[Harp-L] (no subject)
BluesWax Sittin' In With Rick Estrin
A Nine Lives Interview
Part Two
By Mark Hummel
Rick Estrin is the frontman, harp player, songwriter, singer, and character
extraordinaire for Little Charlie and the Nightcats for over 30 years. Estrin
has definitely had Nine Lives (the title of Rick and Little Charlie Baty's
brand new CD), since we first met. At the time we met he was on a methadone
program to kick heroin. I first met Rick in the early seventies when he had
just returned to San Francisco from Chicago. I'd heard about this really great
harp player with a really bad reputation. I'd just moved from Los Angeles to
the San Francisco Bay Area and I was looking for a gig. I read an ad in a
local paper looking for a harp player. I called the guy and he tells me he just
hired someone, I asked who and he says the harp player's name is Rick Estrin.
So I go down to their gig that night in the Mission district of San Francisco
at a really seedy bar where the guy is playing really loud Jimi Hendrix style
guitar and Rick is almost inaudible thru the PA.
The band has a washtub for tips going, that's all they're getting paid. I
walk up to Rick, who's wearing an eye patch and an Army jacket and tell him I'm
a harp player, too. Estrin then asks if I want to go out front and have a
smoke. He picks up his harps, goes up to the washtub on his way out and scoops
up all the bills and coins he can fit in his Army coat, and we go out front.
We blew our harps out front for awhile, then went across the street to the
donut shop and talked till 3 a.m., after which I drove Rick home to wherever he
was crashing. I saw him again right after he and Little Charlie hooked up a
year or two later. This time he says, "I heard what you were saying about me
and I don't dig it." I say, "I don't know what you're talking about?"
sounding freaked out, to which he responds, "I was just fuckin with ya!" So begin my
friendship with Rick, way back when. Enjoy Part Two (to read Part One click
HERE to read it in our ARCHIVES)!
Mark Hummel for BluesWax: How did you hook up with Little Charlie? What did
you think of Charlie as a harp player before the guitar became his main
instrument?
Rick Estrin: I had met Little Charlie when he was at U.C. Berkeley. He had a
band called the Charles Baty Blues Band. I would see that name in the club
listings in the paper and I used to think, "Wonder if that's a harp player?"
Back then the scene was so tiny and so competitive you sort of knew, or knew
of, everybody out there. Anyway, I was back in San Francisco, probably around
1973, I wasn't doing much and I got a phone call, it's this guy Charles Baty
and he wants to come over and meet me. He had heard about me from Gary Smith.
The bait he used was that he said he'd bring me a '45 of "Tonight With A
Fool" b/w "Don't Have To Hunt No More," - which at that time was this mysterious
Little Walter record that nobody had ever heard! Somehow, he had gotten a
bootleg copy of this '45! So, he came over, played the record, which is great
of course, but can you imagine hearing something like that for the first time?
I mean this record had previously been like a myth or something - and we
talked.
I told him that I hadn't even been playing much since I'd been back from
Chicago. Told him it just seemed like there wasn't any scene and nobody knew how
to play behind a harp anyway, generally just bitching and making excuses. He
told me that he knew how to back a harp on guitar. He had learned this stuff
so that he could show guitar players what he wanted to hear behind him, when
he was playing harp! And looking back, I can see now that he always was the
type of guy to take the initiative, ya know, make shit happen...whereas I was
always more of a dreamer, the kind of motherfucker that just sort of fell in
to the next thing that came up. Anyway, he said maybe someday we could try
playing together...just threw it out there.
After that I saw him maybe a couple times. One time that I remember I ran
into Charlie over at Keystone Berkeley. Muddy was playing, Jerry [Portnoy] was
in the band by this time and Muddy called me up to sit in along with John Lee
Hooker! Now that was cool! I'm up there blowing, standing in between Muddy
and John Lee and they're trading verses on "Boom Boom Boom"! Then, after John
Lee sat down, Muddy kept me up there to finish the set with him. Really made
me feel good that he obviously still dug my playing. After that, I think I
moved to Chicago again one last time and when I came back to California, I went
out to a club to see Luther Tucker and Gary Smith. They were playing a place
in San Francisco called the Savoy Tivoli. I went there on sort of like a
double date with a guitar player, good friend of mine and yours, Mark, the late
Sonny Lane, and two of Little Walter's sisters, Sylvia and Lula. I ran into
Little Charlie again at that show and he told me he had moved to Sacramento and
had started a band up there. He gave me his phone number and said that maybe
in about six months he'd be ready to try playing together. I took the phone
number, but I didn't think anything would really come of it. Then, fast
forward six months, I was in San Francisco living in the Tenderloin with a hooker.
I don't want you to get the wrong idea either; this was no glamorous
pimp-type situation. This was some low-level shit! I was on methadone maintenance.
In those days I had a small recurring drug problem as well. Just in general,
you could say I wasn't doing too good.
One day, I looked in my wallet and I saw this piece of paper with Charlie
Baty's phone number on it, and I thought, "Nothin' from nothin'...hell, I ain't
doin' shit around here." I called him up and he said we could try it. At the
time, he had a couple of funky little gigs lined up. I rode up there on the
Greyhound two or three times and it seemed to be working, so I relocated to
Sacramento. I had never really heard Charlie blow harp until I went to
Sacramento and started working with him. We had a second guitar player at the time,
so the way the show would go in those days was, Charlie would play harp on
the first set and after that, he'd switch to guitar. You know this, Mark,
'cause you heard him back then. That sucker was a hell of a harmonica player! That
same kind of fire and imagination that he has on guitar, he had that on the
harp! I heard him and it really made me re-focus on getting my shit together
as a player, as a performer, and in general 'cause I could see, some half-way
effort just wasn't gonna get it!
----------------------
Have you been to the ARCHIVES lately?
Be sure to check out everything in the BACKSTAGE area
Including the PHOTO PAGE featuring the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival!
----------------------
BW: How did you first start writing songs and what inspired you to do that?
RE: For some reason I always believed I could write and then, when I got
with Rodger Collins he would always encourage me to try to write. He'd
constantly talk to me about songwriting and he kind of drilled into me certain
principles, gave me basically like a check list to see if a lyric can stand up.
Like, is it interesting? Is the story worth telling? Does it make sense? Is a
rhyme too obvious? Are you telegraphing? Is what you're saying clear? Is it
fairly conversational? In other words, would this person really talk like that?
Does the meter match up well enough? Is there a rhythmic pocket to the meter?
Is it singable? He used to say, "It's many things, Rick," and he sure was
right! He also set a good example for me as far as showing me what it was to be
a real professional. He was always thinking...wracking his brain, always
editing and trying to improve whatever song it was he was working on. Always
listening for song ideas in everyday life. He showed me so much stuff, man! He
put me on shows with him when I was basically of no value to him, but he could
see I was serious about learning so he tried to help me improve as a
performer. He'd explain to me why certain things were effective. Little subtle shit
that makes a big difference! I really owe a lot to Rodger Collins!
A lot of the stuff he showed me, I couldn't even use back then, but years
later, when I was ready, I was able to apply those principles in telling my own
story, in my songs and also in my performances. Percy Mayfield too, he
really encouraged me. Not by giving me specific pointers or anything, but just by
being complimentary about my work. He really made me feel like I had
something legitimate to say and that I had the talent and the skills to get it
across! I really miss that guy too. He was one cool and classy cat. I wish I
could've spent a lot more time with him.
BW: How have you and Charlie worked it out to work together so long? It's
very difficult to play with another musician for almost thirty years without
getting on each other's nerves or driving each other crazy. Does two vehicles
when you tour make the difference, among many things? I know you have huge
respect for Charlie, musically.
RE: Getting on each other's nerves used to be a recurring theme in the
really early years, but things have smoothed out a lot since then. There's rarely
any friction now days. We respect each other's space and over time, our roles
on and off the bandstand just sort of naturally defined themselves. He's
much more of a detail person, a natural organizer, and I'm more of a dreamer.
It's a combination that works. What can I say? I'm sure two vehicles help some,
but ours is kind of a unique situation. Charlie likes to keep his own
schedule. Likes to get up early, leave the hotels early, get wherever he's going
early. The rest of us like to take our time when we can, check out the scene
wherever we happen to be. So the two-vehicle arrangement definitely helps.
As far as my respect for Charlie as musician goes...awe is probably a better
word for the way I feel about his talent and skills and creativity. Plus,
his playing still surprises me every night! He can generate so much excitement
with a guitar that being on the bandstand with him is just never
boring...never!
Hey, I just thought of something that would probably help relations within
any band way more than two vehicles is single motel rooms! We figured that one
out a long time ago. Think about it...you gotta be stuck in a van together
all day, then you gotta work together on the bandstand all night, and then
you're expected to go back to a motel room and be cellmates, too! I don't care
how much you might like each other or whatever, but over an extended period of
time, that's gonna wear on anybody! Separate rooms!
BW: What is the typical time it takes to record a CD? To write a song?
What's a typical process on either, from idea to completion?
RE: Usually, we'll record for about four days. There really is no typical
time that it takes me to write a song. I've had songs that I've struggled with
for weeks. I've had songs that have started as some fragment, a couple of
lines or a hook and didn't get written for years, and then I've had some that I
call, "getting a free one" where the whole thing, beginning to end, just came
to me at once...where I'm just hoping I can get it written down before it
disappears. The "free ones" are a pretty rare occurrence and they generally
only happen when I've already been wracking my brain, working trying to solve a
problem with another song. Somebody once asked Yip Harberg, the Tin Pan Alley
lyricist who wrote all the lyrics for The Wizard of Oz, wrote "Brother Can
You Spare A Dime," and lots of other old standards, about his process and he
said something like, "Nothin' to it...I just stare at a blank piece of paper
until blood comes out of my forehead." That about sums it up pretty well.
BW: How much input does Jerry Hall have in the studio when he produces?
RE: Jerry's our engineer so he's not producing, but he has an awful lot to
do with the way things sound. He's got amazing ears. He's the one that makes
it sound like a record. What mikes to use, where to place them, and all kinds
of other technical shit that I couldn't even begin to explain. Jerry's also
been real helpful to me in a production sort of way on songs where I end up
overdubbing the vocal. I think because I'm doing brand new songs, where there's
no template, no established way of singing the song...like sometimes I
might've just written it and haven't had a lot of bandstand time to really settle
on my approach or my delivery...Jerry is great for guidance in those
situations. Jerry's got great ears plus he's really calm and has tons of experience.
BW: How do you decide who solos, you or Charlie or both? Genre, style? It
seems you played a little less harp on the Nine Lives CD?
RE: To me the song itself makes those kind of decisions. We try to do
whatever seems right for each song. After we were done with the record Charlie
brought up the point that maybe there wasn't as much harp as there was on some of
our previous records, but that's just how it turned out. I feel like you
should serve the song...almost like subordinate yourself to the song. To me,
with a lot of Blues today, I sense an attitude like "Ok, let's get this other
shit - the song - out of the way so I can get to the solo, really show what I
can do!" I can tell you that is definitely not my approach. I'm trying to tell
a specific story with each song so the arrangement and which instrument
takes a solo and even the message of the solo is hopefully going to reflect
whatever that particular song is trying to put across.
BW: What's your main goal on stage with an audience, on how to affect them,
emotionally or otherwise? Has it changed over the years?
RE: Well, first of all, emotionally is about the only way a performer can
affect an audience...I mean I'm not really looking to educate anybody. There's
a whole range of human emotions that can be affected by music, by a
performance, but it basically boils down to this...you can turn 'em on or you can turn
'em off! The longer I do this job the more I see that if you can just be
yourself and if you feel what you're doing people will respond.
To be continued...
Mark Hummel is a contributing editor at BluesWax. Mark may be contacted at
blueswax@xxxxxxxxxxx
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