Earl the Pearl and the Peoples of the Blues


(Memphis, Tennessee) This week brings a fun gig with Earl the Pearl and the Peoples of the Blues down at Murphy’s Oyster Bar in Midtown(photo of Earl Banks above, from facebook by Michael Alago). We played on a Saturday afternoon, had a splendid time and, it being the week commemorating the death of Elvis(what is known locally as Dead Elvis Week), we were visited by a very thin Elvis who was invited to the stage but did not utter. I think he was just there for beers.
Use your imagination.
Friday night I ventured down through the delta with my brother and played at Ground Zero, Clarksdale, Mississippi, to play with the Reba Russell Band. We got lots of kind feedback from friends around the world who tuned in on their popular live stream.
We drove by the famous Blue & White Restaurant in Tunica, Mississippi, a diner which has been in business there since 1937(you can check them out at Road Food.com). Famous for chicken and dumplings and fried dill pickles(which were invented at the nearby “Hollywood”).
The Hollywood and it’s pianist, Miriam Wilkins, were immortalized in the hit song, “Walking in Memphis” by Mark Cohn. Here’s a picture inside The Hollywood where my buddy Steve Reid plays every Friday and Saturday night. The original 1856 commissary building, built of cypress, was destroyed by a fire in 1983, but they have moved the business to yet another cool, old commissary building near Robinsonville, Mississippi. It is a highly recommended stop for food, libations and music.
Here is a Ground Zero shot taken by my friend, Jay Moore, of Razor Blade sitting in with the band. He is, well, sharp as usual and in fine voice. After a long, enjoyable night we journey north up Highway 61 to Memphis.
Murphy’s Public House, Madison Avenue, Memphis
photo by the author at the Hyatt Hotel, Memphis
Murphy’s is a small, intimate place which has been known throughout the years for featuring all types of music.
The next day we arose and headed for midtown and a gig with Earl the Pearl’s fine band. I was greeted by my old friends with whom I have played many nights both in Memphis and on the road in various mid-south venues.
Photo by my friend, Lisa McGaughran
Often I played in Earl’s band with some of the finest old school blues and R & B players in town, including members of the famous Hi Rhythm Section, including drummer Howard Grimes and bassist Leroy “Flick” Hodges. These guys played on most of the old Al Green hits that came out of Memphis as well as tons of stuff that Willie Mitchell recorded.
B.B. King, my friend Dr. Herman Green, sax, Melvin Lee Green, bass
photo from Free World jams
It’s really difficult to express with words how great the musicianship of Melvin Lee really comes across on stage. Although he has played big venues all over the world, he is as kind and down to earth as anyone you would ever meet. He has been my friend for many years and I have been honored to play on stage with him many nights. When I was touring Belgium with Reba Russell a couple of years ago, several people asked me about Dr. Melvin Lee when they learned I was from Memphis. He’s just that good.
His bass playing is classic blues, low, deep, perfectly executed and inventive without ever being obstreperous, distracting or out of place. It is in a word, just perfect. He leads the band steadily with loping, beautiful bass lines that you have come to know from so many classic records from the past century. Although it is not really a perfect comparison, he reminds me of a Memphis version of Jack Meyers. It all comes from his heart and he performs seemingly effortlessly.
Melvin Lee, you are the hero of many a Memphis musician. The folks that have the pleasure of hearing you play at Wild Bill’s likely don’t know what a famous bassist you are, but they always know how great you sound.
In November we reported on Earl Banks winning of a W.C. Handy Heritage Music Award in the Authentic Beale Street Musician category. Here’s a link to that American Blues News article:
http://www.ameriblues.com/2009/12/memphis-dr.html
Earl the Pearl is a classic performer of Memphis Blues, the slick, slightly more sophisticated sound of a music that sprang out of a cotton field but was refined and dressed up in the big city during it’s migration north to Chicago and then onto the world stage. This is the blues of B.B. King, Bobby “Blue” Bland, Little Milton and so many other great southern post-WWII bluesmen. This music benefited from the influences of jazz and big band that were heard in Memphis during the 1940′s. The more lush arrangements and slightly more complex chord changes are a hallmark, even when the music is performed by a 5 piece band.
Earl moves easily from Albert King numbers to Willie Mitchell instrumentals and touches on the Birmingham Boys’ “Crosscut Saw” which was written here in Memphis. Earl is a veteran of all the old blues clubs and his seasoned expertise shines through during his performances. Earl has been a mainstay in Memphis and continues to perform throughout the region, occasionally gigging at Clarksdale’s Ground Zero for appreciative crowds.
Earl the Pearl and Melvin Lee
before the gig
© Robert “Nighthawk” Tooms, 2010
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