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Raymond Hill: Remembering Clarksdale’s Unsung Reed Man

“Blow your horn, Raymond! Blow!” If you’re a fan of rock-and-roll, you’ve heard those words, yelled by Jackie Brenston during the solo on the groundbreaking track, “Rocket 88.” Many regard it as the first rock-and-roll record, combining car-crazy fun — it celebrates swigging booze while cruising around in an Oldsmobile Rocket Hydra-Matic 88 — with the distortion of guitarist Willie Kizart’s amp.

Courtesy Blue T.O.M. Records

Hill’s “Going Down” from High Water Records

Whether that tag’s deserved or not, the song played a pivotal role in the genre’s ascendance, being the first hit recorded at Sam Phillips’ Memphis Recording Company and one of the biggest R&B records of 1951. What a break for Ike Turner’s band, the Kings of Rhythm, for whom Brenston sang and played saxophone. And what a moment for Raymond, the superior reed man, bringing what Nick Tosches called his “post-melodic saxophone shriekings.”

And yet, as a friend recently queried, “Who is this Raymond?” As it turns out, it was Raymond Hill, who, like Turner and most of his band, grew up around Clarksdale, Mississippi. Now, with the 70th anniversary of the “Rocket 88” recording session only two weeks away, on March 3rd, Hill’s life is especially ripe for celebration this Black History Month. “He’s an unsung hero of Black music,” notes Dr. David Evans, who taught ethnomusicology at the University of Memphis for decades, and recorded Hill for the first 45 to be released on U of M’s High Water Records in 1979. For once, that isn’t an overstatement.

Courtesy Cheryl Thurber

Raymond (left) and Lillie Hill

“Rocket 88” was only the beginning. Hill’s work turns up two years later on the great Junior Parker track, “Mystery Train,” one of Sun Records’ finest moments. And in 1960 he may have appeared on another milestone recording, the brilliant, oft-covered “Ooh Poo Pah Doo” by Jessie Hill (no relation), now considered a cornerstone of New Orleans R&B. Raymond Hill must have been making that journey south fairly often: One of his rare solo singles on Sun was “Bourbon Street Jump.” Although Evans is skeptical that it’s Hill, Jessie Hill does shout “Spread your fingers, Raymond!” on the single’s instrumental “Part 2,” a veritable showcase for the sax player.

Back then, the sax was king, and Raymond Hill brought the big tone. “He said Gene Ammons was his big idol,” says Evans, who interviewed Hill while recording the High Water single. “He emulated that honking sax sound.” Evans notes that Hill was also a DJ on Clarksdale’s WROX, playing live on the air with a small combo. No wonder the Clarksdale Press Register dubbed him the “chief of the hepcats” back in the day.

He fell in with Ike Turner when he was 15 and was still in high school when “Rocket 88” launched Turner’s band out of its local orbit. Through the early ’50s, Hill recorded more tracks for Phillips, even starring as a vocalist on “I’m Back Pretty Baby.” Two instrumental tracks were actually released by Sun at the time, including “The Snuggle.”

In 1955, he rejoined Turner’s Kings of Rhythm, now based in St. Louis. As Tosches notes, singer Jimmy Thomas “remembered Brenston and tenor sax player Raymond Hill being more or less drunk throughout the late Fifties, even though Turner fined them for drinking.” Perhaps that was why Hill eventually left, or perhaps it was because Turner had his own plans for the band’s young singer, Anna Mae Bullock, with whom Hill had a romance and a child in 1958. Ms. Bullock, of course, would come to be Mrs. Tina Turner, but by then Hill had moved on.

After touring with Albert King through most of the ’60s, Hill eventually settled down in Clarksdale by the decade’s end, and that’s where he lived when Evans recorded him, this time playing guitar (with saxophone overdubs) and accompanying his wife Lillie. And that’s where he passed away in 1996. “He was a very mild mannered guy, a real nice guy,” recalls Evans. “And he was in the thick of it from an early age.”

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Million Dollar Quartet Television Series to Film in Memphis

A CMT television show inspired by the Tony Award-winning musical Million Dollar Quartet will be shot in Memphis.

The show will tell the story of Sun Studio alums Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Ike Turner and the man credited with making them famous, producer Sam Phillips.

The Tennessee General Assembly approved $4 million to incentivize Thinkfactory Media to produce <i>Million Dollar Quartet</i> in Memphis. That effort was led by Senate Majority Leader Mark Norris and backed by Senator Reggie Tate, Representative Steve McManus, and Representative Curry Todd.

“The work resulting from the alliance between the Tennessee Entertainment Commission and the Memphis and Shelby County Film and Television Commission convinced Thinkfactory Media Executive Producer Leslie Greif and Co-Executive Producer Barry Berg to shoot here,” said Memphis and Shelby County Film Commissioner Linn Sitler.

Filming will begin in late March. There will be a casting call on Saturday, February 13th at Humes Preparatory Academy Middle School (the alma mater of Elvis) at 659 North Manassas from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. They’re hoping to cast all the leads — Elvis, Trixie Dean (Elvis’ girlfriend), Jerry Lee, and Ike — as well as supporting roles and extras. Those who attend the casting call are asked to come in 1950s hair and wardrobe.

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Blues News

Life of Riley screens at the Brooks Museum of Art on Thursday, May 29th, at 7 p.m.

This documentary from director Jon Brewer renders B.B. King and the blues in an unsentimental and unsettling manner. The film opens with Bill Cosby, who emphatically rejects any romantic notions of the music or of King’s life. It’s a powerful opening to a great historical document.

King’s life is set in place as he is interviewed in recent footage at the site of his birth. There are moving interviews with many of his old friends and family members. Those are cut against interviews with Bono and Eric Clapton. But the man who emerges is one who never stopped moving through a half century of extreme social change.

The notoriously hard-touring King, now 88, was orphaned, went to a one-room schoolhouse, and then into the cotton fields of the Mississippi Delta. The horrors of the system are powerfully depicted. He witnessed a lynching, worked under armed guard, and ran away twice to Memphis before the musical life took hold. Music aside, the first-person history of 20th century plantation life is worth watching. What King accomplishes from this appalling situation is one of America’s greatest artistic legacies.

King’s guitar playing is idiosyncratic to say the least. His stylistic efficiency relates to his lifestyle of working and moving fast with a light footprint. His ex-wife’s story of him fishing in a silk suit has a funny aspect to it. But his response, “It’s all I have,” is that of an orphan who had nothing, had to depend on himself, and who couldn’t let himself stop working. This is what Cosby wants us to bear in mind. This film should be shown in our schools. Life of Riley goes to video on demand on June 1st.

KWEM, the West Memphis-based radio station that launched “Memphis” music, is powering up again. Mid-South Community College in West Memphis received a license to operate a low-powered FM transmitter. The signal will go live in about 90 days on 93.3 FM and might reach parts of Memphis. But the programming will be streamed online at kwemradio.com.

KWEM was a music-production think tank at the dawn of electrified blues. In the film discussed above, B.B. King mentions the exposure and experience he gained through his sponsored work on KWEM. The deal was you could pay to play on the air or get a sponsor.

Howlin’ Wolf, born Chester Burnett, had a connection to the station that ran for half a decade: Burnett was the station’s first African-American host. In 1951, Sam Phillips heard Wolf on KWEM, recorded him in Memphis, and sold the records to Chess. Everybody thought things were going along smoothly. However, Ike Turner, pianist and frequent collaborator with Phillips, took Burnett across the river to record at KWEM for the Bihari brothers, owners of the Modern label in Los Angeles. Although Wolf eventually went on to a productive relationship with Phillips and Chess, Joe Bihari and Ike Turner recorded four tracks on Howlin’ Wolf at KWEM in 1951 and several the next year.

Burnett, James Cotton, Junior Parker, Hubert Sumlin, and Elmore James worked or performed at KWEM. Bill Black and Scotty Moore played there. Johnny Cash made his broadcast debut and hosted a show.

Jim Dickinson — Memphis’ Dr. Johnson — was emphatic on the issue that Memphis music had its roots at West Memphis’ Plantation Inn. He insisted that Packy Axton was the funky Prometheus who brought the sound back across the river. Between Phillips and Sun’s reliance on KWEM and the Stax/Mitchell connection to West Memphis live scene, it’s a wonder we don’t call it West Memphis Music.

• Memphis Blues stalwart Daddy Mack has a new album and will celebrate its release at the trolley stop of the Center for Southern Folklore on Saturday, May 21st. The show will be recorded for a Beale Street Caravan broadcast and will include tracks from Daddy Mack’s latest album, Blues Central. If you’ve never heard and met this band, you’re missing out big time.

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“Rocket 88” — A Tribute to Ike Turner

Ike Turner’s death yesterday at 76 has been duly noted in the press. The words “wife-beater” were in every obituary, a result of his wife Tina Turner’s revelations after the breakup of their relationship.

That episode in Ike Turner’s life defined him in the minds of many. But the man was a genius — a songwriter, guitarist, and piano player with few equals.

His Kings of Rhythm teamed up with Jackie Brenston in Memphis to record what’s generally acknowledged to be the first rock ‘n roll song ever.

Here’s a nice video tribute. Rest in Peace, Ike.

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Ike Turner: RIP

Ike Turner, whose role as one of rock’s critical architects was overshadowed by his ogrelike image as the man who brutally abused former wife and icon Tina Turner, died Wednesday at his home in suburban San Diego. He was 76.

“He did pass away this morning” at his home in San Marcos, in northern San Diego County, said Scott M. Hanover of Thrill Entertainment Group, which managed Turner’s musical career.

There was no immediate word on the cause of death, which was first reported by celebrity Web site TMZ.com.
T

urner managed to rehabilitate his image somewhat in his later years, touring around the globe with his band the Kings of Rhythm and drawing critical acclaim for his work. He won a Grammy in 2007 in the traditional blues album category for “Risin’ With the Blues.”

But his image is forever identified as the drug-addicted, wife-abusing husband of Tina Turner. He was hauntingly portrayed by Laurence Fishburne in the movie “What’s Love Got To Do With It,” based on Tina Turner’s autobiography.

In a 2001 interview with The Associated Press, Turner denied his ex-wife’s claims of abuse and expressed frustration that he had been demonized in the media, adding that his historic role in rock’s beginnings had been ignored.

“You can go ask Snoop Dogg or Eminem, you can ask the Rolling Stones or (Eric) Clapton, or you can ask anybody — anybody, they all know my contribution to music, but it hasn’t been in print about what I’ve done or what I’ve contributed until now,” he said.

Turner, a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, is credited by many rock historians with making the first rock ‘n’ roll record, “Rocket 88,” in 1951. Produced by the legendary Sam Phillips, it was groundbreaking for its use of distorted electric guitar.

But as would be the case for most of his career, Turner, a prolific session guitarist and piano player, was not the star on the record — it was recorded with Turner’s band but credited to singer Jackie Brenston.

And it would be another singer — a young woman named Anna Mae Bullock — who would bring Turner his greatest fame, and infamy.
Turner met the 18-year-old Bullock, whom he would later marry, in 1959 and quickly made the husky-voiced singer the lead singer of his group, refashioning her into the sexy Tina Turner. Her stage persona was highlighted by short skirts and stiletto heels that made her legs her most visible asset. But despite the glamorous image, she still sang with the grit and fervor of a rock singer with a twist of soul.

The pair would have two sons. They also produced a string of hits. The first, “A Fool In Love,” was a top R&B song in 1959, and others followed, including “I Idolize You” and “It’s Gonna Work Out Fine.”

But over the years they’re genre-defying sound would make them favorites on the rock ‘n’ roll scene, as they opened for acts like the Rolling Stones.

The densely layered hit “River Deep, Mountain High” was one of producer Phil Spector’s proudest creations. A rousing version of “Proud Mary,” a cover of the Creedence Clearwater Revival hit, became their signature song and won them a Grammy for best R&B vocal performance by a group.