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If
you are interested in booking me, please email the details of your event
or party tojimmy@jimmy-jimmy.com
/ with return email address or telephone number and I will get back
to you.
In Western Australia I can also be reached at 08-97552660.
Writing
a biography one is liable to learn first hand the meaning of the word
hokum. You know, that's the yarn the medicine man at the circus spins
when he's trying to sell you a bottle of "doctor good". The
Gypsies, Tramps and Theives are mostly on television these days; they're
either brushed an' buffed or showin' some skin an' they're pretending
that it's not a circus but I think we all know that it is. The ethics
of Madison Avenue have created an ethos whereby we are casual about
the fact that we are being lied to with constipating regularity...we
accept this in our daily lives until it seems like common sense to us
that selling ourselves be one of the bedrock concepts upon which we
found our social order. It's a dangerous situation.
So I should start by telling you that I had my first garage band in
grammar school; that I met Blind Blake in a roadhouse in Tampa, Florida
years after everyone thought he was dead, and he told me to "keep
pickin' ", ...maybe even that I used to shoot hoops with Jaco Pastorius
down in Fort Lauderdale in the '60s....but that would be pure hokum.
I never met Muddy Waters, just missed Elvis, or shared a cigar with
Johnny Cash..."an' if that ain't country."
I know that a bio is supposed to be a string of superlatives that reads
like the back of an airport novel...How I'm blazing a new trail through
the music scene, opening doors that have never been opened, stopping
hearts dead in their tracks, an amazing multi-instrumentalist, who of
course never plays it the same way twice, forging a new synthesis......but
I've got no talent for that kind of hyperbole. I figure if you're reading
this, chances are you've seen my show. You don't need that. But maybe
you're curious about how I came to be doin' what I do. So here it is,
99% hokum-free, a desultory look at the man behind the one man band:
I'm gonna skip all that I was born stuff, and start somewhere in the
sixtys 'cause that's pretty much when it really started anyway. Oh,
and have fun lookin' for that one percent.
Volume One
I grew up in Florida. The first song I ever sang
and played for anyone outside of my close friends and family, walking
along Cocoa Beach just before sunset, was, Where Do the Children Play.
When I was nineteen I wrote a handful of songs, generally inspired by
the mysteries of womankind, four of which I played in a basement coffee
house, below a church in Lafayette, Indiana. That was the first time
I ever performed properly. I can still sing two of them. Nietzsche says
that if you want to learn something about yourself, go back to the beginning
and ask yourself what you have loved, everything, from the beginning!
There will be something in there that opens your eyes to some essential
fact about yourself that you've forgotten. Try it! Anyway, here's another
one: five record albums that you would choose as formative influences...not
necessarily "the best " but the most influential in shaping
your musical personality. Try it! Here's what I came up with: John Wesley
Harding(I suppose, by the way, that's the one that Dylan suggests,in
Chronicles, was inspired by a book of Chekov short stories), the first
fold-out Crosby Stills and Nash, the one with Suite Judy Blue Eyes and
Wooden Ships; Tea For the Tillerman; Kind of Blue; and Rikki Lee Jones'
first one. That points a musical direction I'm happy with. Of course
there are easily five by Dylan alone, that could have been picked. Subterranean
Homesick Blues was Dylan's "Howl", and Like a Rolling Stone
was the reason I bought my first guitar, a Kay, called Silvertone by
the Western Auto in Leesburg, Florida. I can still remembber it sitting
there between a red truck jack and some spools of tow chain. I guess
if I had to pick a sixth it would be Volunteers, by Jefferson Airplane.
O Yeah, and maybe For Everyman by Jackson Browne....I'm gonna stop at
seven. There are some perfect ones like Tapestry, Sgt. Peppers, Rumours,
Walk Under Ladders....but I said I was gonna stop.
I met Bob Dylan in January of '69...went to his
house. I had travelled from Indiana to Buffalo in a Buick 6, and then
by 727 across the state. I hitchhiked down to Woodstock from Albany.
It had been snowing a blizzard upstate but that Sunday morning it was
beautiful and sunny. A couple in a Porche picked me up and said they'd
help me find his house. They did. "Rabbit running down across the
road..." across from the old opera house on Upper Birdcliff Road.
This was the place. The garage was set over away from the main house,
a dark wooden enclosure, open to the weather: Cadillac and a Mustang...a
little vestibule outside the front door... That's where we stood and
talked. Photos, little cameos of famous people on a poster on the wall
beside us...I didn't notice who the were. Bob was very kind to me...not
haughty, didn't seem annoyed. I dont think I was, to him, like those
he talks about in Chronicles. I wasn't a party or a pantry crasher,
just a fragile young man chasing inspiration, and he seemed sensitive
to that. I asked him about God and Truth and Right and he , paraphrasing
"Too Much of Nothing" said, "It's all in the books."
"What books?" I said. And he told me what he'd been reading
lately: Ernest Holmes, Manley Hall, Maxwell Maltz, and Raymond Charles
Barker...that's the ones he'd been reading lately he said...His daughter
who must have been two or three came out and he put her up on his shoulders
and said, "Anna, this is Jimmy." "That your guitar?"
he said tossing his head in the direction of my suitcase and guitar
which were still out in the middle of the dirt driveway where I'd gotten
out of the Porche. How about that! ...something rhetorical from Bob.
"Yeah." I said. He mentioned his brother David, teaching English,
I think, at University of Minnesota...and some other stuff. I hitchhiked
down for my first taste of New York City, that afternoon....walked into
the city, as it was, from New Jersey across the George Washington Bridge...so
cold my face was wind burned on one side just from walking across that
bridge. The sun was going down. "Wintertime in New York Town...Somebody
could freeze to the bone." I think I stayed on the east side in
the 70s somewhere...not sure anymore...It was a squat, and I remember
there was plaster falling from the ceiling into the toilet...dont know
anymore how I got there...
I went to Europe for the first time in the '70s
after receiving a Bachelor of Science Degree. My father was a
plant pathologist and I suppose I figured I might be something like
that too although my true ambition was to be a poet. Lawrence Ferlinghetti
was my first "hero". I remember I chose Purdue University
because they had a cool pool hall in the basement of the student union.
(Also my Dad had received one of his degrees from Purdue). In Europe
I saw young guys singing and playing on the streets and I'd never seen
that before. There was one old blind black man in downtown Orlando,
sometimes, over from Dixon and Ives Department Store, when I was a little
kid. He had an aluminum cup wired to the headstock of his guitar for
coins, a piece of twine for a guitar strap, and was more of a country
singer than a bluesman. It would be years before I became aware of Reverand
Gary Davis and fully appreciated that these southern street singers
had been the very spawning of the blues... But these guys in Germany
were young like me. I had a guitar. I dug ditches in Heidelberg that
winter,saved a few thousand marks and when spring came I became a street
singer. I had a stash and a few friends places where I could crash...a
good afternoon on the Hauptstrasse meant a good dinner that night and
my savings from the Jakob Schmidt job bought me a Eurailpass which let
me drift from Seville to Amsterdam, via Lisbon and Paris. At the end
of the summer I went back to Florida and got a job teaching mathematics
in Jacksonville.
I was one of a few hip teachers. I had long hair and a bit of a rebellious
attitude and that made me popular with some of the students and unpopular
with some of the older teachers. I took teaching seriously because I
had great respect for mathematics. I taught 3 periods of geometry and
3 periods of general math which I called applied psychology, because
that's what it was for me. I loved that year teaching but I loved Europe
more...so I declined the offer to return to Orange Park High School
as a Biology teacher the next year...with a couple thousand dollars
stashed I went back to France.
I studied French and guitar on my own, lived like
a hermit in a little mountain village near Montpellier and when summer
came I went to Saint Tropez to try my hand at playing on terraces and
in restaurants, troubadour stuff. I had a small motor bike and a tent
and found a mentor, a Spanish man five or six years my senior who seriously
accelerated my learning curve. Pepe Alverez was like some prize rooster.
A small handsome man, a good player and singer, held his head high.
Like the stories they tell about Richie Havens on the scene in New York
City in the '60s....Pepe taught me how to approach the patron (owner)
of the restaurant to be allowed to play in the first place; anyway Pepe
knew every restaurant from Marseilles to Monaco that would let you play...He
would step on the floor, play one of his best songs first and take note
of who was listening...then he would go to those tables and play one
song, a foot stomper for the partying kind, a heartfelt love song for
the doe eyed couple in the corner, and while the other guys would go
around with a bread basket askin' for coin, Pepe would be quietly slipping
unsolicited banknotes in his back pocket. We toured the Cote d'Azure
together, all that summer, with our tents on the back of our little
motor bikes, returning frequently to our base, the campground called
Les Tournelles at the south end of the Plages de Pamplona below Ramatuelles
where Brigitte Bardot was said to live. Word on the street was that
James Taylor had once played in the streets in Saint Tropez...but I
still dont know if that's true...never heard anything more about it,
than that , "...They don't know nothin..." line in that Honey
Don't You Leave L.A. song.
After that summer on the Riviera I went back to the States.
I got a job singing "Hey Dum Fiddle Dum Dee" bawdy
English folk songs at a dinner theatre in Orlando. It was a fast growing
chain and I soon found myself to be the manager....cast myself as fool
to King Henry VIII in the play, and tried my hand at being an actor.
It was a great job....After that I waited tables, drove taxi and did
those gigs that they call "payin' your dues". Doing street
shows around the world I meet lots of people and I often get the comment,
"Yeah, but do you ever do real gigs?"...and I always wonder
if they actually saw my show, because it always feels pretty real to
me. I suppose they mean, bars and lounges, supper clubs, places with
stages, starting times, and a boss, and all that smoke and noise that
makes a gig real, and Yes, I've done lots of those gigs....But excepting
those really nice private parties, and some exceptionally charming small
clubs, nothing tops the street for appreciation and crowd interaction.
It is a little known fact in the music business but, if you are at a
certain level of professionality, the street is every bit as real and
rewarding, spiritually and financially, as the Holiday Inn. I have never
done arena rock and those guys have every right to scoff and call me
an amateur.
A few days before Christmas, 1983, in my apartment
in the centre of Biel, Switzerland with a few other performers, jugglers,
one-man-bands, a young multi-talented performer, Glen Nichols, and his
partner a beautiful young dancer, who were passing through on their
way to California...Glen had been a one-man-band, but could do many
things well, and later would become a T.V. personality in Australia...I
had, for the past year, been part of a duo, with Saint Tropez Pete,
who was actually an Englishman from Bristol, the first one-man-band
I had ever seen. We had done street performances from Canterbury to
Florence, Paris to Berlin, travelling first in Pete's blue Ford saloon,
then in my red Citroen GS, living out of hotels or crashing at other
musicians pads across Europe. Pete didn't stand in one spot when he
played the drum rig but liked to move laterally from side to side playing
face to face to the front row of the crowd. I had taken to stepping
up and down next to Peter, in what appeared to be an imitation of soul
groups like the Temptations. It created a visual interest beyond our
two part harmonies and dual guitar work and nobody really realized that
I had commenced doing it to keep warm on the streets of northern Germany
and Holland that previous winter. In those days there were active street
scenes all over Europe, musicians, acrobats, jugglers, comedians...There
was a scene in Paris, another one in Frankfurt, Cologne, Florence, Amsterdam...We
were the Swiss based scene...(many of whom in summer migrated north
to become the Oslo based scene)...During the week we all played the
different cities of Switzerland...There was usually a particular bar
in each town which was called "the office" where you would
go for your morning coffee and to find out what other performers were
in town... and on Saturday night everyone would turn up on the Niederdorf
in Zurich and catch each others act. Big John's Bootleg Band would drive
a van up onto the Hirchen Platz and drop off an upright piano and with
Mirko on a little snare and hi-hat rig they played kick-ass rock'n'roll.
The best spot to perform had been named the Tomato Platz because Big
John had once been beaned from the windows above with tomatoes. We would
queue up with our drum rigs in a line for our thirty minute shot...unwritten
rule of the street. The Kleine Rheinfelder served a good leber und rosti,
and the crowded restaurant had a room half-way below the street from
which you could watch your buddies perform with your eyes just above
street level while you quaffed your beer or coffee and/or shots of grappa
or calvedos. Harry Manx, a young ,very talented,song writer and lap
style guitar player was a part of this scene. So on this particular
Monday morning I had just learned that "Santro" had decided
to go it alone for the Christmas season, leaving me to fend for myself
during the best time of the year. I was miffed but not defeated. "You
can do, Jimmy", Moti told me, "Put it on your back and give
it a try!" For some reason it had never entered my mind to play
the one-man-band. So that day I wood-shedded for three hours, put together
six songs with the drum on my back and the next day with a borrowed
rig I went to Berne and did my first shows as a one man band. I bought
Pretty Richard's drum rig off of him, as he was moving on to other things
and for the next three months I played in almost every medium sized
town in Switzerland.
In April, with my friend John Greet, who had loaned me his rig in the
beginning, I flew to Bankok.
I spent two months in China doing free shows across the south and west
from Shanghai to Kunming, in the summer of '84, one of the most interesting
things I've ever done in my life. In the trains they blasted you with
Tchaikovsky at 5:30 in the morning but things were beginning to change...
they
had their own form of pop music beginning to emerge...and I learned
one that was a current hit. In some regions many of them had never
even seen a white man, let alone one standing in a public place
jumping up and down with a drum on his back singing songs from another
place and time. They knew Jambalaya but because of the timing of
the cultural revolution had mostly never heard of the Beatles. And
I remember feeling a rush of power when I almost instantaneously
blocked a six lane intersection with bicycle riders beneath a Mao
statue in Chengdu...The police politely ushered me away and I had
to jump on a city bus to escape the curious crowd. At the end of
that 5 month Asia trip I discovered Japan, where I would spend a
good portion of the next 18 years...
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I
really learned to play the one-man-band-drum-rig after
the Asia trip, playing along with Billy Higgins ...I ruined one walkman
wearin' it on my hip....Billy had a real smooth fluid style and thats
how I wanted to play the drum.
It was Lee Morgan's jazz crossover hit, The Sidewinder, or maybe it
was The Rumproller, I can't remember, they're both excellent...the next
walkman I hung from the ceiling and played for hours in my sister's
bedroom in my parents house in Florida. You see, all the guys whose
playing inspired me, Moti, Little Joe, Scottish Craig and Pretty Richard,
they all played a fast double beat on the kick drum and used the hi-hat
like it was a snare. That's still pretty much the way it's usually played.
Pete didn't use a double beat but had a great variety of moves with
the hi-hat, dipping the shoulder, or letting the heel come back up off
the ground after the downstroke, keeping real loose in the knees . I
learned alot from Pete about that stuff just playing guitar beside him.
I wanted to make myself different than all the other guys so I invented
the Jimmy Stick, a drumstick on the hi-hat splash cymbal worked off
the right foot toe. It feels natural to play it that way. Now there
are other guys who use a stick on the hi-hat but only one I know who
claims to have thought of it first. That's Bill Johnson, who I run into
in Germany from time to time, but he doesn't use it anymore... the other
guys, they have the stick attached to the headstock of the guitar which
doesn't seem as fluid to me. The first stroke of the double kick can
be on the beat, or ahead of the beat which is the way I do it most of
the time...for smooth stuff and ballads. I learned the other one from
Jim Franklin and it's better for rock'n'roll. There is a syncopated
double beat for songs like Stand by Me and Under the Boardwalk...and
of course once you can play the thing there are a million possibilities...just
listen to any good funk drummer if you think you've done it all.
The rivers of Norway are icy cold and full of trout,
providing both a morning bath that will jolt you awake faster than a
double shot of Italian expresso, and an evening meal of smoked fish...the
nightlife, including the light of day goes on 'til morning...Most of
my friends were headed up there when I returned to Europe in the spring
of '85. So I hooked up with Simon Murley, an excellent English alto
player and headed north. Somewhere in Sweden Simon took off with an
old girlfriend and I made it to Oslo just in time for Danny's birthday
bash and the traditional "Big Pitch" where all the performers
get together for one big show at the top of the Carl Johan and all the
money goes to pay for the birthday party. We did a kind of caravan thing
around the coast jumping ferry boats, catching mackerel in the apparently
bottomless fjords, and playing the main towns on week-ends and market
days...in Norway your fishing rod actually becomes more familiar to
your fingers than your guitar neck...We made it to Tromso in the Arctic
circle, a very happening town as it is the only action for many a mile...but
the encroaching autumn finally chased us all the way back to ....
Japan was like no other place for a street singer...they
had a tradition of street performance, dai dogei, while in the bars
at night they clustered around the karaoke monitors and sang Yesterday
and My Way with scary amounts of reverb...we were like a new synthesis
and they loved it. They were a good audience, attentive, if a bit shy,
and able to clap only on the back beat which is always a good sign.
The action was mostly after dark. The nightlife areas, usually clustered
around the main train stations, were a bustle of salarymen, geishas,
Philippina hostesses, and very occasionally another gaijin(foreigner)...the
air was thick with Asian scents, mouth-watering yakatori and sour smells
from the steaming stock pots in Ramen Alley mingling with incense from
behind the walls of the temple. When I'd been there in '84 I didn't
encounter any other street shows, although I knew from the grapevine
that I wasn't the first. There weren't even that many foreigners evident
. Now, two years later, I found another one-man-band, Jim Franklin,
had nestled in for the duration. He had had Tokyo to himself for a year
and was happy to share it with me . I designed a rig and had it bolted
on to the back of my Kawasaki 200 to carry my drum, guitar, and a small
amplifier with almost the whole city being virgin territory. Shinjuku
Station, which we called The Belly of the Beast, sees more people on
one day than occupy most European cities and The Ginza with the Chuo
Dori blocked to traffic on Sunday afternoon was the classiest pitch
I had ever done. After a while, Jim and I, toured Japan from Osaka to
Sapporo as a two-man-one-man-band. We called ourselves Gemini. There
is usually a good energy present when journeyman types hook up and make
music together...the people feel the spark and they love it.
Hey listen, my wife tells me I can be rather long winded, and I know
she's right. To those of you that have made it this far, Thanks so much
for letting me indulge myself. There is plenty more left to tell so
I'm just going to call this Volume One and leave the rest for a later
time, who knows when, it took me long enough to get this far. Chapters
still to tell: Taipei and my first trip Downunder for the Bicentennial
in Sydney. Puppets and the Showtime Family Singers take Japan by Storm.
Glen Nichols and the Flea Circus. Golden Days in Susskino. Blah Blah
Blah The Kyushu Kidnapping Incident....and finally The Return to the
European Scene.... there will be excerpts from my dada prose ramblings
and
my new CDs which will be released
sometime early in '06, and blah, blah, blah...Hey wait this is beginning
to sound alot like hokum...and, by the way, did you think you found
that one percent...? O.K. I'm gonna tell you. It was the red truck jack
and spools of tow chain. I can pretty much picture where in the store
it was, and it was the Western Auto sellin' me my first guitar...but,
truck jack and tow chain? I just made that stuff up. Everything else
though, in that story, is just the way it happened.
bye
for now,
Jimmy-Jimmy
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