Showing posts with label Elvin Bishop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elvin Bishop. Show all posts

December 9, 2018

Larry Blake's on Telegraph

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From 2003 to 2004 I shot a series of performances by the music duo, earRotator (link below). One of them was at the restaurant, bar and nightclub, Larry Blake's on Telegraph Ave. in Berkeley, California



Larry Blake's

Larry Blake's on Telegraph was more than a restaurant, bar and nightclub - it was an East Bay entertainment mecca. The club was initially called Larry Blake's and was founded in 1940 by Larry Blake who ran it for almost 20 years.

The restaurant's initial selling point was that it was the first establishment within a mile of campus to gain an alcohol license. Before this breakthrough, thirsty Cal students had to travel to Oakland, Albany or San Pablo Avenue to imbibe.

Larry Blake's second claim to fame was the salad dressing, a closely guarded recipe Blake reportedly devised while working as a cook in the military during World War II.

But mostly, Larry Blake's was prized as a comfortable place to share a beer with friends, listen to music and enjoy a Blake's Burger.


Larry Blake's

Having earned a reputation for providing good food in a comfortable, friendly atmosphere, Larry sold the business to a group of employees who envisioned expanding the occasional music venue into a full-fledged nightclub.        

Blakes initially booked talented local jazz acts such as Ed Kelly, Pete and Sheila Escovedo and Kitty Margolis alongside national acts like the great Cal Tjader, Mose Allison, and Joaquin Lievano. Eventually blues was incorporated into the mix, and within a short period of time, Blakes became the premiere blues club in the entire Bay Area.       

The list of blues luminaries who enjoyed a run at Blakes includes some of the most talented artists in blues history: John Lee Hooker, Etta James, Lowell Fulson, Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, Otis Rush, Johnny Heartsman, Brownie McGee, Irma Thomas, and Johnny Adams.       

World-famous blues guitarist Robert Cray, was recognized by booking agent, Tim Kaihatsu, as a tremendous talent, and was fostered throughout the years by Blakes. When the great Charles Brown decided to step back into the music world, his first comeback performance was at Blakes. Charlie Musselwhite, Lady Bianca, Tracy Nelson, Joe Louis Walker, Roy Rogers, Buckwheat Zydeco, Little Charlie and the Nightcats, Norton Buffalo, Rory Block, John Hammond, Boz Skaggs, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Amos Garrett, Maria Muldaur, Roomful of Blues, Elvin Bishop, and Greg Allman all graced the Blake's stage and entertained its customers. For nearly four decades, Blake's was THE blues hotspot in the East Bay.      

In 1993, Blake's recognized the need to become more contemporary and gave the club a facelift, officially changed the name to "Blakes on Telegraph," and started booking modern rock, punk, ska, jazz, funk and hip-hop. Since that time, Blakes has had the good fortune to discover Cake, Third Eye Blind, Box Set, Train and Stroke 9 before much of the rest of the world.


earRotator - 2003 
Larry Blake's, Berkeley, California 
photo by Styrous®



After 71 years, Larry Blake's, the funky Telegraph Avenue watering hole closed on Friday, February 4, 2011.       


Larry Blake's
 


 
Larry Blake's   
2367 Telegraph Avenue
Berkeley, CA 94704
      

Viewfinder links:         
       
Gregg Allman     
earRotator       
Cal Tjader           
       
Net links:         
       
The Mercury News ~ Larry Blake’s restaurant a Berkeley tradition
                                ~ An era ends as Blake’s closes       
Berkeley Daily Planet ~ Larry Blake's on Telegraph in Berkeley Closes  
Berkeleyside ~ Blakes on Telegraph closes after 71 years       
SF Business Times ~ Berkeley institution Larry Blake’s shuts down 
SF Gate ~ Larry Blake's closes      
allmenus ~ Blake’s menu
sfbayshop ~ Blake's       

 
  
Styrous® ~ Saturday, December 8, 2018



                 




January 22, 2014

101 Reel-to-Reel Tapes 33: Paul Butterfield Blues Band ~ The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw








 
The Butterfield Blues Band ~ The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw
  
detail photo of reel-to-reel tape box by Styrous©




In addition to my 20,000 Vinyl LP collection I'm selling, I have reel-to-reel, pre-recorded tapes I am selling as well. This entry is about the reel-to-reel tape, The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw, by The Butterfield Blues Band. Interested? Contact me by email but please, not through a comment.
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The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw is a 1967 album by The Butterfield Blues Band. Its name refers to a nickname of Elvin Bishop, whose role shifted to lead guitarist after Mike Bloomfield left to form Electric Flag. Pigboy marked a slight shift in the band's sound towards R&B and features a horn section that included Gene Dinwiddie (tenor sax), David Sanborn (alto sax) and Keith Johnson (trumpet).. The album moved away from Chicago blues towards an R&B/soul sound, most notable on the opening track, a cover of the Motown song One More Heartache (written by The Miracles and first recorded by Marvin Gaye).


photo by Styrous©


Also known as The Paul Butterfield Blues Band, the group was formed in 1964 in Chicago, IL. It disbanded in 1971 and became Paul Butterfield’s Better Days, in 1972, at Woodstock, New York. This lineup disbanded a year later in 1973.

back of reel-to-reel tape box
photo by Styrous©


One More Heartache is a bouncey, great-for-dancing tune with a great hand-clapping and guitar intro by Elvin Bishop that is outstanding. The Bishop guitar and Butterfield harmonica playing is WAY cool!  In spite of the lyrics, it's a really fun song.

Driftin' and Driftin is a slow and bluesy piece that just meanders along very nicely with no particular need to hurry.

I remember I Pity the Fool was a favorite strip song of one of the girls I performed with on the same program when I was dancing on Broadway (see: Beemer Memory 5). It was a perfect song for her and her bump and grinds were sensational! She let me use the song in my act once and it brought down the house. What fun!

Double Trouble is another beautiful bluesy tune with the fantastic harmonica of Butterfield and the fantastic, mournful tenor sax of Gene Dinwiddie joining in on the fun. Of course, Bishop's guitar work lays it on as well. VERY nice!. Trouble kind of fits into the strip category as well but without the bump and grind, just slow and erotic for gracefully easing out of one's clothes.

Links to songs on YouTube below.


 The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw
reel-to-reel tape
detail photo by Styrous©




reel-to-reel label detail
detail photo by Styrous©




back of reel-to-reel tape box detail
detail photo by Styrous©

Track listing:

  1. "One More Heartache" (Smokey Robinson, The Miracles) – 3:20
  2. "Driftin' and Driftin'" (Charles Brown, Johnny Moore, Eddie Williams) – 9:09
  3. "I Pity the Fool" (Deadric Malone) – 6:00
  4. "Born Under a Bad Sign" (William Bell, Booker T. Jones) – 4:10
  5. "Run Out of Time" (Paul Butterfield, Brother Gene Dinwiddie, Peterson) – 2:59
  6. "Double Trouble" (Otis Rush) – 5:38
  7. "Drivin' Wheel" (Roosevelt Sykes) – 5:34
  8. "Droppin' Out" (Paul Butterfield, Tucker Zimmerman) – 2:16
  9. "Tollin' Bells" (Traditional, arranged Butterfield Blues Band) – 5:23
Length: 44:29
Released in December, 1967
Label: Elektra  - EKX 4015
Producer: John Court

Personnel:


Music links:

One More Heartache on YouTube
Driftin' and Driftin on YouTube
I Pity the Fool on YouTube 
Double Trouble on YouTube


reel-to-reel tapes on eBay

Styrous® ~ January 22, 2014

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