Soul fixer
After 20 years, it's finally
Luther Allison's time
by Bill Kisliuk
Luther Allison is no magician, and the past 20 years or so have not been a
disappearing act. But it sure might seem that way to American blues fans, who
barely registered the dynamic Chicago blues guitarist and vocalist after he set
up shop in Europe in 1979 and faded from stateside view.
These days, Allison has rematerialized on our radar like a meteor, with a
headlong momentum that matches his furious musical strengths. Oodles of new and
old Allison recordings are in the racks, and North American tours and festival
stops have rekindled his reputation as an incendiary live performer.
His resurgence has also been marked by some timely fanfare, including a 1996
Blues Entertainer of the Year Award and four other W.C. Handy Awards that seem
to be belated acknowledgments of his lifetime achievements. The recently dubbed
"New King of the Blues" is actually a 57-year-old juke-joint veteran whose
fundamentals -- primal intensity, rugged vocals, and keening guitar work direct
from Chicago's legendary West Side -- have been more or less present since the
late 1960s.
"Everyone knows I won five W.C. Handy Awards last year," says Allison,
speaking on the telephone from his home in Paris. "But I'm not playing anything
different." Different or not, he's been on a hot streak in his home country for
about three years. In 1994 Chicago's Alligator Records issued Soul Fixin'
Man -- his first American disc in nearly two decades. Originally rejected
by another American label, Soul Fixin' Man (a play on Allison's youthful
avocation as a shoe repairman) is a smoldering blues-and-soul set that captures
him in an uncluttered, funky setting. Then came 1996's Blue Streak,
which rocked a little harder and grabbed a bunch of blues awards. And now
Alligator has shot another new Allison work to the bins, Reckless. Like
Blue Streak, Reckless is a chugging, churning blues-rock assault.
With the exception of a tasty acoustic duet ("Playin' a Losing Game") with his
son Bernard, he rarely lets up on the throttle, squeezing piercing solos from
an array of Gibson guitars and wailing into the microphone with his roughhouse
mix of blues, soul, and rock and roll.
Had the flurry of new recordings not shaken off the years of obsolescence,
Allison's live performances surely would have brought hardcore blues fans back
up to date. He regularly grinds out high-volume, three-hour-plus sets at clubs
and festivals, pushing crowds to exhilaration and exhaustion with the able
backing of the Minneapolis-based James Solberg Band.
"I go for it," he says. "I'm what you call an Evel Knievel. I take chances."
Born in Arkansas in 1939, Allison performed with his family's gospel group, the
Southern Travellers, then moved with his family to Chicago in 1951. Musical
friends and relatives had him brushing with the likes of Muddy Waters -- the
man most responsible for creating the bedrock Chicago sound -- when Luther was
still in his teens. By his early 20s he was gigging with Magic Sam Maghett and
Freddie King, who -- along with Otis Rush, Buddy Guy, and Albert King -- were
steering blues guitar on its crash course with rock and roll. When Freddie King
started to hit it big with instrumentals like his oft-covered "Hideaway," he
left a small West Side joint called Walton's Corner and his group in Allison's
hands. Luther was still working the vibrant Chicago club scene in 1969, when
promoter John Fishel invited him to perform at the Ann Arbor Blues Festival on
the University of Michigan campus. Legend and liner notes have it that he
turned the festival upside down. Allison himself says, "That was a very
important moment for me. We played on like a Monday night. First set, there was
nobody. Nobody knew who we were. Second set was jam-packed. At the end of the
night the promoter came up and asked, `Where can we find people who play like
you all do?' I said, `Down in Chicago.' "
Fishel also fronted the money for Allison's first LP, Love Me Mama. The
album, re-released on CD last year with a few extra tracks, captures Luther's
raw talents in a pure state, as he howls madly on blues standards like B.B.
King's title tune and Willie Dixon's "Little Red Rooster" while picking his way
imperfectly to tough, passionate instrumental peaks.
"When I make a mistake, I make a mistake," he says, almost proudly. "I don't
think music should be played perfect. The fact is, you just play the
instrument. You get as much out of the instrument as possible."
A few years after Love Me Mama, Allison recorded for a subsidiary of
Motown Records, though his unfiltered West Side blues sounded like little else
recorded for Berry Gordy's R&B hit factory. These searing performances have
also been repackaged on CD, as The Motown Years 1972-'76,
offering a mix of Chicago standards and originals; there's just a trace of the
soul conventions of the day. You can almost hear the signature B.B. King note,
a bent high note that Allison imitated to good effect as a youngster, turn into
his own nastier, scratchier signature.
In the mid 1970s, Luther went to Europe to back John Lee Hooker at the
Montreaux Jazz Festival and found easier acceptance and a better life than he
had at home. Around 1983 he settled in Paris, a good base for his busy European
performing schedule. He now plays regularly at a Montparnasse club called the
Petit Journal, works on his tennis game, and helps his son Bernard develop his
own guitar chops.
"If I was in the states, I'd be hanging out, drinking and smoking and losing
all my rest," he says. "But I think I would like to go back home and stay in a
beautiful neighborhood where everybody is all friendly: no racism, good
fishing, and a place to play tennis. And a nightclub big enough to have all
kinds of music."
Allison has recorded extensively while overseas, though many of the recordings
from his European years are rambling and unfocused. His awesome voice and
piercing guitar are usually intact; what's sometimes missing is inspiration.
When I ask about this lackluster period, he racks it up to changes in location,
record labels, musical fads and fortunes. But comments here and there about
drinking (check out "Cherry Red Wine" on Blue Streak) hint at one
possible symptom of what he says was a gnawing frustration with his career.
"If the trees don't give the fruit, you're going to have to wait until the
next season," he says. "It wasn't Luther Allison's time. I remember sitting
with Buddy Guy, on a barstool at his club [in Chicago]. We were saying, `I done
what I do. I'm not going to change.' "
Clearly he would rather talk about how he's now spinning 20 years of straw
into gold. Collaborating with longtime accompanying guitarist James Solberg,
Allison is writing tons of new material, blistering crowds with his intense
performances, and seeing the sun shine down on the same musical path he has
walked for many a year.
"I've waited this long," he says. "If it [recognition] comes tomorrow, fine.
And if it's another 40 years, believe me, I think I'm going to have my say."