ROCK N ROLL HALL OF FAMER, AND SIX-TIME GRAMMY WINNER, DR JOHN GOES BACK TO THE
SOURCE WITH SKE-DAT-DE-DAT...SPIRIT OF
SATCH
New Orleans musical giant pays tribute to
fellow Crescent City legend Louis Armstrong with star-studded, divinely-inspired
new tribute disc
Proper Records / September
1st
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee and
six-time GRAMMY®-winner Dr. John is New Orleans' most prominent living musical
icon. The embodiment of his hometown's freewheeling creative spirit and multiple
musical traditions, he's built a visionary, idiosyncratic body of work that's
deeply rooted in the Crescent City's myriad blues, R&B, jazz and rock 'n'
roll traditions.
So it's fitting that Dr. John's new album on Proper
Records, Ske-Dat-De-Dat...Spirit of Satch, pays heartfelt tribute to another
larger-than-life New Orleans legend: the seminal trumpeter and vocalist Louis
"Satchmo" Armstrong, whose musical innovations created the template for
20th-century jazz, and whose playful attitude and life-embracing spirit made him
a beloved figure whose worldwide appeal transcended music.
"He's the most
famous guy that ever came out of my neighborhood," notes Dr. John. "He became a
legend all over, for his trumpet playin' and everything else, and he was the
United States' ambassador to the world."
Ske-Dat-De-Dat...Spirit of Satch
honors Armstrong's musical genius as well as his effervescent personality with
13 classic numbers drawn from various phases of Armstrong's five-decade career,
with Dr. John joined by a stellar supporting cast that manages to update the
material while maintaining the music's timeless emotional appeal.
The
subtitle Spirit of Satch is particularly appropriate given the album's birth
cycle, which Dr. John says was set into motion when the late Armstrong—whom he'd
only met once during his lifetime, in the office of their mutual manager Joe
Glaser—came to him in a dream.
"Louis's spirit came to me and told me to
do something, that's how this whole thing started," says Dr. John, who's
previously released tribute albums to musical giants Duke Ellington and Johnny
Mercer. "Louis told me, 'Take my music and do it your way.' It was the most
unexpected thing in the world to me, to have Louis' spirit show up like that,
but he gave me a concept of where to roll with it that was spiritually correct.
That made me feel very open to try some different things, because I felt that
his spirit had ok'ed this record."
Prior to making the album, Dr. John
honored Satchmo on stage, presenting rapturously received tribute concerts,
dubbed "Props to Pops," at New York's Brooklyn Academy of Music in March 2012
and at the Hollywood Bowl in July 2013.
In addition to Dr. John's
trademark vocals and piano, and backup from some of New Orleans' finest
musicians, Ske-Dat-De-Dat...Spirit of Satch features a stellar assortment of
guest singers and players. Bonnie Raitt shares the spotlight on a swinging
reading of "I've Got the World On A String," Ledisi and the McCrary Sisters lend
gospel authority to "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen," Anthony Hamilton is
featured on a mournful "Sometimes I Feel Like A Motherless Child," Shemekia
Copeland trades verses with Dr. John on a playful reworking on "Sweet Hunk O'
Trash," and the Blind Boys of Alabama lend their powerful voices to "What A
Wonderful World" and "Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams."
Since
Ske-Dat-De-Dat...Spirit of Satch is a tribute to the man who popularized the
trumpet for a worldwide audience, it's fitting that the project should feature
some of today's greatest trumpeters, namely Nicholas Payton (on "What A
Wonderful World" and "Gut Bucket Blues"), Terence Blanchard ("Mack the Knife,"
"Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams"), Arturo Sandoval ("Tight Like This," "Memories
of You"), Wendell Brunious ("Thats My Home") and James Andrews ("Dippermouth
Blues"), along with New Orleans' legendary horn ensemble the Dirty Dozen Brass
Band ("When You're Smiling").
"The whole thing felt pretty special, and I
definitely was in a different zone for this record," says Dr. John, who
co-produced the album with his longtime trombonist Sarah Morrow, who also
arranged ten of the album's 13 tracks. "I wanted to pull together some of his
hits and some of songs he wasn't as well known for, and make them feel fresh and
different. Sarah wrote some slammin' charts that kept everything spacious and
hip. And everybody played and sang great, and gave it their own
spirit."
Ske-Dat-De-Dat...Spirit of Satch is the latest achievement in a
singular musical history that stretches back to the 1950s, when Dr. John—then
still known by his given name, Mac Rebennack—emerged as an in-demand producer,
guitarist, pianist and songwriter on New Orleans' studio scene, working for such
local labels as Ace, Ron and Ric, collaborating with the likes of James Booker,
Earl King, Professor Longhair, Art Neville and Frankie Ford, and scoring the
regional solo hit "Storm Warning."
In the early '60s, he relocated to Los
Angeles, where he played on countless sessions before debuting his flamboyant
new musical persona, "Dr. John, The Night Tripper," with his first solo album,
1968's Gris-Gris, which introduced the world to his uniquely eclectic
voodoo-funk. In the years since, he has remained a distinctly prolific and
powerful force, releasing more than 30 albums of his own while collaborating
with a broad array of acts including the Rolling Stones, Sonny and Cher, Van
Morrison, Aretha Franklin, Gregg Allman, Mike Bloomfield, Levon Helm, Ringo
Starr, Rickie Lee Jones, B.B. King and Christina Aguilera. He also performed in
such films as The Last Waltz and Blues Brothers 2000, and pursued a successful
two-decade songwriting partnership with legendary tunesmith Doc
Pomus.
Dr. John was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2011,
and won the most recent of his six GRAMMY® Awards when 2012's Locked Down was
voted that year's Best Blues Album.
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