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Hi, Neil Warren here again and welcome to another episode of the Happy Hour Harmonica podcast with more interviews with some of the finest harmonica players around today.
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Be sure to subscribe to the podcast and also check out the Spotify playlist where some of the tracks discussed during the interviews can be heard.
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Rod Piazza develops his exciting brand of West Coast Jump Harmonica in Southern California, where he formed his own band before joining forces with George Harmonica Smith to form Bacon Fat, Two Hearts, What A Sound.
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rod has an extensive discography both as a solo artist and also with his long-term band the mighty flyers alongside his wife honey rod talks us through his evergreen career and how he has burned it up on stage for so many years Hello Rob Piat, thank you very much for joining me today.
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Oh man, my pleasure Neil, thank you.
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You grew up in Southern California.
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What was the music scene like when you were growing up and your sort of influences when you were younger?
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The
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first influences were the blues and R&B records that my older brothers brought home.
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And then from there, the LPs, the blues LPs that I kind of got turned on to from hearing a few songs on the radio or records of my brothers and pursuing it farther and farther into the blues idiom.
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That was my first education, I would say.
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And then the second education would have been after we had already been playing and had a couple records out.
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My introduction to the black community of Los Angeles Watts area And all the great blues men who had moved to Southern California and lived and played down in Los Angeles through George Smith, he introduced me to that whole scene.
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And T-Bone Walker, Pee Wee Creighton, Big Mama Thornton, Eddie Vinson, Joe Turner, Roy Brown, on and on and on.
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And that's just in the SoCal area.
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You had Lowell Folsom, too.
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All these artists, you know.
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And then up in the Bay Area, there were more who had my I think you started playing guitar first, yeah?
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You had a guitar bought
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for you when you were 10 years old, is that right?
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Yeah, I bought a guitar off a lady selling them on the street, and I think it was four or five dollars, and I cried enough to get my mom and my brother to walk back down the street where she was and buy me a guitar, and I started on that.
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I didn't play no harp until my brother took me to see Jimmy Reed and introduced me on break to him and said, this young man is trying to play guitar.
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I said, well, he needs a harmonica to go with it, and he handed me one of his old harmonicas, so So I started fooling around with that, and then eventually bought some harmonicas.
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And when I got in the first group, they had guys playing guitar better than me, and they taught me to blow harp and sing.
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So that was the end of guitar.
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So your first harmonica was a harmonica given to you by Jimmy Reed?
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Yeah.
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That's a pretty awesome first harmonica.
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These early recordings that you listened to, do you remember if there was any particular inspiration for harmonica at
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the Jimmy Reed album, Best of Jimmy Reed.
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Best of Jimmy Reed Slim Harpo, Scratch My Back, God Love If You Want It, anything that you would hear that was an AM hit out here, those things kind of piqued my interest.
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From there, I've got the Sonny Boy William record, and then this cat had a little music store, and he told me, he said, man, do you know Little Walter?
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I said, no.
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And he said, here's the best of Little Walter.
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When he gave me that record, then I pretty much forgot about it.
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You formed
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your first band at high school, yeah?
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I think they were called the Mystics, and you were singing and playing harp with those.
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Yeah.
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Yeah, that band was the Mystics, and then it became the same band, became the house of DBS, Dirty Blues Sound, and then we got a record deal and got a manager in Hollywood, and he changed the name to the Dirty Blues Band, and we recorded for ABC Blues Waves.
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We were the only white act they had.
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They had Otis Spann and T-Bone Walker and several people, George Smith.
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And they signed us.
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I guess they thought we would sell some blues to young white hippies or whatever, you know, because we all had long hair and we were trying to play.
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We were just learning, you know.
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I think I got both those albums.
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Stone Dirt was one, wasn't it?
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And then the Dirty Blues Band.
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Some great raw tracks in there, some great playing by yourself in there.
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I think you developed a good sound by that stage.
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And I thought, not too fast.
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I think I was about 18 when I did the first record and about 19, if that, when I did the second one.
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We were just lucky to have a record deal and happy to have somebody recording us and putting us on some shows.
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Yeah, great.
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So from a very young age then, you were doing music as a full-time job.
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Yeah,
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trying to be.
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That isn't to say that I didn't have to work a day job on different things to supplement the income, you know.
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But we were certainly trying at that age to get ahead and make it in music.
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I knew that's all I want to do.
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And then you met George Shalmonica Smith.
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By that time, a lot of the guys had went into the Army, and I had just formed the Rod Piazza Blues Band.
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Then, when I teamed up with George...
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We went by the Ash Grove.
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Big Mama Thornton was going to start playing, and they were rehearsing that night.
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It was closed, but George Smith was standing outside, and I talked to him and asked him if I could come by the house sometime and learn something on the harmonica, and he said, yeah, sure.
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He didn't have much to say, and that was the first meeting.
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I don't know if it was six months or a year or two months.
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I don't recall how long.
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I went to the who was called Big Walter was supposed to be playing there.
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So I drove down to the Ash Grove to see who we thought was Big Walter.
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It turned out to be Big Walter Smith, George Smith.
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He called me up on the bandstand to play, and I was so intimidated.
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I did the best I could, and he looked at me and said, okay, you can get around on the little harp a little bit.
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Then he made me take the chromatic and try to do something on that.
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I hadn't been playing the chromatic but a little bit, and he realized I could be get around on it, so he let me sit back down, and that was it.
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I thanked him after the night, and he didn't even look up.
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He just said, okay.
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A few months after that, I was opening the show for Holland Wolfe there for a week, and George was playing with Wolfe.
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I hired George sometimes to blow harp with him on tour.
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George came up on my set, and now I handed him the harp, and he sat in with me, and we did that all week long, and we tore it up together, and George said at the with Wolf for a month.
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I want you to start a band with me with two harps.
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I said, two harps?
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He said, yeah, that's what we're going to do.
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And I said, okay.
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And he says, I'll call you.
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I figured he'd never call me.
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And he got back off the road a couple of months.
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I got a phone call.
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Rod?
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Yeah.
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George Smith.
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Oh, hey, George.
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How you doing?
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Yeah, you ready
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to work?
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Yeah.
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For people listening, Bacon Fat, a great band.
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It's a treat for harmonica fans to have two harmonicas I think you came out with, was it two or three albums with Bacon Fat?
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We did
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one.
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Then we went on a tour to England in 1970 for Mike Vernon, you know, Blue Horizon.
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He had saw us opening for Paul Butterfield over at the Golden Bear down in Huntington.
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And he signed my band.
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He said, I want to do a record on you.
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He had just lost sleep with Mac.
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They went to Warner Brothers.
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So I said, well, can you do one on George Smith, too?
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And he says, yeah.
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So we did No Time for Jive with George.
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He brought us over in 70 to tour, and we recorded a few more songs over there while in England, and he put that out on a Tough Dude record.
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George Smith obviously had a big influence on you, and you played with him for a good few years.
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Did he particularly tell you much about how to play the harp, or was it just a case of playing with him and picking up from listening to him, playing along with him?
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We both
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had the same harmonicas.
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We played the same harmonicas out of the bag and the same amp, same microphone.
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I would play half the set and then I'd sit down and I'd watch him play and he'd look at me and give me looks.
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And I would try my best to figure out why the hell does it sound different and why is it so much better when he's playing than when I'm playing.
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And when I would get back up, he would walk by the bandstand and look at me if I was doing something and and kind of like give me a, oh yeah, or a hmm.
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And then he would grab my hands and squeeze them around the microphone so I could get a better tone, you know.
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And he'd force me to pick up the chromatic harp more than I would have.
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So I ended up playing it, you know, every two or three songs.
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So I was able to advance on that instrument as well as a small harp pretty quick.
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One of the songs, the tribute to George Smith song that you do, yeah, you talk about George on there and So yeah, it's a great song.
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I also hear George was quite a performer on stage as well.
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He did some crazy things on stage.
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Is that something you tried to emulate as well?
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Well,
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it started, we were playing the, George used to go out in the crowd all the time, he had a long cord, you know, and he would go out on the crowd on the last song of the set, and this one night we were playing, and George told me, he said, okay, Rod, tonight, now we're both going out in the crowd, I got another 20-foot cord, and I said, no, George, that's your thing, man, you know, he goes, no, you're going out, we're going to go out on each side of the stage, and we'll meet in the middle out there, and we'll upset the club, and, you know, That's what I did that night, and then after that I started doing it on my own, and eventually I got a wireless and hooked it up to the harmonica mic somehow and started using the wireless for the harmonica.
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I was the first guy that did that.
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Then Albert King, he came along and asked me, what wireless, how are you doing that and this and that, and I showed him all that stuff.
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He said that Keith Richard told him how, but really it was this little harmonica player, Rod Piazza, that showed it to him.
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Brilliant, yeah.
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Yeah, then that's quite a common trick now, the harmonica player, isn't it?
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You know, to walk out in the crowd with a harmonica, like you say, but quite often with a wireless microphone.
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So you think maybe you were the start of that, you and George at
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least.
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I'd say George Smith was the start of it, and I know that George's mom told me that when George was in Chicago, him and Walter would do some stuff like that, you know, and certainly there was guitar players who did it.
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So I can only tell you from the era that I came up in, I was the only harp player using a wireless to go out there.
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I had never seen nobody else do it.
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So you mentioned Little Walter, who's a...
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you know, obviously an influence to every blues harmonica player.
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Anything particular about Little Walter or, you know, the songs that inspire you from Little Walter?
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Yeah, I love the fact that
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Walter had the swing jazz saxophone influence on his playing, the way he phrased and the way he constructed his lines.
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And the fact that he had songs...
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that weren't just your average three-chord blues song.
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I mean, take a song like Too Late.
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or Who Told You or One Chance With You.
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I mean, Walter had all these great songs, man, that were really great blues songs and way, way different from the standard three-chord blues.
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Not that they had a lot of different changes in them, but they were just...
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constructed in a way that, man, there were so many great songs there.
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And then you had that swinging double shuffle, we called it, that B-Lo would play, you know, which was sort of a march, but it was more of a swinging beat, which enabled the harmonica to be more free without the backbeat on two and four, and allowed you to construct the type of phrasing and lines that were so open and available if you had the confidence content in your head and your heart and your soul to put into your harmonica.
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So it's interesting you're talking about trying to emulate the sound of saxophones, and that's something that is talked about with Little Walter quite a lot, that, you know, they try to emulate the sounds of saxophones.
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That's more in your phrasing, is it, rather than the actual tone of the harmonica that you're doing that?
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And were you, you know, did you listen to a lot of saxophone players yourself to try and emulate the sort of lines that saxophone players play?
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Yeah, quite a bit.
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Lewis Jordan, Gene Ammons, Red Prysock.
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so many of them.
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I love Ben Webster, and I love all their playing.
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I know when I first got with George Smith, I was still playing some Sonny Boy stuff, and George would walk by the bandstand and tell me, Rod, blow your axe, play your axe, man, play your axe.
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He didn't want me to do the sort of wah-wah harmonica effect.
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He wanted me to play it like an instrument, like a saxophone, and play it like a horn.
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Obviously, that's where Walter was headed.
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I know Dave Myers used to come see me play all the time when I'd go to Chicago, and he told me, he said, Rod, you know, Gene Ammons would come down to the club where we was playing, me and Walter, and he would sit in with us, and he goes, Walter's records were okay, Rod, but you should have heard when him and Gene Ammons was jamming on a live set.
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Oh, man, I would have given anything to hear that.
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To me, the acoustic harmonica didn't really turn me on a great deal.
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That amp amplified horn sound with the microphone in the box.
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You know, that really was what moved me.
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Talking through more some of your albums, you've got a great long list of released albums.
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It's great to see.
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So your first album came out in 1967 with the Dirty Blues Band.
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Then you started, obviously you did Bacon Flats, which we talked about.
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Then you started releasing some albums under your own name.
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I think Blues Man was the first album you released under your own name in 1973.
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and then you formed some of the Mighty Flyers, which has been your band since 1980.
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But you kept some solo albums as well during the time with the Mighty Flyers, didn't you?
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What's been the difference, emphasis, between when you're playing with the Mighty Flyers and when you did your solo albums?
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The
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Mighty Flyers had a manager.
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The band as a whole was more interested in trying to make a hit record and get a worthwhile record deal and be able to advance in the business world.
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The
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solo records I did, I was only concerned in playing what I loved and what I had started out to do and what I always wanted to be, which was just a blues man.
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That's not to say that it didn't change in 1991, I believe, when I signed with Blacktop.
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Then it was more back to just pursuing the blues.
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But I think that gives us a nice difference with your albums, isn't it?
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We've got the more sort of heavily blues-centric albums.
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And when you're playing with the Mighty Flies, you know, it's more boogie, you know, it's more kind of faster up-tempo jive jumping sort of music, which works great with your harp as well.
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I think your last album, Emerging Situation, is 2014.
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Other
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than the live album at Fleetwoods that was put out by Big Mo, recorded in...
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Ninety-four.
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That just came out last year or a year before.
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But certainly the last studio record was Emergency Situation.
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Are you planning on releasing any more albums?
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I did a live recording down at Tampa Bay Blues Festival in Florida for Chuck Ross down there.
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He did a live recording, me and Kim Wilson, tribute to Lil' Walter.
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He hasn't been able to clear it to get it put out yet.
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So I'm thinking about having him sell it to Ripcat Records, who put out my instrumental album last year or year before, and combining it with about three new tracks in the studio and releasing that here in the near future.
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You mentioned the instrumentals album there, which is called His Instrumentals, which is a great collection.
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So I really enjoyed that one.
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It's something I think you're particularly strong on.
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What's your approach to playing instrumentals on the harmonica?
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Well, after a long career like I've had, it's been hard to create a new instrumental that didn't sound like one of the ones that I had already done.
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That was a big challenge, but I think I succeeded in it.
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I don't know of any other harmonica player that has as many original instrumentals as I've done over the years.
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And so I felt good about putting them all on one record and making a statement with that.
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I love doing instrumentals.
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I like finding the head and then creating something around it.
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Most of those that you have on that record, they're all done in one take because I'm primarily taking a structure and working around it, just whatever off the top of my head.
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I hate doing more than one take of the songs.
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All my songs are usually one take, two takes at the most.
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I mean, I don't know of any other harp players that have an instrumental like Stratospheric tune on the 64 chromatic.
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these are songs that instrumentals written by yourself yeah so they're all original instrumentals yeah i think you're absolutely right listening to it they all sound very different when you're putting together an instrumental is there any particular secret you got to that are you just trying to make the head sound different are you and build from there
00:21:07.905 --> 00:21:23.384
Yeah, once you've got the head in your mind to give the identity to the tune, then in your soloing, you have one part of your mind, I think, is resting on what you've already done and the other part of your mind where you can go new territory.
00:21:23.842 --> 00:21:38.130
And then you've also got the soulful element of it to try to keep it soulful, you know, not make it too technical, but technical enough to where somebody says, oh, wow, I didn't think of doing that.
00:21:38.570 --> 00:21:43.740
And yet have enough soul to it to where somebody wants to put it on and listen to it more than once.
00:21:44.385 --> 00:21:47.711
You know, one thing you need in instrumentals is to keep the interest in the song.
00:21:47.990 --> 00:21:53.019
When you're trying to play an instrumental as a harmonica player, I think you often feel that you lose your momentum a little bit.
00:21:53.098 --> 00:21:57.986
So to keep that going to sort of four minutes or so through a song is really important for the instrumentals.
00:21:58.026 --> 00:22:00.911
And again, I think that you do really well in the songs that you do.
00:22:01.191 --> 00:22:04.215
And I noticed there's a few horror-themed songs on there.
00:22:04.276 --> 00:22:09.163
You've got Soul Monster and Frank and Bop and Scary Boogie and Devil's Fight.
00:22:09.182 --> 00:22:11.165
Have you got a particular interest in horror music?
00:22:11.458 --> 00:22:16.983
Oh yeah, man, I grew up seeing all them original horror movies on Universal.
00:22:17.625 --> 00:22:21.710
Wolfman, Frankenstein, Dracula, all that, you know, as a kid.
00:22:21.950 --> 00:22:29.218
I always loved those movies, still do, and some of the titles are drawn from that, yeah.
00:22:30.159 --> 00:22:39.490
An album that really first introduced me to your playing is the Modern Masters album, which is a compilation album of yours, which covers, you know, a lot of your career.
00:22:39.970 --> 00:22:46.380
Talking about a few of the songs that I really love with yours, quite possibly my favorite harmonica song is Rockin' Robin.
00:22:58.417 --> 00:23:06.671
I really love that song.
00:23:06.711 --> 00:23:07.952
Anything you say about
00:23:07.992 --> 00:23:08.374
that song?
00:23:08.705 --> 00:23:20.596
Yeah, it started when we were playing together, me and George, and George would always do a little bitty pretty one on the harp, which was an AM hit, you know, big R&B hit.
00:23:21.497 --> 00:23:24.319
And so I said, okay, well, George can do that one.
00:23:24.359 --> 00:23:27.001
I'm going to do Rockin' Robin.
00:23:27.182 --> 00:23:31.566
So I learned Rockin' Robin and I started playing that down at the club.
00:23:31.625 --> 00:23:41.616
And then George watched me and I remember the night that George got up after me and he played Rockin' Robin and looked at me and said, Okay, now I'm getting some of yours.
00:23:41.696 --> 00:23:44.442
You're not only getting some of mine, I'm going to get one of yours.
00:23:44.823 --> 00:23:47.948
And we were both laughing and I felt good about that.