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Boston Globe
15-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Boston Globe
Joe Louis Walker, free-ranging blues explorer, is dead at 75
Along the way he traded riffs with blues powerhouses such as B.B. King, Buddy Guy, and Otis Rush. Advertisement Keyboard innovator Hancock deemed him 'a singular force' with a 'remarkable gift for instantly electrifying a room.' Jagger called him 'a magnificent guitar player and singer.' Jazz pianist and composer Chick Corea playfully anointed him 'the Chick Corea of blues.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Critics, too, felt Mr. Walker's power. 'His voice is weather-beaten but ready for more; his guitar solos are fast, wiry and incisive,' Jon Pareles wrote in a 1989 review in The New York Times, 'often starting out with impetuous squiggles before moaning with bluesy despair.' Mr. Walker came of age musically during the flowering of psychedelic rock in San Francisco in the late 1960s, and he was also fluent in jazz, gospel, soul, funk, and pop. On his album 'Great Guitars,' released in 1997, he collaborated with the likes of Bonnie Raitt, Ike Turner, and Taj Mahal. Advertisement Mr. Walker considered himself more of a blues explorer than a purist. 'When I picked up a guitar, I did not say I was gonna be a blues artist, or a rock artist,' he said in a 2021 interview with NPR. 'The idiom,' he added, 'finds us.' In an interview with Living Blues magazine, Mr. Walker recalled that jazz saxophonist Branford Marsalis, with whom he recorded several times, once told him: 'You know, Joe, if you're ahead of the curve, people ain't gonna like you, but if you join the pack, you're gonna be like everybody else. So just stay ahead of the curve and maybe they'll catch up to you.' Louis Joseph Walker Jr. was born in San Francisco on Dec. 25, 1949. His father was a longshoreman and construction worker; his mother, Mildred (Siles) Walker, was a nurse. When he was a child, an older sister started calling him Joe Louis after the Black boxing champion, and the name stuck. His parents sent him to a predominantly white Roman Catholic elementary school, believing that it would give him the best education. While the experience was at times traumatic, he said, it taught him to deal with the racism he would encounter as an adult. He took up the guitar at age 8 and at 16 became a house guitarist at the Matrix, where Jefferson Airplane was the house band. 'At the Matrix, I was a young cat still learning his craft, but guys like Magic Sam and Albert King took a liking to me,' Mr. Walker said in a 2021 interview with the Chicago Tribune. 'They could see I was sincere and I would learn from them.' Advertisement During those years, San Francisco was overflowing with rock luminaries. Sly Stone was a neighbor, and Mike Bloomfield, the guitarist who backed Bob Dylan in his much-dissected electric performance at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, was his roommate for several years. 'He was a few years older, but he was huge part of my development,' Mr. Walker told the Tribune. 'Everyone would come to pay homage to Michael. Bob Dylan would come to the house.' The city was overflowing with drugs, too, and Mr. Walker and Bloomfield were hardly immune to their lure. By the mid-1970s, Mr. Walker had reached his limit. 'A lot of my friends were dropping like flies,' he told the Tribune, 'and I made a point to change, or I would have been an obituary like everyone else.' (Bloomfield died of a heroin overdose in 1981). He kicked drugs and enrolled at San Francisco State University, where he earned a bachelor's degree in music and English. He also abandoned the blues for a decade, joining an Oakland gospel group, the Spiritual Corinthians. After performing with that group at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, Mr. Walker rekindled his love of the blues, formed a band called the Bosstalkers and signed to HighTone, an Oakland label. His debut effort, 'Cold Is the Night,' was produced by Bruce Bromberg and Dennis Walker, who had recently helped propel another blues guitarist, Robert Cray, to stardom. In 1988, Times critic Peter Watrous described Walker as 'a fluttering blues guitarist' whose 'lines seem blown by the wind' and 'a singer with a Cadillac of a voice.' Advertisement Mr. Walker continued to show off his free-ranging musical sensibility on the 2020 album 'Blues Comin' On,' joined, among others, by Jefferson Airplane guitarist Jorma Kaukonen and singers Dion DiMucci and Mitch Ryder, of 'Devil With the Blue Dress' fame. In addition to his wife, he leaves a sister, Ernestine; a brother, Roy; and two grandsons. On the release of his soul-inflected album 'The Weight of the World' in 2023, Mr. Walker told Living Blues that he wished he had a dime for every interviewer who had ever asked him to define the blues. The album included a musical answer to that question: 'Hello, It's the Blues,' a song on which he said the blues was 'speaking in the first person.' 'It's in your heart, your soul, and your mind, you just don't know it,' he said. 'Because everybody's got the blues, from the president on down to the dogcatcher, you know?' This article originally appeared in


Boston Globe
27-02-2025
- Entertainment
- Boston Globe
Recordville returns to Northampton with 70,000 albums for sale
Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Cohen also DJs and sells records under the name Studebaker Hawk. Lara Woolfson Advertisement Last March's edition of the fair was 'by far our biggest one ever,' Cohen says. And the Recordville world is poised to keep growing, as his 16th Northampton fair comes to 'Even by 9 a.m. — when we open for early admission — there's probably at least 150, if not over 200 people, who are ready to come in,' Cohen says. For everyone else, a bounty of sounds await in the afternoon, ranging from the most mainstream records — say, the latest release from Taylor Swift — to obscure finds tucked among dollar bins. From funk to punk, you'll be hard-pressed to name a genre that's not represented among the scores of vendors, although some businesses boast notable niches. Golden Music of New Hampshire is a 45s dealer, for instance, while Cambridge shop 'Searching online is just such a different journey than looking in person, digging in person, and getting recommendations,' Cohen says. 'You really don't know what you're going to find.' Advertisement As guests browse wares from dealers who made the trek from Connecticut, New York, and New Hampshire, as well as selections from Massachusetts shops like Belmont's Want List Records and Purchase Street Records in New Bedford, DJs will soundtrack the afternoon with highlights from their own music collections. (Cohen, who DJs under the name Cohen also intended to expand the fair Eastward this March, and booked a Somerville rendition of the fair at the As it turns out, the expansion will have to wait a few more months. Following a fire on the hotel's ninth floor in February, the Holiday Inn has canceled all March events, although Cohen has plans to rebook the record fair there in late 2025. 'I was vocal about 'why doesn't someone restart [the Holiday Inn fairs]?' he says. 'I certainly have the experience and the network, and I'm happy to make it happen and turn it into a really great fair.' GIG GUIDE Folks eager to celebrate Mardi Gras can head to and guest vocalist will ring in the festivities. Scullers Jazz Club will also host Mardi Gras events on Saturday, tapping Boston's Advertisement Washington D.C. duo Two shows involving Berklee College of Music will reimagine the catalog of rock icons this week, starting with the Berklee Ensemble Orchestra's renditions of Led Zeppelin classics at the Advertisement The Burren welcomes the next generation of budding Massachusetts artists on "Vroom Vroom, etc.", the new EP from Boston band Copilot, contains stomping roots and pop-rock radiance. Yazi Ferrufino NOW SPINNING Copilot, "Trilogy 3" captures the live magic of jazz greats Chick Corea, Christian McBride, and Brian Blade. Jordin Jaz Pinkus/Chick Corea Productions Chick Corea, Cornelia Murr's first LP in six years, 'Run to the Center,' contains 10 tracks of lithe pop and balletic synths. Laura-Lynn Petrick Cornelia Murr, Advertisement BONUS TRACK Game on, chiptune fans. Victoria Wasylak can be reached at vmwasylak@ Follow her on Bluesky @