Wednesday, 20 November 2024

Dr. John born 20 November 1941

Dr. John. (November 20, 1941 – June 6, 2019) was an American singer, songwriter and pianist. His music combined New Orleans blues, jazz, R&B, soul and funk. 

Dr John’s real name was Malcolm John Rebennack. His father ran an appliance shop in the East End of New Orleans, fixing radios and televisions and selling records. “Mac” grew up listening to his father’s hoard of 78s by blues artists such as Big Bill Broonzy and Memphis Minnie, jazz by Louis Armstrong, Miles Davis and King Oliver, and country music from Hank Williams and Roy Rogers. 

His family was intensely musical, with numerous aunts, uncles and cousins who were amateur musicians. From a young age Mac attended local gigs and, with his father’s assistance, visited recording sessions at the fabled J&M Studio. It was a meeting with the piano player Professor Longhair when he was 14 that persuaded him to pursue a musical career, and he began performing at local clubs. When Jesuit high school told him he must choose between schooling and music, he picked the latter. Proficient on piano and guitar, at 15 he began playing on recording sessions and accompanied artists such as Art Neville, Toussaint and Joe Tex. By 16 he had started producing tracks and was hired as an artists and repertoire man by Johnny Vincent at Ace Records. 

In 1960 he was involved in a fight when playing a show in Jackson, Mississippi, and had the ring finger of his left hand almost shot off. He eventually recovered the use of the finger, but it affected his guitar playing and caused him to concentrate on the piano. Working in the New Orleans clubs, he became embroiled in the criminal underworld of drugs and prostitution, and acquired a heroin addiction while dealing drugs himself. After completing a two-year jail sentence in Fort Worth, Texas, for drug possession in 1965, he moved to Los Angeles and soon was in great demand as a studio session musician. He played on countless tracks for the producer Phil Spector for artists including the Ronettes and the Righteous Brothers, worked with Aretha Franklin and Roberta Flack, recorded with Bob Dylan and Doug Sahm and played with Frank Zappa, until Zappa sacked him for using drugs. 

                                    

His album Gris-Gris, was recorded on studio time borrowed from Sonny & Cher, with whom he had been working in Los Angeles and who had helped him secure a deal with Atco records. Produced by Harold Battiste, it marked the first appearance of Rebennack’s pseudonym Dr John Creaux, alias Dr John the Night Tripper. After The Sun, Moon & Herbs he brought out the album Dr John’s Gumbo (1972). Following the positive reaction to In the Right Place in 1973, his next album, Desitively Bonnaroo (1974), was much less successful and it proved to be his last album with Atco. He moved to United Artists for the live album Hollywood Be Thy Name (1975), which was also unsuccessful. 

From the mid-70s onwards Dr John began a long partnership with the songwriter Doc Pomus that led to songs for his albums City Lights and Tango Palace (both 1979). He then made the solo piano album Dr John Plays Mac Rebennack (1981), a virtuosic showcase of his keyboard skills, and repeated the feat with The Brightest Smile in Town (1983). In 1989, the year he signed to Warner Bros and finally put his heroin addiction behind him, he released In a Sentimental Mood, a sleekly-produced collection of standards including Makin’ Whoopee, a duet with Rickie Lee Jones that earned the pair a Grammy for best jazz vocal performance. He won another Grammy for his second Warners album Goin’ Back to New Orleans (1992), this time for best traditional blues album. 

In 1994 he published his autobiography, Under a Hoodoo Moon: The Life of The Night Tripper (co-written with Jack Rummel), a lurid memoir of his musical life in New Orleans that did not shy away from details about drugs, violence, prostitution and the dark side of the music industry. Nonetheless he was beginning to assume the aura of a respected senior citizen, winning a third Grammy in 1996 for the track SRV Shuffle from the album A Tribute to Stevie Ray Vaughan, and a fourth in 2000 for his duet with BB King on Is You Is Or Is You Ain’t My Baby. Duke Elegant (2000) comprised John’s takes on favourite Duke Ellington pieces, while Mercernary (2006) was his tribute to another classic songwriter, Johnny Mercer. 

The obliteration of New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 spurred Dr John to release the fundraising EP Sippiana Hericane, and then City That Care Forgot (2008), an album-length tribute to his grievously wounded home town. It won him Grammy number five, in the best contemporary blues album category, and in 2013 Locked Down brought him a sixth for best blues album. New Orleans was on his mind once again when he made Ske-Dat-De-Dat: Spirit of Satch (2014), a homage to Armstrong, the city’s founding father of jazz. . He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2011.  On June 6, 2019, Dr. John died of a heart attack in New Orleans, Louisiana at the age of 77 years.

(Edited from Adam Sweeting obit @ The Guardian)

 

8 comments:

boppinbob said...

Here’s a few of Dr. John’s Compilations found in my library

Dr. John – The Very Best Of Dr. John (1995 Rhino)

https://www.imagenetz.de/hswmx

1. Right Place Wrong Time 2:56
2. Such A Night 2:58
3. Mama Roux 3:01
4. Junko Partner 4:32
5. Wash, Mama, Wash 3:43
6. Loop Garoo 4:43
7. Iko Iko 4:10
8. Tipitina 2:11
9. Jump Sturdy 2:21
10. Qualified 4:48
11. What Comes Around (Goes Around) 3:13
12. Mos' Scocious 2:49
13. I Walk On Guilded Splinters 7:46
14. Honey Dripper 3:38
15. Accentuate The Positive 3:55
16. Goin' Back To New Orleans 4:12
17. Makin' Whoopee! 4:09
18. Litanie Des Saints 4:44

Dr. John – The Definitive Pop Collection (2006 Rhino)

https://www.imagenetz.de/f4ToM

1-1 Gris Gris Gumbo Yaya
1-2 Mama Roux
1-3 Jump Sturdy
1-4 I Walk On Guilded Splinters
1-5 Black Widow Spider
1-6 Loop Garoo
1-7 Wash, Mama, Wash
1-8 Familiar Reality – Opening
1-9 Iko Iko
1-10 Somebody Changed The Lock
1-11 Mess Around
1-12 Junko Partner
1-13 Tipitina
Huey Smith Medley
1-14.a. High Blood Pressure
1-14.b. Don't You Just Know It
1-14.c. Well I'll Be John Brown
1-15 Traveling Mood
2-1 Right Place, Wrong Time
2-2 Such A Night
2-3 Life
2-4 Qualified
2-5 I Been Hoodood
2-6 Cold Cold Cold
2-7 Quitters Never Win
2-8 What Comes Around (Goes Around)
2-9 Mos' Scocious
2-10 (Everybody Wanna Get Rich) Rite Away
2-11 Let's Make A Better World
2-12 Honey Dripper
2-13 Makin' Whoopee!
2-14 Accentuate The Positive
2-15 Goin' Back To New Orleans

The Best Of Dr. John (2009 One Media MP3 album)

https://www.imagenetz.de/kJAUA

1 - Crawfish Soiree (Bring Your Own)
2 - Della (part 1)
3 - The ear is on strike
4 - Go ahead on
5 - In the Night
6 - A Little Closer To My Home
7 - Tipitina
8 - Zu Zu Man
9 - New Orleans
10 - Mean Cheatin' Woman
11 - Cat and mouse game
12 - Baldhead
13 - You're just too square (you ain't nowhere)
14 - Shoo Raa
15 - Woman is the Root of All Evil
16 - One night late

Dr. John - The Mojo of Dr John (2019 Sunset Blvd)

https://www.imagenetz.de/hnvJu

Disc 1
1. Foolish Little Girl
2. Good Times
3. Sahara
4. Feedbag
5. South Of The Border Town
6. The Honeydripper Pt. 2
7. Storm Warning (Long Version)
8. The Time Had Come
9. Woman
10. Which Way
11. A Little Closer To My Home
12. Make Your Own
13. You Said It
14. Bring Your Own Along
15. Somebody Tryin' To Hoodoo Me
16. Don't Want No Monkey In My Business
17. I Pulled The Cover Off You Two Lovers
18. Shining As Hard As I Can (Dying In The Forest)

Disc 2
1. Trader John
2. Zuzu Man
3. Tipitina
4. Woman Is The Root Of All Evil
5. Bald Head
6. The Ear Is On Strike
7. Go Ahead On
8. Got Lonseome-itis
9. Such A Night (Live)
10. Walk On Guilded Splinters (Live)
11. Goin' Back To New Orleans (Live)
12. Tipitina (Live)
13. I've Been Hoodooed (Live)
14. Right Place Wrong Time (Live)
15. Let The Good Times Roll (Live)

2 CD Release featuring Dr. John's early singles pre-Atlantic Records and live concert recordings previously unreleased in North American and Japan. This new retrospective includes rarities from the Rex, Ace, Crazy Cajun labels, and rare live band and solo performances of Dr. John's greatest hits.

iggy said...

Fantastic offering, Bob. Thanks so much and all good wishes to you. Iggy

Stinky said...

Excellent share! Thanks!

Hugh T. said...

Thank you so much. I would strongly encourage any Dr. John fans to check out his autobiography. He picked up some great stories along the way-- some of which are not told elsewhere.

BlueNote Cyberstar said...

His story about Professor Longhair spraying insecticide to cover up the odor of weed is hilarious. "There were dead roaches in the ashtray and everywhere else in the room."

I had the privilege of meeting Mac the year he died and got to observe his playing up close. The man made it look so easy. He was that good.

Hugh T. said...

Yes those candid stories about being in Professor Longhair's house are priceless.

Aussie said...

dont know this one but thank you

egroj.jazz said...

many thanks!