Boogie Man (74 page)

Read Boogie Man Online

Authors: Charles Shaar Murray

BOOK: Boogie Man
7.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘If it ain’t down, it just ain’t down,’ he concludes. And he skips into a light, swinging, mellow-down-easy ‘Boogie Chillen’ (this time retitled ‘All
Night Long’) with the audience clapping even further off the beat than before. The Phantom Harp Player returns for the closing, ultra-slow ‘Crawlin’ King Snake’. His
interventions are not always totally appropriate.

Alone
is living-room intimate and back-porch meditative, occasionally to excess; by the same token,
The Cream
flows but sluggishly, though undeniably it has its moments. Backed by
the September ’77 edition of the Coast To Coast Blues Band – John Garcia (lead guitar), Peter Karnes (harmonica), Ron Thompson (guitar),
150
Mike Milwood (bass) and Larry Martin (drums), plus Charlie Musselwhite and Ken Swank sitting in to respectively spell
151
Karnes and Martin on a tune or
two – Hooker coast-to-coasts his way through the set, flying by the seat of his chair. The band seem less an integral part of his music (as were the bands of Howlin’ Wolf or Muddy
Waters, let alone those of Duke Ellington or James Brown), as simply the backdrop against which
Hooker’s music – wholly contained by and within him, rather than
partially invested in his accompanists – exists.

To ‘a really good friend of mine who have passed on’, the then recently-deceased Elvis Presley – ‘I hope that wherever he at, he restin’ at ease’ –
Hooker dedicates a fine, measured ‘Tupelo’ (‘that was his home town’) followed, perhaps as a nod to Presley’s debut ‘That’s All Right Mama’, by the
odd-one-out in a night concentrating mainly on slow blues tunes: a peppily uptempo rockabilly take on Little Walter’s ‘It Ain’t Right’. Other fare is rather more familiar
– ‘TB Sheets’, ‘Sugar Mama’ round up the usual suspects – and, as deep as some of the performances are, it brings little to the party not already present in the
songs’ previously recorded incarnations. If we’d been at the club the night
The Cream
was cut, we’d almost certainly have thought the show was fabulous. Since we
weren’t, we’re left with the overwhelming impression of a past master marking time.

In fact, the most fascinating – and, with benefit of 20/20 hindsight, the most revealing – aspect of
The Cream
isn’t on the record at all: it’s on the cover. We
see John Lee seated, suited, hatted, in a booth at some classic American retro diner complete with dinky plateside jukebox terminal; a half-smile on his face, his left eyelid adroop, contemplating
what’s in front of him: a majorly calorific-looking vanilla ice-cream sundae topped by a cheekily erect cherry. In one hand he holds, not a cigarette, but a pipe: a token of the influence of
his fourth wife, a serene young Canadian named Millie Strom, whom he’d met whilst working in Vancouver. She had encouraged Hooker to cut back on his drinking; and weaned him off cigarettes.
Finally, the pipe went also, and Hooker was off tobacco for good.

‘I got married then to Millie,’ Hooker says fondly. ‘She got me off cigarettes, and the pipe . . . I would say she saved my life. I say I would’ve been smoking now. She
never could stand the smoke, and she used to keep on about the smoke. I was [living] in Gilroy, and
she took my pipes and give ’em to the guy next door. She was a big
help to me, I admit that. She wasn’t a drinking woman and she wasn’t a smoking lady, but she helped me get off all this stuff, so I can appreciate what she did.’

‘She’s very quiet and soft-spoken,’ says Zakiya Hooker, who remains best friends with Millie Strom to this day. ‘John was playing up in Canada and he met her. She just
appeared. She just came. She was just here! She tells you what she’s got to tell you, but in such a soft manner that some people may not take her seriously, and think they can just run over
her. She was very good for my father, a very calming influence on him. Of course, she had to contend with the crazed family, because they have the tendency to go into his house and treat it like it
was their house.’

If some others close to Hooker are to be believed, this was something of an understatement: it is alleged that Maude was in the habit of bustling into the kitchen and rearranging things on the
grounds that ‘they weren’t the way John likes them’, and Hooker seemed unwilling to remonstrate. The marriage didn’t last, but in its place emerged a warm, solid friendship
which should be a source of inspiration to all divorced couples. Even now, asked by the
Guardian
where and when he was happiest, Hooker cites the years he spent with Millie.

‘[Millie] was real nice,’ says Charlie Musselwhite. ‘She and John had a good life together while it was happenin’. She really cared about him.’

The Hookers had been living ‘down in Gilroy, which is a pretty good size, a little country town in California’, John Lee remembers, though he is spectacularly vague about exactly how
long they were there. ‘Lived there about five or six years, four or five anyway, give or take three or four,’ he offers, with magnificent disdain. ‘I sold that house and . . .
what did I do then? I sold that house and bought a house in San Carlos, next door to Redwood City.’

‘John and Millie lived out in San Carlos,’ recalls Zakiya. ‘They were together quite a while.’ However, it was in San Carlos that
the marriage broke down.

‘We parted,’ says Hooker, ‘and got a divorce on friendly terms.’ With that, there is no disagreement. ‘[John and Millie] did [part friends],’ confirms Zakiya.
‘When he goes up to Vancouver he doesn’t get out without seeing Millie. Her son [Richard, from her previous marriage] stays at the Long Beach house and watches over it. Millie never
remarried. The thing with my daddy is that once you’re in his life, you’re in his life. There’s a certain responsibility. We all have to be responsible for helping each
other.’

And another long loop in Hooker’s life was to close during these years, as presidents – Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan – came and went and Hooker made his living on
the road. The church from which Hooker had walked away in his youth re-entered his life, through the unlikely agency of his younger son’s wife. ‘It was always on my mind about
church,’ remembers the Rev. Robert Hooker, ‘but my wife was in church and I was still livin’ that wild life, man. And she told me, “It’s either Jesus or leave me
alone.”
Whoah!
’ he laughs. ‘“Either Jesus or leave me alone”! So I chose Jesus.

‘You have to realise, see . . . it’s deep. It’s very deep. Take me, for example. When I was out there, into the drugs and the liquor and all that, it was like that because I
didn’t have no power. You know why that was? Because Adam, that first man Adam who disobeyed God – see? – God told him and commanded him don’t do something and he did it.
God told him the day you do it you gon’
die
, you gon’
surely
die, don’t even
touch
it. Awright? And Adam disobeyed God, and because he disobeyed God,
that’s why you got . . . see, a whole lotta people don’t understand this. This is why we have all the sin in the world, because of Adam, he disobeyed God. And by him disobeying God, he
let the devil have power. And the devil is a wicked spirit, and he’s living in men. Living in womens, boys, girls, makin’ ’em do wrong.
This is why Jesus
said, in St John the third chapter, “You must be born again.” See, when you repent and be baptisedinthenameJesusChrist-befilledwithholyghost . . . you be born again. And then you got
power. See, you got power, man, you got power over the devil. You could be the worst dope fiend in the world, but when you receive the Holy Ghost, man, they can stand right in front of you and just
shoot all they want to. Won’t make you do it. See, I’m a witness, man. I used to . . . I just couldn’t leave that stuff alone, man. Man, I started . . .
whoo
, I started at
. . . you know what? I started at the age of fifteen years old. That was my first experience. I was into dope all the way up to the age of twenty-four years old. I mean, I couldn’t stop. I
tried! Little spells I tried and I stopped, you know, but I had to go right back to it, because I didn’t have no Holy Ghost power. See? I went to clinics: that didn’t help me.
Wasn’t until I found the Lord, man, back in 1977. That’s what helped me. It wasn’t me!’ He laughs again. ‘It’s not me doin’ it. It’s beautiful,
man.’

And where Robert went, Maude soon followed.

‘Well, she was living in California then. I got into the church in Detroit. She was fightin’ it awhile. One time I came out to California, man, and I was talkin’ to my mother
and my sister Zakiya and they went to church with me that night, and both of them got baptised, man. Zakiya, she’s into the singin’ right now, but my mother, she just kept right on.
She’s a changed lady, man.
Changed
lady. No bad language no more – all right? – she
changed
, man. She can tell you ’bout the church experience, man, how good
it make you feel . . . [singing secular] that’s her [Zakiya’s] thing, if that’s what she wanna do, then a
men
. But me in my house, I’m gonna serve the Lord. Like as
far as the dope world . . . I’m not gonna go out there and go back to shootin’ dope with him [John Junior]. Or drinkin’ my Mohawk vodka and JV scotch and my wine, I’m not
goin’ back to that. It’s a different world. I’m in a different place now.’

‘You know,’ says Maude, ‘[Robert] said that one day he was sittin’
down and he saw that him and his wife wasn’t gettin’ along too good,
and he figured that something had to be done. So that he went out that Sunday morning, him and his two kids, and he went to one church, and he didn’t like that. He said he went to several
churches before he really decided which one he wanted to go to, and when he found the right church, then the Lord put it in his mind that that was the true church, and that’s where he’s
been ever since. After he got in it, he started on everybody, you know. “Come go to church”, you know, “Mother, come go to church.” And truly I didn’t get into church
until I came here. I wasn’t religious and Johnny wasn’t. So [Maude’s parents] went to church every now and then, Sunday school, we went to church together sometimes. Diane and
Vera used to sing in choir, but it was Baptist choir, John used to have a brother, William, who was a preacher. One father taught him to go to church and the next father taught him how to play the
blues. He used to sing Jubilee, what you call a group. I guess everybody breaks away from something that they do, one way or another. John Junior was a minister also. He was out there in the world
and then he came in and he joined church too.’

Zakiya remembers Maude’s conversion in slightly less glowing terms. ‘Life is like a cycle,’ she says, ‘and it must have been a weak cycle for her. [Robert] came out one
year. He convinced her, found a church, took her to the church, and the next thing we knew she was hellfire and brimstone.’ But Zakiya was baptised also. ‘Mm-hm.’ So clearly it
didn’t take. ‘It took. Probably took better with me than it did with them, but in their eyes it certainly didn’t take. That’s a thing that never ceases to amaze me: how
religion can dictate what you should and shouldn’t do. I can’t imagine God being a vengeful God that’s gonna, when you die, burn you for ever and ever in some pit fire.’

Which is pretty much the way John Lee Hooker sometimes puts it himself. He has his own sceptical takes on Maude’s religious fervour. ‘Now she’s a church lady, sanctified and
saved. Call herself “saved” now; she ain’t saved. Well, you know, the money I give her, that’s devil
money. She don’t want my records in the
house, she shouldn’t want the money in her house. That come from bars: people knockin’ out windows, kickin’ down doors, gettin’ drunk. That’s where that money come
from.’

Elsewhere, the big screen was beckoning – well, after a fashion. Comics John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd had been working up their ‘Blues Brothers’ R&B pastiche as part of the
top-ranking
Saturday Night Live
TV show and, in cahoots with director John Landis, were in the process of parlaying a series of TV skits into a feature-length movie. They’d already
roped in Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, Cab Calloway and James Brown when John Lee Hooker came on board. ‘John [Belushi] and his partner Dan Aykroyd was really into the blues,’ says
Hooker. ‘This woman who was managing me then, Sandy Getz, she contacted them, and I knowed ’em pretty good. I met John in New York; we was playin’ there and he came down. I
didn’t know who he was, but he come up on stage and he was singin’, and I said, “Is that one of the Muppets?” but they said no, that was John Belushi. I said, “Oh
yeah?” All of the band, they was lookin’ at him, givin’ him a dirty look because we didn’t know who he were. They said, “That’s John Belushi.” Didn’t
have on no suit, just old raggedy pants and stuff like that. He didn’t look like no movie star or famous person. That’s how I met him, and I met Dan while we was doin’ the movie
together in Chicago. I been knowin’ him ever since.’

In the movie, Hooker appears as ‘Street Slim’, immaculate in tan leather jacket and dashingly scarved white safari hat, performing ‘Boom Boom’ on Maxwell Street with
various members of Muddy Waters’ band as Belushi and Aykroyd track down Matt Murphy at Aretha Franklin’s ghetto diner, the Soul Food Cafe. ‘At that time [being in the movie]
helped my career. More people had seen me. They still show that. It sells really well. They got a cassette of that, a video. It was shown all over the world, so that was good,
good
publicity
for me. I knowed all those people, too.’

Hooker remained in occasional contact with Aykroyd ‘for a good while’ after the movie was made, but he had no idea of just how much dope Belushi was hoovering up
behind the scenes. ‘I really wasn’t aware of it until it really happened. He kept it kinda private. He was really gettin’ up high, too. His success came so easy and so quick. Mine
came hard and it’s gonna go hard, ’cause I ain’t gonna let go of it.’

Scoring Hooker’s appearance in the
Blues Brothers
movie was a coup for Sandy Getz, especially since her client is heard again later in the movie: Hooker’s Vee Jay remake of
‘Boogie Chillen’ plays in the background as the Blues Brothers Band rolls up for its ill-fated gig at Bob’s Country Bunker. However, she missed one important bet: the
movie’s soundtrack album ended up selling millions, but while most of the movie’s major musical set-pieces were featured, both of Hooker’s tunes were omitted.
152

Other books

Some Like it Scottish by Patience Griffin
Eli the Good by Silas House
Kim Philby by Tim Milne
The Flame in the Maze by Caitlin Sweet
Upstate by Kalisha Buckhanon
Nightingale by Susan May Warren
Baehrly Alive by Elizabeth A. Reeves
Daughter of Lir by Judith Tarr