EILEN JEWELL STEPS BACK IN
TIME
FOR DOWN HEARTED BLUES,
RELEASING SEPT. 22 ON
SIGNATURE SOUNDS
Sax great Curtis Stigers
contributes to renditions of unearthed blues treasures
by Otis Rush, Memphis
Minnie, Howlin’ Wolf and other favorites
BOISE, Idaho — Eilen Jewell laughs when told her
label’s president called her a musicologist. But she confirms she and her
husband and bandmate, drummer Jason Beek, have a passion for
studying American music.
“We really love to uncover the past. It’s almost like digging for
buried treasure,” she says. “For me, that’s where music is at. I like all kinds
of music as long as there’s the word ‘early’ in front of it.” For her new
album, Down Hearted Blues, releasing Sept. 22,
2017 on Signature Sounds, she and Beek unearthed 12
vintage gems written or made famous by an array of artists both renowned and
obscure, from Willie Dixon and Memphis Minnie to Charles Sheffield and Betty
James. Then, like expert stonecutters, they chiseled them into exciting new
shapes and forms, honoring history while breathing new life into each
discovery.
Known for what allmusic.com describes as a “country-flavored and
blues-infused version of contemporary folk (which also can include healthy
doses of rockabilly and surf),” Jewell’s discography includes several albums of
original material and one of Loretta Lynn covers. Jewell has also recorded two
albums with her eight-piece gospel-group side project the Sacred
Shakers. But this latesteffort, which she and Beek co-produced, with
engineering by pianist/banjo player Steve Fulton and Pat
Storey, is her first collection of blues — despite the fact that she
credits the genre for igniting her musical curiosity in the first place.
That’s because, even though she’s dreamed of recording a blues
album since discovering Howlin’ Wolf as a Boise, Idaho, teen, Jewell had to
convince herself she could — and should.
Eilen Jewell | Photo Credit: Joanna
Chattman
|
“I’ve always had this sense of self-doubt about it,” she admits. “Like, who am I to sing the blues? I’m a white girl from Idaho. I don’t know if I have a right to do that.” But she also remembersan old friend’s advice: “Everyone has the right to do what they love in this world, regardless of who they are and what background they come from.”
Finally, she tired of waging her internal battle and decided to
let the “do what you love” side win. It was a wise choice — particularly
because she’s hardly appropriating or imitating anyone’s style; on the
contrary, Jewell makes each song her own, while paying homage to her beloved
inspirations. It also should be noted that American blues music, like its
country of origin, is a melting pot of influences, and that all music evolves
from what came before — and that, by recording these songs, she’s helping to
strengthen the legacy of those who created and popularized them.
Some of them she heard while listening to her husband’s Radio
Boise show, Spoonful. The pair also cite John Funke’s Backwoods, on
Cambridge’s WMBR-FM, as a source of discovery. In fact, the couple’s mutual
attraction to musical obscurities led directly to their relationship. A friend
who knew of their common interest made the introduction, correctly guessing
they’d hit it off.
That happened in Boston, where Jewell lived for nine years after
leaving Boise to attend college in Santa Fe, New Mexico, then migrating to Los
Angeles and finally, to the East Coast. Jumping into Boston’s roots-music
scene, she began hunting for a guitarist. Beek pointed her to Jerry
Miller, a bona-fide Boston legend known for his versatility. They’ve been
playing together ever since; she chose some Down Hearted Blues tracks,
such as “Crazy Mixed Up World,” a Dixon tune recorded by Little Walter, and
Albert Washington’s “You’re Gonna Miss Me,” to showcase Miller.
On the latter, his notes bend around her supple, dramatic
minor-key vocals, which slide in after a punchy sax and bass intro. Jewell, who
titled a previous album Queen of the Minor Key, says its
“scary, creepy” tone fit right in with so many songs they’ve done, it already
felt like an old friend the first time she heard it. That horn, by the way,
comes courtesy of Curtis Stigers, a fellow Boisean who had
several soul hits before segueinginto jazz. A fan who pumps her music through
the PA before his own shows, he also sits in with her band when they’re both in
town. (Jewell and Beek moved to Boise in 2012 to be closer to her family and
start their own.)
“He played with us at a local festival and we loved what he did so
much we asked him, very spur of the moment, to come to the studio and record
with us. He literally dropped what he was doing and said, ‘I’ll be there in 15
minutes,’” she recalls, marveling about how he created a horn section with
overdubs — chartless, on songs he’d never heard.
He’s also on “You Know My Love,” another Dixon tune popularized by
Otis Rush. Jewell’s torchy rendition emphasizes its spooky message: “You think
you’re gonna get on with your life, but there’s this thing between us that will
never die; it’s always gonna come back and haunt you.
Laughing, she says, “I can definitely attest to that being a real
thing in life.”
Other picks, such as Dixon’s “You’ll Be Mine,” have a more
personal connection. She came to it through Howlin’ Wolf, whom she found while
rooting through her dad’s garage-stashed album collection. The minute she heard
him, she says, “I knew what I was supposed to be listening to.”
By then, she had absorbed the classics — Hendrix, Janis Joplin,
the Doors — and noticed her favorite rockers had something in common: they were
influenced by early blues artists. Down the rabbit hole she went, finding
Bessie Smith, represented here via the Lovie Austin and Alberta Hunter-penned
title tune Smith turned into a hit, then Memphis Minnie (“Nothing in Rambling”)
and “Big” Maybelle Smith (“Don't Leave Poor Me”).
“I’m always drawn toward anything that women accomplish in the
musical world, especially of previous eras,” Jewell says. “It was amazing that
women could do anything back then, when it was so frowned upon.”
Jewell, who also plays guitar and Hammond organ on these tracks,
claims she’d be happy singing nothing but Big Maybelle songs — if they weren’t
such a heavy vocal workout. On the propulsive “Don’t Leave Poor Me” she
practically dares her voice to leap up high and swoop down low before stepping
aside for the pulsating guitar-and-percussion bridge.
Her easy glide from note to note on the back-porch picker “Nothing
in Rambling” contrasts with that style — and with lyrics expressing the
difficulties of life on the road (a life that now includes daughter Mavis,
already a world traveler at age 3) — further highlighting the smooth/raw dichotomy
inherent not only to this album, but the genre itself.
While Jewell doesn’t exhibit whiskey-scratched vocal tendencies,
she can certainly make a gutbucket lose some splinters — or beguile with silky
sexiness. It’s as if she’s doing a one-woman play, slipping into a different
persona with each song — a feat that becomes even more impressive when she
reveals these tracks were recorded in only two days, live, and that Miller and
upright bass player Shawn Supra hadn’t even heard some of them
beforehand. That’s how spontaneous it actually was. They just happened to book
some studio time during a free day in Boise, and had so much fun playing these
songs they decided to make an album.
“It really felt serendipitous, like what was supposed to happen
was happening,” Jewell says. “I finally gave myself permission to do what I
wanted to do, and the universe supported me.”
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