Jazz Festival Review: Billy Boy ArnoldReview by Tyler Hersey
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Billy Boy Arnold
The Frontroom
November 7, 8pm
Why are the blues so universal in appeal? How did a genre of music derived from the hardships faced by
post-sharecropping African-Americans in the first half of the 20th century become one of the most enduring art forms in
the world? Taken literally, the blues is a simple musical template based on predictable chord progressions and lyric
lines repeated ad infinitum. So how, in this age of programmed drum beats and digital synthesizers, can a 70 year old
black man from Chicago touch a roomful of white New Zealanders with nothing but a cocked half smile and a fistful of
whisky tinged verses about his sexual bravado?
The answer to this question was embodied by seminal Chicago singer and harmonica player Billy Boy Arnold on Tuesday
night before a packed house at the Frontroom. Entering from stage right in a wide-legged orange suit with sixties-era
lapels, Arnold’s cool demeanor and imposing frame showed the enthusiastic audience that the blues is a feeling, an
attitude, and most importantly, a way of life.
Arnold began his career on the street corners of South Chicago, playing harmonica and singing with Ellis McDaniels, a
boogie woogie blues guitarist who later took a name suggested by Arnold to became the legendary Bo Diddley. The pair
wrote a number of seminal blues songs together, but when the time came to record, record label impresario Leonard Chess
declared Diddley the star of the show. While Diddley soon scored a string of national hits at Chess Records, Arnold
walked across the street to rival VeeJay Records to record under his own name. But whereas Diddley traded mostly on his
upbeat “shave and a haircut” strumming rhythm (also known as hambone), Arnold’s blues took on a straight-forward,
simmering machismo.
By the mid 1960's, Arnold’s songs had been covered by British invasion acts like The Animals and Eric Clapton-era
Yardbirds, who had taken the black legacy of the blues and marketed it to the burgeoning white middle class on both
sides of the Atlantic. But while many of these white performers went on to make a fortune off the backs of their black
idols, demand for the original bluesmen waned in the late 60s and Arnold spent the better part of the next two decades
as a bus driver and parole officer in Chicago.
In the midst of a career revival, Arnold’s stage presence at the Frontroom was cooler than the rainy night outside. He
came off as less a performer than a man who simply displayed his life on stage. With a black and white Fender
Stratocaster strapped around his shoulder and a selection of harmonicas rustling in his suit pockets, Arnold led his
Wellington-based backing band through a wide selection of material ranging from his very first single “Hello Stranger” -
recorded when he was just 18 - to a number of original and traditional songs taken from his 1990's comeback albums.
Each tune started with Arnold picking out a classic riff on the low strings of his guitar, joined soon thereafter by the
band made up of local blues guitar legend Darren Watson, rock-steady drummer Ross Burge, unfailing bass player Nick
Bollinger and the often explosive piano work of Simen Taylor. The musicianship was excellent, though an obvious lack of
preparation time led to a couple of false starts. But once the train got rolling, Arnold and the band became a tight
unit of blues power, often steaming through a number of blues classics without stopping. “Once I got ya in the groove,
I’m gonna keep ya there,” Arnold proclaimed after a fantastic medley which romped through “Stormy Monday” by T-Bone
Walker and a wonderful take on “She Left Me A Mule to Ride” by Sonny Boy Williamson, whose harmonica playing was a major
influence on Arnold in the late 1940's.
From fast shuffle to swing ballad, Arnold’s funky harmonica fills kept every head bobbing and sent fans into the aisles
to dance. Early in the show, there was a disparity between the frenetic guitar work by Watson and Arnold’s calm demeanor
and dry delivery. But after a particularly tasteful and melodic guitar solo on “Man of Considerable Taste”, Watson and
Arnold were on the same page, trading licks and fills like old band mates. The backing band wore huge grins for the
entire performance, and were clearly thrilled to be receiving a first hand education in the feeling, attitude and way of
life that makes the blues.
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Wellington International Jazz festival homepage: www.jazzfestival.co.nz