We
were just a half hour removed from Barbara Morrison’s scintillating performance
in the musical Howlin’ Blues and Dirty
Dogs, presented on the stage at Hollywood’s famous Stella Adler
Theatre, and the star of the show had just finished signing
autographs for her fans when, now dressed comfortably in a track suit she led me
to a room adjacent to the theatre. Morrison has a knack for making you feel
instantly relaxed when you are in her company and she was gracious with her time
as she discussed her role in the musical which is centered about the life of
legendary blues singer and songwriter Big Mama Thornton, a woman with whom
Morrison was personally acquainted.
“I think that there is a lot of me in Big Mama, and we were
discovered by the same person, who encouraged us to be ourselves. I think that I
was just being me (in the musical), but I was also Big Mama. We were discovered
by the same person who encouraged us to be ourselves. I knew so many of her
ways, and so many stories about her that intrigued me. I wrote the songs around
the story, so it kind of fits very well, but I didn’t do anything different than
I normally do,” says Morrison.
Morrison explains why she wanted to be a part of this
project, “I always wanted to be a part of the theatre and when I looked at this
(musical) I thought this piece would be good for me and that I could take it
across the country or I could take it around the world. In
Europe, one blues festival will pay for four hundred jazz
festivals. People love the blues. Spain
has a huge (audience for blues) and Italy
has a big audience for blues also. It is just one of those things. When I hooked
up with this piece for the theatre I thought that it would be a great vehicle
for me to get more blues out there. Even though it (the blues) is so big, it is
so small at the Grammies, so small at the Oscars, and it is so small in the eyes
of the people who make the big bucks.”
“When I first met the writers (collectively known as The
Theatre Perception Consortium), they were doing a blues show on
North Central Avenue, here in Los Angeles, which is a great Mecca for blues and
jazz.. I was away in England,
but they asked me to be a part of it, so I told them I would be back for one
day. I think they just wanted to use my name. They did and it worked, because
they packed the house. When they came to me and asked me what I could do for
them, I said that I wanted to be Big Mama Thornton.
I told them the stories that you saw here tonight, and they wrote around
them. When they presented me with a script, I started writing little songs
around the stories, and that’s how it came together. It was kind of like still
being me and being Big Mama too,” she says.
Since Barbara Morrison grew up near
Detroit, Michigan
and Big Mama Thornton grew up in Montgomery,
Alabama, one would assume that Morrison might have faced
some challenges in learning how to accurately portray the early part of Big
Mama’s life, but that in fact was not the case.
“My mother was from Birmingham,
Alabama and I grew up in a rural area
outside Detroit that was just as
country as Alabama. With the
underground railway, most of the people from Mississippi
went to Chicago, and most of the
people from Alabama went to
Detroit, so we got all of their ways, mannerisms and
stuff. Detroit
is the place that people from Alabama
came to, because we had Henry Ford, the Ford plant and General Motors. When they
decided to pay black people the same as white people, they flocked there. I knew
about outhouses, coal stoves and wood stoves (that were used) to heat the whole
house for us during the winter. I knew about chopping wood, and as a matter of
fact (she rolls up her pant leg to reveal a scar) that is from chopping wood,”
Morrison says.
A journalist from Ohio
once said of Barbara Morrison, that she was one of the few signers who could
sing the yellow pages or the obituaries and he would give her five stars and the
thumbs up, because of her ability to infuse personality and passion into her
music.
“The most important thing is for you to communicate and it
doesn’t matter how you say it, or how it comes out. It is not if you say it and
the person that you are talking to understands what you meant. I am earthy and
the way that I dress is earthy. (As for being) sensuous, I think that I can tap
into stuff that a lot of people are afraid to say or to address. I think it is
because I work a lot. Sometimes,
like today (in the musical) in that scene with Johnny Otis when he discovered
those people, I added, ‘and then he discovered a little girl named Barbara
Morrison,’ because that works,” she explains.
Even though Howlin’
Blues and Dirty Dogs, is not Barbara Morrison’s first foray into theatre,
her stage credits pale in comparison with her accomplishments as a blues / jazz
singer and songwriter. In 2008, she launched a thirty-three city tour of
America, and also toured
Australia. She has performed with iconic
figures such as; Dizzy Gillespie, Ray Charles, James Moody, Etta James, Johnny
Otis, Dr. John, Kenny Burrell, Cedar Walton, Tony Bennett, Nancy Wilson and Ron
Carter, to name just a few. She regularly performs with the Count Basie
Orchestra, the Clayton-Hamilton Orchestra and Doc Severinsen’s Big Band. Barbara
Morrison has performed at the Montreaux Jazz Festival, the North Sea Jazz
Festival, Monterey Jazz Festival, Nice Jazz Festival (France), the Long Beach
Jazz Festival and the Pori Jazz Festival (Finland).
She has also played New York City’s
Carnegie Hall.
Morrison has released more than twenty recordings during
her thirty year music career, including her current album,
By Request, produced by her friends
Mara and Ron New. For her current album Morrison says that she took all of the
songs that people like to hear her sing and put them all on one CD, including
one of her personal favorites, Brenda Russell’s “Get Here If You Can.”
On By Request Morrison is
accompanied by pianist Ronald Bishop who has been with her for twenty-five
years, guitarist Charles Small who has been her electric guitarist for eighteen
years, bass guitarist Richard Taylor who has served in that capacity with
Morrison for a mere fifteen years and drummer Peter Buck.
As far as what musical elements inform Barbara Morrison’s
music today, she says, “I like the blues. I think the blues are my forte,
although I do like soft, sweet stuff. I like ballads which I think that I do
very well. I like the idea of being able to do all of it. I just like to have
fun. I always say that when I stop having fun, I am going to hang up my vocal
chords.”
When you watch Barbara Morrison perform and you sit in her company, she leaves
no room for doubt that she is still having a lot of fun with both her music and
her acting
Interviewed by Joe Montague, March 2008, protected by copyright ©
Riveting Riffs Magazine, All Rights Reserved.