Interview with Joe Montague
His
name is Bobby Thompson and he grew up in Arlington, Virginia, where he still
lives. He is a very good Blues Rock guitarist – singer – songwriter, who
channels Eric Clapton vibes from the Cream and Blind Faith era. In February of
2011, Bobby Thompson released his album
By The Hand, a ten song collection, which features eight original tunes and
two covers, the Eddie Floyd / Steve Cropper song “Things Get Better,” and Albert
King’s “I’ve Made Nights By Myself.” The album may represent a significant
turning point in the career of Thompson who has toured with a number of Blues
and Reggae / Funk influenced bands during his career, for
By The Hand, features his own solid
guitar licks, complimented by the drumming of Gary Crockett, some solid bass
players (Steve Wolf, Mike Echols, Jeff Frank) and the funk master of the tenor
saxophone, Ron Holloway, whose performance credits include; Gov’t Mule, Susan
Tedeschi, Taj Mahal, Allman Brothers Band, Peter Frampton and Little Feat.
Benjie Porecki is awesome on the keyboards and the icing on the cake is the
background vocals served up by Angie Head and Dusty Rose.
Recently, Bobby
Thompson took time to sit down with Riveting Riffs Magazine to talk about his
new album and the circuitous route that he took to arrive at this point in his
career. He is proud of his southern heritage, his father was from Athens Georgia
and as he likes to say, his mother was from the Deep South; Peru, in South
America. He was one of three children, with his sisters April being one year
older and Angie is two years older, but Bobby Thompson was the only one in his
family to pursue a career in music.
His tenure at
the Corcoran College of Art and Design in Washington D.C. seemed doomed from the
beginning, as he remembers how he skipped classes to play guitar and he did not
really see graphic design work in his future. There was another one year stint
at a community college and a third post-secondary school in Utah, before he
landed at the Musicians Institute in Los Angeles.
“That is where I
really excelled. It was really cool and there were a lot of guitar players. It
was called GIT, the Guitar Institute of Technology, but under the umbrella of MI
so you also had keyboards, bass and drums. There were a lot of rock guitar
players and heavy metal guitar players and I was part of a very small percentage
of Blues guitar players. We all studied the same things, theory, harmony, rhythm
and performance classes. Performance classes were the thing that really got you
going and it really got the music out of you,” recalls Thompson.
Bobby Thompson
reflects upon those who influenced his approach to music, while he attended the
Musicians Institute, “There were four, Keith Wyatt who played guitar and who
writes articles for Guitar Magazine.
He is like an encyclopedia of Blues guitar. Anything that you want to know, he
already knows it and he can show it to you. He had a guest by the name of Osee
Anderson, a Chicago based Blues guitar player, who I spent a little time
studying (under) and I got a chance to play with him on one of the first gigs
that I ever did, when I was about twenty years old. He got me on stage with him.
Shortly after that Albert Collins came to the school and Keith played with him.
I got to sit in the front row and it just blew my mind. It was incredible.
Another person who influenced me and who there was Tim Bogert a bass player, who
used to play with Jeff Beck in the early seventies. He taught a lot of
performance classes. He was playing the bass while he was suggesting guitar
parts to us.”
After his time
at the Musicians Institute, Thompson returned to Arlington, Virginia where he
started going to local jam sessions and looking for bands with which he could
play. Starting in 1995 he toured with several R&B, Jazz and Blues bands for the
next six or seven years, mostly on the east coast, although there was at least
one tour that included Texas.
In 2009 he
toured with Reggae rockers SOJA and See-I, prior to forming his own band the
BobbyT Project. It was while he was on tour with See-I that Thompson experienced
somewhat of an epiphany when the band members walked into the legendary Blues
nightclub Antone’s.
“As soon as I
walked in and I saw the poster of Stevie Ray Vaughan, I felt a very strong
emotion. None of the other guys had listened to the same music as I had. I was
obsessed with Stevie Ray and I was just in awe being in that room. We got to
play in front of an awesome crowd that night. The people (in Austin) know their
music,” says the soft spoken Thompson.
Reflecting upon
the time that he spent with SOJA and See-I he says, “The also have a lot of funk
roots. To me it is kind of all tied together with being a Blues guitar player.
You play Rock, Funk and Reggae if you know how to place it correctly in the
music.”
It was while he
was touring in 2009, including the BobbyT Project, which performed at Reggae
Rising in Humbolt County, California, that the seed for the album By The Hand
was first planted. “My friends had been putting the idea in my head for a long
time, but I would probably say it was when I was on the road in 2009. We spent a
lot of time in hotels and in the back of a van, and I had time on my hands. I
would keep a few notebooks and I would scribble down notes of what I wanted an
album to sound like. After I was off the road early in 2010 I had the time (to
work on an album). The first step was working out songs at home. I worked out
demos and I worked with the drummer Gary Crockett, who ended up being the
producer. That was early in the spring of 2010. When we first went into the
studio in April or May of 2010 we did four songs, with Steve Wolf on bass.”
Songs such as,
the note bending “Let Your Mojo Shine,” began to emerge. That song was one of
the ones that I was stuck on for a while and it had all the instrumental parts
the way that I wanted it. The voice
tended to be the backing voice to the guitar. We spent a crazy amount of time in
the studio with that song, having fun finding tones and capturing that sound. I
have listened to so many artists and heard people like Robert Randolph and Ben
Harper play and I have just been blown away by their sound. It is fun to have
come back around and to play a song like “Let Your Mojo Shine.” We literally had
the amplifiers cranked up in the studio. We had a couple of Vox AC30s and a
Marshall, and I am playing an Asher lap slide guitar, made by Bill Asher who
(built guitars) for Jackson Browne and the Black Crowes (and Ben Harper and
Bonnie Raitt).”
Of the sound
that music fans will hear in the songs from
By The Hand, Thompson says, “It goes
back to my early guitar roots; Cream was probably the first band that I really,
really paid attention to. I had all of their live albums and (I like) the way
that Clapton had the tone of his guitar, during the era of Cream and Blind
Faith. I never really got rid of that and it was a joy for me to go into the
studio. I wasn’t trying to emulate anything, but I was trying to bring that
spirit and to do something creative with that.”
One of the
killer tracks on this album is the song “Every New Day,” which features the
background vocals of Angie Head and some scintillating guitar work by Bobby
Thompson. There is something about the timbre of Thompson’s voice that is
inviting and his easygoing vocal vibe contrasts nicely with Head’s soulful
wails.
“I was trying to
create the sound of early seventies. We had a couple of guitars going and maybe
the touch of a boogie woogie blues sound. I felt that Angie would bring
something really soulful to the song. We rehearsed a few times and then we went
in and cut the track. From the demo that I created to the way the song sounds,
it sounds even brighter than I expected. It sounds pretty energetic and it is
one of my favorite songs on the album as far as the energy goes. Angie got to
shine on that one. She did a great job. She is in Brooklyn, New York now. She
goes back and forth between New York and D.C. to perform. She also has her own
EP out and you can find it at
www.angiehead.com ,” says Thompson.
“Things Get
Better,” was one of those songs from the Delaney Bramlett era and it kind of
stuck in my head. I always wanted to play the song, but the live band that I
play in is usually a trio and I didn’t feel that song could be done as a trio. I
felt like it needed more, so I thought let’s give it a shot (on the album). I
didn’t want to cover the Delaney and Bonnie version, but I couldn’t find the
Eddie Floyd version, so I ordered it through Barnes and Noble and when I finally
got it, I kept playing the record over and over, until I got the rhythm of the
Eddie Floyd song. It is different than the Delaney song.”
As for the
reasons why Albert King’s song, “I’ve Made Nights By Myself,” was included on
Bobby Thompson’s By The Hand, the
answer is pretty simple, during the first part of 2010, he recalls that much of
the Washington D.C. and Virginia areas experienced heavy snowstorms, so much so
that he could not get out to see anyone, so he spent a few nights alone and
listening to Albert King’s song.
You can listen to songs from Bobby Thompson’s By The Hand on his website.
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