces Duane to go horseback riding for his birthday. The guy they get the horses from says, “Look, be careful if you take the horses up on the road. They spook when they go off the dirt and onto the tarmac.” So they get up there, and of course the horses spook. [laughs] Duane gets thrown and breaks his arm on his birthday. He’s got some kind of fever, and he’s pissed at baby brother for suggesting the horseback ride. He’s laid up at the house. Gregg hears “Statesboro Blues” on my record [1969’s Taj Mahal]. He gets a little grass, goes by, knocks on the door, leaves the record and runs away. Duane finds the record, figures it’s Baby Brah, and a few hours later he calls Gregg: “Baby Brah, get your ass over here. You’ve got to hear this!” Duane is sitting up in bed with his arm in a sling so he can’t… [Mahal makes a motion like playing slide with his arm in a sling. At that moment, a crow comes heckling. Mahal heckles it right back, “Yo’ mama too! And yo’ other mama!”] Anyway, so there he is with the Coricidin bottle, and that was the beginning of it. Sky Dog could play.

Do you have a slide thought to share right now?

Well, I’ve always played a bottleneck style, and I’d use either glass or a stainless-steel slide on a resonator, depending on the sound I’m after. But I’d like to be able to play it lap style. My next quest is to get after that, because I absolutely love the sound.

Speaking of lap steel, Ben Harper was the Frets feature in the May issue. How did you come to meet and mentor him?

The first time I heard Ben Harper, I was in a house that they had actually sawed in half. [laughs] Anyway, we had flown in from Europe to play a concert in Claremont, California. I went upstairs and fell asleep. I awoke to the sound of a slide player taking a solo pass in a trio. I was thinking, If it sounds anything like that again, I’m going downstairs to find out who the hell this is. When I got down there, it was Ben. He said, “Sorry, we didn’t mean to wake you up.” Okay. Sure guys. At first I didn’t realize that I knew his grandparen­ts, who ran the Folk Music Center, but I knew Ben was going to do what he was going to do. He wasn’t just playing around; he was playing music. He was filled with the spirit of it. He’s also a luthier. You can drop your D-28 off a 20-story window, and he’ll come sweep up the pieces and put it back together. He’s that guy.

Harper has a profound connection to the Weissenbor­n and a shared appreciati­on for Hawaiian music. You

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 ??  ?? Taj Mahal on the Hendrix Experience 2019 tour, Paramount Theater in Colorado Springs, October 15, 2019
Taj Mahal on the Hendrix Experience 2019 tour, Paramount Theater in Colorado Springs, October 15, 2019
 ??  ?? Performing in college with an Epiphone acoustic
Performing in college with an Epiphone acoustic
 ??  ?? Taj onstage in 2020
Taj onstage in 2020

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