If they ever make a movie about the life of firebrand blues
guitarist and soul vocalist Joe Louis Walker they should title it From the Tenderloin to la Ville des Lumières.
And they should make a movie about Walker
because he's everything you've ever heard about the American blues experience.
The journey of The Man So Nice They Named Him Thrice is one of the total human
experience today.
Just a snippet of his career accomplishments would make a
great story line. The plot takes a nice turn when Walker
returns to San Francisco
State University
to finish not one but two college degrees.
Walker, the youngest in his
brood, grew up in San Francisco
but his parents were originally from the South. Money might have been tight but
his folks took the time to instill an essential work ethic.
“My family used to pick different agricultural stuff in the
area,” Walker
said by telephone during a recent interview. “They taught me to take advantage
of hard work to open doors that might not have been open to them.”
As a teenager Walker
was soaking up the psychedelic rock music of the day and hanging around with
people like Mike Bloomfield, Jimi Hendrix, and Jorma Kaukonen. He was learning
the blues first-hand from Lightnin’ Hopkins
at places like the Matrix. Walker would soon embark on
a series of lifetime gigs at Eli’s Mile High blues club in Oakland.
He was heralded as one of the best of his generation with
all the well-deserved notoriety imparted. But to hear him say it, one of the
best things he ever did was to go back to school.
“I went back to address some unfinished business and further
my personal development,” Walker
said. “I took time to work on self and music. I found that I was able to become
more fluent in all things that were connected to me.”
During his time at SFSU Walker had given up the blues rock
and was playing in a gospel group called The Spiritual Corinthians. When he was
done with school he decided it was time to return to the blues.
“I found I could bring different sensibilities to the blues with
a gospel background,” Walker
said. “I was getting fresh handle on what I was trying to accomplish and the
blues is my mother tongue.”
Walker
never strays far from the gospel tradition. “Soldier For Jesus,” from his
latest release Hellfire (Alligator),
features harmony vocals from The Jordanaires and all the energy and exuberance of
get-up-and-shout praise music.
Although Joe Louis Walker has yet to field any offers for a
film about his life, he says he might have a project which puts to use his bachelor’s
degree in English (he has another in Music).
“If I ever write a book I’m going to call it ‘From the
Projects to Paris,’”
he said with a laugh. “It feels like I’ve gone from the outhouse to the
penthouse.”
An Evening with Joe Louis Walker, 9 p.m. (doors 8), May 18 at Dreamers Blues Bar, 978 Pine St, Muskegon 49442. Tickets $15 advance, $18 day of. Call the club at (231) 728-9157 for more ticket info.
More Things on The Man So Nice They Named Him Thrice: http://joelouiswalker.com/
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