"We had so much fun on this cruise, there was no way I was going to miss the occasion to put it on record," says Joe Louis Walker of the tremendous artistic and personal experience he had on the Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise at the beginning of this year.
And fun it was! Music cruises have been the rage for the past decade, but never have so much flamboyance, exhilaration and good music been featured on a blues sailing, making Live on the Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise the most incredible party record of the year.
Recently voted Most Outstanding Guitarist by Living Blues critics, Joe belongs in the very select club of original blues greats who revolutionized the art of the electric guitar. Sharing the stage with younger members of the blues crowd was a way for him to enjoy this sunny trip through the Caribbean, but it was also much more: "When B.B. King asked me to be a part of his 'Blues Summit' album back in the early 90s, it was a way for him to pass on the torch. The time has come for me to do the same."
Walker's career is unique. Unlike those who came in his wake, Joe never had to learn the blues, simply because it was his mother tongue, although he doesn't hail from the Delta. When other blues legends grew up in the prewar South, Walker was raised in the Fillmore district of San Francisco in the late fifties and early sixties, at a time when black blues and white rock lived hand in hand. And while honing his skills locally with the likes of Lightnin' Hopkins, Fred McDowell, Magic Sam and Earl "Zebedee" Hooker, he was very much part of the local psychedelic scene. "I knew them all. Carlos Santana and the guys from the Jefferson Airplane and the Grateful Dead as well as Sly Stone and Larry Graham. My roommate at the time was Mike Bloomfield, fresh from introducing Bob Dylan to the electric guitar."
Enrolling at San Francisco State University, Walker then earned degrees in music and English, ending up playing guitar for 10 years with a gospel ensemble, The Spiritual Corinthians. "I got my blues from my Dad, and my gospel from my grandmother. She lived with us, but her head was still in Arkansas, so that's very much part of my heritage too."
By 1985, Walker was ready to move back into blues territory. "There's no contradiction between blues and gospel. They are the two faces of the same coin, with soul music somewhere in between," he says. At the head of his Bosstalkers, Joe rapidly worked his way to the top of the profession with a series of stellar albums, produced by such luminaries as Steve Cropper and Scotty Moore (Elvis's original guitar player) that radically changed the blues landscape of the late 20th Century.
Considered one of the last of the great blues guitar heroes, alongside B.B. King, Buddy Guy and Otis Rush, Joe gives more than a 100 fiery performances on all continents every year, appearing at major festivals from the US and Canada to Australia, Europe to Japan, the Far East to Southern America, while collecting awards like others collect pennies.
"Glowing like a blue beacon" — in the words of noted blues critic Bill Dahl —, Walker is certainly the most brilliantly innovative guitarist on the contemporary blues scene today. A fact that owes him the unbridled admiration of certified fans like Sir Mick Jagger, B.B. King, The Edge, Bono, and Herbie Hancock, who show up at his concerts whenever the occasion arises.
Official Website: http://www.41bridgestreet.com/calendar/index.php?id=123
Added by Bridge Street Live on August 11, 2011