New Interview- Keeper of the flame- Eric Bibb: the happiest man in the world?
Eric Bibb’s music is classy and consistent. His style uplifting, inspiring and there’s always a spiritual aspect. Almost gospel, but without the preaching! His new album, THE HAPPIEST MAN IN THE WORLD is all of this and more. Recorded in the Norfolk countryside with old friends, North Country Far and famed bassist Danny Thompson. 15 songs, 11 written or co-written by Eric and one traditional song arranged by him.Thrilled with the result, Eric believes it is an album that will be with us for a while. “People will come back to that record years from now.” Eric has toured with Danny Thompson in Australia and they have played radio sessions, but this is their first album together. Danny’s an original member of legendary folk group Pentangle and has played with John Martyn and Donovan. Recorded at Dave and Sue Williams’, The Grange Studios in Norfolk, where Eric cut his acclaimed album HOME TO ME in 2000. “There is an immediacy, an intimacy….it will appeal to anyone into the kind of roots acoustic music I am known for. This is where I made my mark in this kind of genre.Bluesy, countryish, rootsy stuff played on acoustic. It’ll always be that way, my heart drawing me back to this style even when I try other things. It’s my home zone.” “Even if I veer off into other directions, I try to keep that pretty central somehow. My style and sound was never consciously designed. I tend to gravitate towards certain music, a style of playing and sensibility over the years which has gelled into some of kind of brand.” Eric hits the milestone of 65-years old in August. He’s travelled the globe, performed just about everywhere, collaborated with many big names, released 36+ solo albums – his debut was AIN’T IT GRAND in 1972 – and many collaborations on record and on stage. So what about the “R” word? “Retirement is not really in my thoughts. Even if I won the lottery, I’d still do concerts, but probably not at the pace I am doing it. In 2017 I’d like to take a little bit more time off the road to gather my wits about me and figure out my priorities. I’ll do dates here and there, but not so much extended tours, to take a bit of a break.” Speaking to me in his dressing room at Birmingham Town Hall in the afternoon of a wonderful sold out show on his recent UK tour, he says it feels different doing what he does today, as it did when he first started. “I remember being more conscious of wanting to make a mark, wanting to get on the map, to be written about. That has happened on its own, and I am no longer chasing recognition. That’s the big difference.” “I am really gratified I have that place in people’s minds and hearts, somebody they really enjoy and follow. No longer striving in the way I was. Relaxed more about it. It’s not about making a name for myself, but more about satisfying myself and my fans’ expectation.” He starts recording a new album in August with Michael Jerome Brown, “a wonderful roots guitarist,” and Jean Jacques (JJ) Milteau on a stripped back acoustic album, without drums. “Sort of like Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee with an extra guitar player. Going back to that country blues that has been at the foundation of what I have been doing.” Aiming for a spring 2017 release. As one of the few artists to keep traditional blues, country blues and real American folk music alive, is it harder to reach new audiences, especially younger people? “There’s an increased interest in Americana, in blues, picking up with younger bands. A lot of younger players, in their 20s, are starting to discover who I am; a lot of that through YouTube. I have managed to stay current without changing direction.” Eric has championed the music of Lead Belly and Bukka White (aka Booker T. Washington and Booker White), among other blues and roots pioneers. He released Booker’s Guitar, in January 2010, playing the Delta master’s original guitar on the album. Last year he released ERIC BIBB & JJ MILTEAU: LEAD BELLY’S GOLD, and gave a show stopping performance at Lead Belly Fest at the Royal Albert Hall in London. “Both artists I was aware of early in my journey. Lead Belly was there from the very first. I heard covers of his songs before I heard him. He died two years before I was born. People who my family knew, had met Lead Belly, inc Pete Seeger who I met.” “Bukka White; someone in Newcastle in the UK inherited his guitar, as he was a friend of Bukka’s. In gratitude for the support he had given him through the years, before he died he shipped his guitar to UK as a gift. He has been guardian and caretaker of that wonderful Duolin guitar for years.It may end up in a museum. I still have access to it if I want to record with it. Holding the man’s guitar; it was an amazing gift to me, sealing my link to these other generational guys who I admire.” “I grew up in New York City, in the suburbs then Manhattan, in an upper middle class family who took me to Europe at 12. Mine was a whole different experience to Bukka White, but none the less that music hit me hard as a teenager.My link to that music has only got stronger through the years, which tells me it’s a kind of destiny thing and this is what I am supposed to be doing.” “I can imagine somehow the spirit of these ladies and gentlemen who I have admired from an earlier time, would be somehow aware I am gratifying the enduring popularity of their music and happy a guy like me chose to carry their flag. Not only by playing their songs, but by writing new material
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