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Hugh Laurie (Dr.House) tar en Dr. John
Datum: 2011-04-08

Vi er vant til å se engelskmannen Hiugh Laurie halte over TV-skjermen hver uke (hver dag?) som den geniale men skakkjørte medisineren Dr. House i TV-serien »House«.

Lite visste vi at Laurie også er en musikkfreak størrelse XL.

9.mai slipper Laurie album, »Let Them Talk« (Warner), der han gjør yndlingsmusikken sin sammen med et gedigent utvalg musikere.
I produsentstolen; Joe Henry. Medvirkend i studio, blant annet Dr. John, Irma Thomas, Allen Toussaint og Tom Jones, samt et band som bl.a. teller ess som Jay Bellerose (trommer), David Pilch (bass) og Greg Leisz (gitar, dobro,mandolin).

Laurie spiller selv piano og synger. Toussaint har arrangert blåserne.

Laurie skal også ut på veien med konserter i London, Paris og Berlin. I tillegg kommer det også en dokumentarfilm om engelskmannen musikalske reise.

Her forteller Laurie selv om bakgrunnen (vel verdt å lese!)(Platas innhold helt til slutt).
I was not born in Alabama in the 1890s. You may as well know this now. I’ve never eaten grits, cropped a share, or ridden a boxcar. No gypsy woman said anything to my mother when I was born and there’s no hellhound on my trail, as far as I can judge. Let this record show that I am a white, middle-class Englishman, openly trespassing on the music and myth of the American south.

If that weren’t bad enough, I’m also an actor: one of those pampered ninnies who hasn’t bought a loaf of bread in a decade and can’t find his way through an airport without a babysitter. I wouldn’t be surprised to find that I’ve got some Chinese characters tattooed on my arse. Or elbow. Same thing.

Worst of all, I’ve broken a cardinal rule of art, music, and career paths: actors are supposed to act, and musicians are supposed to music. That’s how it works. You don’t buy fish from a dentist, or ask a plumber for financial advice, so why listen to an actor’s music?

The answer is – there is no answer. If you care about provenance and genealogy, then you should try elsewhere, because I have nothing in your size.

I started piano lessons at the age of 6 with Mrs Hare. She was a nice woman, probably; but in my twisted childhood memory I have cast her as a warty thug who bullied me across the hot coals of do-re-mi. I stuck it for about three months, grinding through Elementary Piano Book One until we reached Swanee River by Stephen Foster. (Foster, as it happens, was also a trespasser. Born in Pennsylvania, he never saw the actual Suwannee River – nor did he set foot in Florida, which adopted the song as its state anthem in 1935.
I’m just saying.)

Now you could hardly call Swanee River a blues song - in one of its earliest editions, the score was sold as “An Ethiopian Melody” - but it’s a lot closer than the French lullabys and comical Polish dances that made up the rest of that hellish book.

The day arrived, and Mrs Hare turned the page: “Swanee River”, she read, peering through the pince-nez that I have imagined for her, 45 years later. And then, with a curl of her hairy lip, she read the subtitle: “ ‘Negro Spiritual - Slightly Syncopated.’ Oh dear me no.….”. With that, she flicked the page to Le Tigre Et L’Elephant, or some other unholy nightmare, and my relationship with formal music instruction ended.

And then one day a song came on the radio – I’m pretty sure it was I Can’t Quit You Baby by Willie Dixon – and my whole life changed. A wormhole opened between the minor and major third, and I stepped through into Wonderland. Since then, the blues have made me laugh, weep, dance… well, this is a family record, and I can’t tell you all the things the
blues can make me do.

At the centre of this magical new kingdom, high on a hill (which shows you how little I knew back then), stood the golden city of New Orleans. In my imagination, it just straight hummed with music, romance, joy, despair; its rhythms got into my gawky English frame and, at times, made me so happy, and sad, I just didn’t know what to do with myself.
New Orleans was my Jerusalem. (The question of why a soft-handed English schoolboy should be touched by music born of slavery and oppression in another city, on another continent, in another century, is for a thousand others to answer before me: from Korner to Clapton, the Rolling Stones to the Joolsing Hollands. Let’s just say it happens.)

Over the next decade, I consumed all the guitarists I could find: Charley Patton and Lead Belly, who was a genius, as was Skip James, Scrapper Blackwell, all the Blinds (Lemon Jefferson, Blake, Willie Johnson, Willie McTell), Son House, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Bo Diddley, Muddy Waters and so many more that we’d be here all night just naming a tenth of them.

And then there were the towering piano players: Pete Johnson, Albert Ammons, Meade Lux Lewis, Roosevelt Sykes, Leroy Carr, Jelly Roll Morton, Champion Jack Dupree,
Tuts Washington, Willie “The Lion” Smith, Otis Spann, Memphis Slim, Pinetop Perkins, Professor Longhair, James Booker, Allen Toussaint and Dr John.

I tended to favour the piano over the guitar because it stays in one place, which is what I like to do. Guitars appeal to the footloose, the restless. I like sitting a lot.

As for singers, that’s a huge list, with only two names on it: Ray Charles and Bessie Smith.

These great and beautiful artists lived it as they played it: all of them knew the price of a loaf of bread and most had times in their lives when they couldn’t scrape it together.
They had credentials, in other words, and I respect those as much as the next man, possibly more.

But at the same time, I could never bear to see this music confined to a glass cabinet, under the heading Culture: Only To Be Handled By Elderly Black Men.
That way lies the grave, for the blues and just about everything else; Shakespeare only performed at The Globe, Bach only played by Germans in tights.
It’s formaldehyde, and I pray that Lead Belly will never be dead enough to warrant that.

So that’s my only credential - my one dog-eared ID card that I hope will get me through the velvet ropes and into your heart. I love this music, as authentically as I know
how, and I want you to love it too. And if you get a thousandth of the pleasure from it that I’ve had, we’re all ahead of the game.



STANDARD ALBUM (with original artists)

“St. James Infirmary” (Louis Armstrong / Snooks Eaglin)
“You Don’t Know My Mind” (Lead Belly)
“Buddy Bolden’s Blues” (Jelly Roll Morton)
“The Whale Has Swallowed Me” (J.B.Lenoir)
“John Henry” (Memphis Slim / Snooks Eaglin)
“They’re Red Hot” (Robert Johnson)
“Six Cold Feet” (Leroy Carr)
“Joshua Fit The Battle Of Jericho” (Sister Rosetta Tharp)
“After You’ve Gone” (Bessie Smith /Fats Waller)
“Swanee River” (Ray Charles / Dr. John)
“Police Dog Blues” (Blind Blake)
“Tipitina” (Professor Longhair)
“Whining Boy Blues” (Jelly Roll Morton)
“Baby, Please Make A Change”(Mississippi Sheiks)
“Let Them Talk” (James Booker)

BONUS TRACKS

“Guess I’m A Fool” (Memphis Slim)
“It Ain’t Necessarily So”(Louis Armstrong)
“Low Down, Worried and Blue” (Dr. John)


Läs mer om Laurie, Hugh


 
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