logo
Luther Keith died this week. He was my best friend.

Luther Keith died this week. He was my best friend.

Yahoo09-03-2025
If Luther Keith decided he was going to do something, then that something was going to get done. Insert period here. And if you were in the way once Luther got going? Not advisable.
Luther Keith and I shared a deep friendship that goes back almost 40 years.
On Tuesday night, we performed together on stage. He died hours later, in his sleep, at the age of 74.
I first met Luther at a job fair. He was there with Ruth Seymour, former director of the Journalism Institute for Minorities at Wayne State University, reaching out to young Black journalists. By then, Luther, eight years older than me, was already a veteran journalist. I was looking to land my first job as a reporter at The Ann Arbor News, where I worked from 1986 until 1989.
As a brand new cub reporter born and raised in Denver, Colorado, I was glad for the opportunity to share some conversation with an old hand who knew the ropes about what to expect, what to look out for, and what I might need to do if I ever decided to raise my game and step up to a major daily, like The Detroit News, where he had already established himself as One Who Breaks Down Doors.
But we never quite made it to that deep conversation about journalism. Because somewhere along the way, I mentioned to Luther that I played guitar, and that for four years after graduating college I had moved away from Colorado to follow my dream of becoming a professional guitar player, cutting my teeth in some rather rough clubs and dives on Chicago's South Side.
I told him I had been schooled by George Freeman, one of Chicago's most well-known jazz names and brother to another Chicago jazz legend, saxophonist Von Freeman. Luther's eyes lit up like they had just been plugged in, and from that point forward all we talked about was music, especially the blues.
It was clear how sincere and excited he was to share that passion for the guitar and the blues with someone who loved it as much as he did.
Luther Keith and I didn't just share a name, we shared a love for journalism, a love for blues guitar and the blues overall.
And a love for Detroit.
More: Trailblazing Detroit journalist, musician Luther Keith dies at 74: 'An incredible loss'
We expressed our love for the city in the same way; through our music and through our writing. After spending three years at the Ann Arbor News, followed by another four years in South Florida at the Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel, I returned to Michigan in January of 1993 to join the Detroit Free Press as a member of the editorial board and as an editorial columnist.
Within a year after my arrival, I had started my own blues band, Blue Spirit Tribe, and was navigating my way as a newcomer through Detroit's intimidating music scene.
It wasn't long before Luther and I reconnected, again, more through music than through our writing.
Most frequently we would see each other at the now-defunct Soup Kitchen, located in Detroit's Rivertown area and for years probably the city's most revered blues establishment. In addition to playing there occasionally with my own band, I was a member of another group that hosted a regular Tuesday night jam session at the Soup. We were there for nearly two years, and Luther was a regular attendee and an aspiring blues guitarist.
Luther would be the first to admit that those early days were … well … not promising. I'll be honest; some of us would even step outside when it came time for Luther to play, if we weren't stuck on stage backing him up.
The best advice any of us could give at the time was to hold on tightly to that day job. Sometimes we were harder than we had to be, and I could tell by the expression on his face that perhaps we had cut a little deep. But if you play a stage in Detroit, then you know this is not unusual. You either put on the thick skin. or you get off the stage.
But if Luther decided he was going to do something, well, that something was going to get done.
Because Luther never understood the meaning of "can't."
His career in journalism would have been snuffed out before it began if he had listened to the naysayers who tried to convince him he didn't belong. And ARISE! Detroit, the nonprofit he left the News in 2005 to start, would have remained a laughable idea scribbled on the back of a napkin (true story) instead of morphing into one of the city's most influential neighborhood organizations.
Anyway, some years later after Tribe had folded and I was bouncing around between a few other bands around town, I joined Luther 'Badman' Keith, the stage name he had adopted, for a five-year journey that took us all the way to the International Blues Competition in Memphis, Tennessee, representing Detroit after winning the local competition.
Many of my fondest musical performance memories come from those years with Luther and the band: the late James Payton (saxophone), Mark Croft (trumpet), Jim David (keyboard), Billy Furman (multiple horns and harmonica), Darryl Lee (bass) and the late Milton Austin (drums).
Two weeks ago on Saturday, Luther called me during the afternoon and asked what was I doing that evening. I wasn't doing anything special, I said. Why?
'Just meet me at Baker's at 6 tonight. That's all I'm gonna say. No, let's make it 6:30.'
'What's going on?'
'Just meet me there.'
I headed out for Detroit's Baker's Keyboard Lounge that night. And that's when Luther, who had nominated me three times in a row, told me he had received notice earlier that day that I was being inducted into the Michigan Journalism Hall of Fame's Class of 2025.
He had been on his way to another event, but once he got the news, changed his plans on a dime so he could tell me personally. While sipping on his second Jack and Coke, Luther told me, as we sat at the bar, that he wanted to host a celebration to honor my induction, again at Baker's. It would be a jam session blowout, he said, just like the old days.
'And bring your guitar.'
I couldn't have been more thrilled, grateful and excited all at the same time. And just as we had both hoped, the night, just last Tuesday, was a huge success. A full house, and Luther was at his best the entire time. He was as happy and joyous as I had ever seen him, cracking jokes between songs to an appreciative audience, sounding light years beyond the Soup Kitchen days when he had still been getting his sound together.
Hours later, after the night had ended, Luther texted me at 12:42 a.m. on Wednesday, March 5. The text read, 'Keith, congrats on a great nite, folks had a ball.'
When I woke up at 5:26 a.m., I texted him back, 'I literally could not have asked for a better celebration. So much fun and just the perfect night.'
What I didn't know was that by then he had already slipped away. But what I do know is that, for me, Luther will never be gone. People may pass away, but true friendships never do.
And Luther Keith was one of the best friends I ever had.
Free Press contributing columnist Keith A. Owens is a local writer and co-founder of Detroit Stories Quarterly and the We Are Speaking Substack newsletter and podcast. Submit a letter to the editor at freep.com/letters and we may publish it online and in print.
This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Luther Keith and I shared love for blues guitar and Detroit | Opinion
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell indicted
New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell indicted

Axios

time21 minutes ago

  • Axios

New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell indicted

A federal grand jury indicted New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell on Friday, according to Fox 8, The Times-Picayune and multiple outlets. The charges have not been released yet. Why it matters: She's the city's first mayor to be indicted while in office. The big picture: Cantrell's former bodyguard, Jeffrey Vappie, was also indicted, according to the reports. The U.S. Attorney's Office has a press conference at 2:45pm to release more information. Cantrell's attorney told Axios around 1:30pm that he had not received a copy of the indictment yet. He did not make any further comments. The mayor's office has not responded to the allegations yet. Zoom in: Vappie was indicted last year and was accused of falsifying timesheets, lying to the FBI and taking other actions to conceal his romantic relationship with Cantrell. He and Cantrell hired separate criminal defense attorneys last year amid the federal investigations. What they're saying: Cantrell and Vappie have both previously denied allegations they are romantically involved. The U.S. Attorney's Office last year included a photo of a handwritten note investigators say Vappie and Cantrell shared, which includes a heart and the use of the term "baby" as a term of endearment. Previously, Cantrell said that as the city's first female mayor and as a Black woman, she faces more intense scrutiny and has been held to different standards than her predecessors. Between the lines: Vappie's wife filed for divorce in January 2023 and accused him of having an affair with Cantrell in the documents, Fox 8 reported at the time. Cantrell's husband, Jason, died in August 2023 from a heart attack. They were a month shy of 24 years of marriage. State of play: Cantrell has been dogged by scandals since she was elected in 2018. The Democrat says many of the controversies are Republican-led attacks. Along with the alleged affair, other political tussles include a state ethics investigation into her international travel, the City Council evicting her from a city-owned apartment, and a stalking lawsuit she filed against a woman who took pictures of her and Vappie. (A judge dismissed the stalking case.) She also was the target of a failed recall effort last year.

Shooter who killed 10 Black people in Buffalo NY says grand jury was too white
Shooter who killed 10 Black people in Buffalo NY says grand jury was too white

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Shooter who killed 10 Black people in Buffalo NY says grand jury was too white

A white supremacist who shot and killed 10 Black people at a supermarket in Buffalo, New York, asked a judge to dismiss his federal case because not enough Black and Hispanic people were on the grand jury that indicted him, a motion filed by his attorneys on Aug. 14 said. Lawyers for Payton Gendron, the gunman who is serving 11 life sentences on state charges in connection with the 2022 massacre, said Black and Hispanic people are "systematically" underrepresented in the Southern District of New York's jury pools, violating the constitutional rights of defendants, the motion said. In response, the U.S. Attorney's Office said Gendron's lawyers failed to prove there is a systematic underrepresentation in the jury pool and urged the judge to reject the motion. The judge has not filed a decision as of Friday, Aug. 15. The back-and-forth comes as Gendron is expected to go on trial next year for federal hate crime charges that carry the possibility of the death penalty, which federal prosecutors vowed to pursue. New York state, where Gendron pleaded guilty to 15 state charges, including multiple counts of murder, abolished capital punishment in 2004. On May 14, 2022, Gendron traveled to Buffalo and opened fire in a busy supermarket, killing 10 people and wounding three others. The victims ranged in age from 32 to 86 and included a church deacon, the grocery store's security guard, a man shopping for a birthday cake and a grandmother of nine. Gendron, who was 18 when he carried out the attack, wrote in documents posted online that he picked the grocery store because it was in a predominantly Black neighborhood. What was the makeup of the grand jury? In their filing, Gendron's attorneys say the grand jury that indicted their client was drawn from a pool that was missing "one third of the Black persons expected and one third of the Hispanic/Latino persons expected." The filing did not include the exact makeup of the grand jury, but the judge said at a hearing this week that the addition of two more Black people on the 60-person grand jury would have balanced the panel, according to the Associated Press. Gendron's attorneys also said that the district largely delegates the process of jury sourcing to an outside vendor that failed to properly document its procedures. The U.S. attorney's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment about its jury pool. Diversity in jury pools have been longstanding issues plaguing the criminal justice system. Advocates have called for changes to the jury pool selection processes on local, state and federal levels, such reducing a reliance on voter rolls, which experts say can exclude some racial groups. Gendron previously asked that his trial be moved, citing jury concerns This week's motion was not the first time Gendron's attorneys raised concerns over the demographic makeup of those weighing his federal case. In April, his attorneys filed a motion requesting that his trial be moved from Buffalo to New York City so it could be decided by an impartial, racially diverse jury. His attorneys also requested that the judge take the death penalty off the table, taking issue with the jury selection process. U.S. District Court Judge Lawrence Vilardo rejected the motion to remove the death penalty, but has not decided on whether to move the trial to New York City. Gendron's federal trial is currently scheduled for June 2026. Cotnributing: N'dea Yancey-Bragg

New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell indicted by federal grand jury following lengthy corruption investigation.
New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell indicted by federal grand jury following lengthy corruption investigation.

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell indicted by federal grand jury following lengthy corruption investigation.

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A federal grand jury indicted New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell on Friday after a long corruption investigation. Cantrell's lawyer, Eddie Castaing, confirmed to The Associated Press that an indictment was returned, and her name was read aloud by a federal magistrate judge as a defendant. The charges weren't immediately known. New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell has been indicted by a federal grand jury following a lengthy corruption investigation. Max Becherer/The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate via AP Advertisement The indictment is the culmination of a long-running federal investigation into Cantrell, the first female mayor in the City's 300-year history. Cantrell, who is term-limited, will leave office in January. The Democrat has clashed with City Council members during a turbulent second term and survived a recall effort in 2022. She hasn't sent out a message on her official feed on X, formerly known as Twitter, since July 15, when she touted that the city was experiencing historical declines in crime. Advertisement As Cantrell heads into her final months in office, she's alienated former confidants and supporters, and her civic profile has receded. Her early achievements were eclipsed by self-inflicted wounds and bitter feuds with a hostile city council, political observers say. The mayor's role has weakened following voter-approved changes to the city's charter meant to curb her authority. Cantrell and her remaining allies allege that she's been unfairly targeted as Black woman and held to a different standard than male officials, her executive powers sabotaged. Earlier this year, Cantrell said she's faced 'very disrespectful, insulting, in some cases kind of unimaginable' treatment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store