Episodes

Episode 19. Fred Tackett

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Born in Arkansas, Fred Tackett is best known for being a member of Little Feat. A remarkable musician – he plays guitar, mandolin and even trumpet – he’s also performed with many other great artists, including Bob Dylan during his Born Again tour, and on his albums Saved and Shot of Love.

 

 

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Fred at home. Photo by Louise Goffin.

 

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Fred (on the left) with Bob Dylan on his Born Again tour, 1980. Photo by William McKeen.

 

The list of other great artists with whom he’s performed and recorded is voluminous, and includes Tom Waits, Harry Nilsson. Ringo Starr, Rickie Lee Jones, Jimmy Webb, Jackson Browne, Glen Campbell, Judy Collins, Rita Coolidge, Nicolette Larson, Aaron Neville, Van Dyke Parks, Bonnie Raitt, Carly Simon, Boz Scaggs, Rod Stewart and The Wallflowers.

 

Born on August 30, 1945 in Arkansas, he was not a founding member of Little Feat, but gradually became folded into this band distinguished for their great and soulful musicianship. He became friends with Little Feat genius, the late great Lowell George, and contributed a song, “Fool Yourself” and acoustic guitar to Dixie Chicken, their third album. He also played guitar on Time Loves A Hero, their sixth album.

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When Lowell decided to do a solo album (Thanks I’ll Eat It Here, 1978), he invited Fred to write songs with him. Lowell recorded one of these songs, “Honest Man” and also a song Fred wrote himself, “Find A River.”  Lowell went out on tour to promote his album, with Fred in his group. Less than ten days after the start of the tour, Lowell overdosed on heroin and died in his Arlington, Virginia hotel.

 

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“We were driving down the New Jersey Turnpike,” Tackett remembered, “in this bus and we stopped at this pizza joint off the highway. Everybody in the band shared a cheese pizza but Lowell bought a large pizza with everything on it, carried it to the back of the bus, and he ate the entire pizza by himself. He died two or three days later. So, when people ask me, ‘What really killed Lowell?’ I say, ‘It was a pizza on the New Jersey Turnpike.”

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Patricia and Fred Tackett. Photo by Louise Goffin.

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Photo by Louise Goffin

 

Little Feat disbanded during this dark time of Lowell’s death, but reunited – with Fred now as a full member of the band – in 1988 -with former members Paul Barrere, Richie Hayward, Bill Payne, Kenny Gradney and Sam Clayton, and also new member Craig Fuller. In 1993 Fuller was replaced by Shaun Murphy.

 

Not only does Fred play guitar on their albums since joining, he also plays mandolin and trumpet, and also has written many of their songs. including several written with Paul Barrere, such as “Marginal Creatures” and “Night On The Town.” On Kickin’ It at The Barn, Fred sings his first lead vocal on a Little Feat album, on his song “In A Town Like This,” which also became the title song of his 2003 solo album. In 2011 he released another solo album, Silver Strings. He and Paul also toured as a duo and made album as Paul & Fred.

 

 

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These days he lives with his wife in a beautiful old house in L.A.’s Topanga Canyon, and it’s there that Louise went to conduct this interview.

 

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Louise & Fred. Photo by Patricia Tackett

Episodes

Episode 17. Joachim Cooder, Part 1


Episode 17

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Parenthood, as Joachim Cooder explains, means a lot to him, and has informed all his music. It’s the same for his father – the legendary Ry Cooder – who not only raised his son in a remarkable house of music, where living legends came constantly to make music, but specifically set up his most recent tour to provide Joachim with sufficient income to raise his two little kids. 

Joachim has not only played drums live and with his dad on many projects, including Ry’s recent and remarkable The Prodigal Son, he also helped co-produce that album. He brings his decidedly new school sensibilities to his father’s old school music. Whereas daddy Ry plays all his elegiac slide-guitar lines in real time, just like records have been made for decades, Joachim employs exotic sonic loops, which they fold into the tracks. 

So when not gainfully employed working with his famous father, Joachim’s been busy building his own tower of song with new materials. Last year he released the glorious EP Fuschia Machu Pichu (named after a local plant), with beautifully hypnotic songs such as the title track, as well as “Everybody Sleeps in the Light” and the tender, haunting “Gaviota Drive.” 

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Image result for joachim cooderFather & Son in Cuba, making The Buena Vista Social Club

Lest you think he is being noticed only because of his lineage – an easy assumption to make – listen to the dimensional beauty of these tracks, and the poignant lyrics (almost all inspired by Joachim’s own parenthood) and beautifully heartfelt vocals. It’s music far different and more modern than that his father makes. Yet it shares an essential element: it is real. Genuine. From the heart. Not contrived. 

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Joachim’s music possesses the single attribute Ry finds missing in most modern music: artistry. As he said, too many players he hears these days have developed no artistry, no style or grace, only urgency. “Can’t they hear that they’re flat?” he asked with disbelief. “If you don’t feel it,” he said, “Fine. Do something else. Go get a sandwich.”

Timeless music, as Ry has shown by example over these decades, is all about a  purity of intention, of stripping it down to essentials. It’s not about how many notes you play but by how deeply one note can make you feel. It’s a lesson Joachim, born in the summer of 1978, learned well. 

Of course, Ry was not the only legendary teacher around. Drummer-extraordinaire Jim Keltner kept a set of drums at the Cooder home, and showed Joachim just enough to get him started. Perhaps sensing that his father owned much of the map of modern guitar playing already, Joachim knew he needed to walk his own musical path. It started with drumming – as well as co-producing with his father and other artists (including their great Buena Vista Social Club celebration of Cuban music) – and branched off into creating his own sonic collages, which led to his own songs and style. 

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 Photo by Amanda Charchian

Nowadays father and son blend their approaches effortlessly and without question. When I asked Ry if he ever looped his guitar, he laughed and said, “No! Never. That is my son’s thing. I just play.”

Not only did Joachim bring  deeply soulful, creative drumming to this album,  he also created many of the sonic landscapes – “tone centers,” as Ry put it – on which these tracks were built. 

After the album was complete, father and son assembled a new touring band. None of which would have happened if not for Ry’s love for his son and their work together.

“I wouldn’t do it if [Joachim] wouldn’t do it,” said Ry. “He’s got a new baby. Four days old. And my little granddaughter’s 2 ½.  And we have to leave them behind. Gonna go out and make some money. Put some beans in the pot.”

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The collaboration evolved gradually, as Ry tried to figure out the best way to make a record about both of them. But how to connect that new school with the old one?

The revelation came when Ry realized that he could solve two problems at once. Wanting to make an album about now, this moment in our history some 18 years into the 21st century, with so much madness, hatred and sorrow streaming through America, he was drawn to the redemptive, hopeful glory found in the timeless gospel songs he loved. He felt an album of his favorite spirituals, mixed in with some fresh originals, could be right for now. Yet he knew a traditional approach to classic gospel songs would not conjure the magic he wanted.

And that’s when he tried singing the old Pilgrim Travelers’ beautiful “Straight Street” over one of Joachim’s tracks. The result was unexpected, and beautiful. And the journey of Prodigal Son had begun.

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Ry Cooder, 2018.

It’s an album of great sonic beauty, a rich, fertile fusion of Joachim’s grooves and sound collages with Ry’s exquisitely poignant guitar work on these new and old spirituals is stunning.

That spirit is very much alive in Joachim’s haunting and inspired song cycles, and the beauty of his soul that shines through in each on Fuschia Machu Pichu. Wisely, he employs his dad to play guitar on his music as well.

We were happy to talk to him about all of this and more, his own music, being raised by Ry and how much his kids have inspired his songwriting.  We spoke this past summer over the phone just days before he embarked on a national tour with his dad.

Fuschia Machu Pichu, he said, is “probably the thing I’ve been most excited about. I feel like this is the most real thing I’ve ever done, the most representative of who I am. I feel like it’s not part of any other thing. It’s very just me with my influences I’ve had since I was really young, growing up around people like Ali Farka Toure or seeing John Lee Hooker live at a really young age. There’s certain things about this record that makes me think about all those things and how I’ve come up through these things.”

This is Part One of our two-part talk, conducted by Paul Zollo, with Joachim Cooder. 

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Episodes

Episode 16. Josh McClorey of The Strypes

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Josh McClorey

 (photo by Jude Palmer)

 

The Strypes started when they were still pre-teens. They grew up in love with American rock & roll and blues in Cavan, Ireland, where they started playing music at the age of 12. Their first performance was at a school Christmas party when they were only 15. But they had tremendous energy, reverence for the real blues, knowledge, passion and drive. Soon they were performing all over town, wowing audiences with their raw intensity and deep-pocket blues. 

They were always a  four-piece band revolving around Josh McClorey on guitar. After a few changes, they found a line-up that worked, with Pete O’Hanlon on bass, Evan Walsh on drums and Ross Farrelly on lead vocals and harmonica. 

  

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 Josh McClorey (2nd from left) with The Strypes.

Like many great British bands, they were drawn to the authentic spirit of American blues and early rock & roll. They recorded a self-produced EP called Young, Gifted & Blue of four blues songs. Their record of “You Can’t Judge A Book By Its Cover” (written by Willie Dixon and recorded by Bo Diddley) became a hit on Irish radio.
They also performed a Leiber & Stoller song, “I’m A Hog For You Baby,” which was the flipside to “Poison Ivy” by The Coasters.  (Mike Stoller is our featured guest on Episodes 14 and 15. Our archival interview with Willie Dixon will be featured later this year). 

That EP lead to much attention, and gigs in and around London, where Elton John discovered them. And was seriously impressed by their musical authority. 

 

“They have a knowledge of R&B and blues at 16 years of age,” he said, “that I have only amassed in my 65 years. They’re just like a breath of fresh air.”

 

Soon several labels heard their EP and wanted to sign them. They ultimately went to Elton’s own company for management – Rocket Music – and signed a record deal in 2012 with Mercury. All the British music mags, such as MOJO and NME, did stories celebrating the band, and The Strypes were on their way.

 

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Their first single, released in 2013, was “Blue Collar Jane,” which the band wrote together, and became a popular iTunes download on the Blues and Alternative charts. Their debut album was Snapshot, which came out later that year, produced by Chris Thomas – famous for his work with The Beatles and Sex Pistols. The title was a reference to the band’s intention of presenting a “snapshot” of their live set. 

 

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Josh & Louise at Pennard House, Somerset, England. 
 
 
Their second album, Little Victories, was released in 2015 and went to the very top of the Irish charts, and close to the top of the British ones. 
 

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The Strypes have released two subsequent EPs: The Demos EP features acoustic versions of tracks. Almost True came in late 2017 with three new originals and one live cover, “Summertime Blues.”

This past November of 2018, the band announced their breakup on their Instagram page. Josh, who is influenced very much by Prince, whom he discusses in the interview, has just embarked on new solo projects.

Having been a busy member of a popular and busy band at such a young age, Josh had no time to establish any kind of normal life. His challenge now, reflected in this interview, is to strike a balance between a real home life and a life in music.

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This interview was conducted in June, 2018 by Louise Goffin at Pennard House, where they both participated in their friend/mentor Chris Difford’s song camp in Somerset, UK in a “beautiful room with high ceilings.”  You can hear Louise’s interview with Chris Difford in Episode 9. 

 

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