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"Let the white guys sing!"
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Nov. 24, 1999 |
They broke into a T-Bone Walker shuffle and played another hour and a half. The first set had just been a warm-up. Max's Kansas City, 1973. My introduction to live Doug Sahm. Jack Barber, a real barber, on bass. As (almost) always, Augie Meyers on Vox organ. Bobbie Neuwirth opens up all lonesome on an acoustic guitar. Sahm's players wander onstage like a bar band you'd think twice about throwing a bottle at. Rocky Morales on tenor sax is large, swaying in a deeply hypnotic state, a nasty tone to his playing, biting the reed. Wasted days, perhaps. But the night is not being wasted. The kicker is the older- I recorded Doug Sahm's "Texas Me" in Berlin in 1987, and it is easily one of the most embarrassing byproducts of my illustrious career as a below- Jimmie's New Orleans, 1992? The last time I saw Sahm play, a gig with the Texas Tornados. An unanticipated second commercial coming, shades of the early Sir Douglas Quintet days, when Sahm had a handful of Tex-Mex hits dressed absurdly like a British fop. He was sharing a stage with Meyers, the incomparably psychedelic accordion stylings of Jimenez and the man he called "the great Rio Grande Valley bluesman," Freddy Fender. I was playing with the opening band and hanging backstage. All four principals were forthcoming, patient, courtly, in a way that simply never happens in such circumstances. Onstage was a different matter. Poking, digging at each other. An accumulation of close to 200 years of one-night stands among them. "Let the white boys sing!" you could hear Sahm yell between songs. The guy was no saint -- he loved to lead the band, and left dozens of bands in his wake as testimony. But I still couldn't figure out who he was talking about. There weren't any white guys onstage I could see. Doug Sahm, hardcore troubadour, Chicano by force of will, metaphysician without boundaries, dead at 58 in Taos, N.M.? The place sounds right. The timing, though, is way off.
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