I saw the original Paul Butterfield Blues Band in Detroit, 1966 or 67 at
a no age limit folk and blues club called the Chessmate in Detroit
Michigan, and this was an event that changed my life forever. I bought
my first harmonica soon afterward and have been playing ever since.
Detroit is a fantastic town for Black music, with lots of soul, blues,
jazz and rock and roll, and the exposure to these kinds of music at an
early age influenced my harmonica playing. I listened to saxophone
players like Coltrane and Sonny Stitt and Coleman Hawkins, I listened to
guitarists like Johnny Winter, Clapton, John McLaughlin and Larry
Coryell, I listened to harmonica players like Butterfield, Musselwhite,
James Cotton, Sonny Boy Williams, Norton Buffalo, but mostly I just
played all the time, all the time, with bands, played to records, played
alone, all the time. I played until my lips bled, literally. My parents
thought I was eccentrc . I didn't care. I play everyday.
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I played even
at my worst drinking; i have been sober now nearly t wenty five years. I
am now trying to figure out the way I play so i can do some instruction
videos. I play entirely by ear and really have no idea how to convey my
style to others. I would love to read or hear someone describe what is I
do. I thank all of you for listening to me and your kind words.
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only harmonica players I studied closely and made a concentrated
attempt to sound like, ie copy, are Paul Butterfield and Charlie
Musselwhite. Butterfield and Musselwhite were the first guys to
introduce me to blues harmonica playing and elements of their
respective styles remain in my own style 46 years later. What really
helped me, though, was just listening to virtually anything I could get
my hands on; in my case it was an ongoing obsession with guitar players.
In fact, I picked up harmonica because I couldn;t learn how to play
fast like Alvin Lee or Johnny Winter fast enough--I was just all thumbs
and no patience. But it was with the harmonica that I found a voice, my
voice, and it was with the harmonica that I found myself being able to
duplicate riffs and effects from harmonica players and from a good
number of guitarists and, especially, many, many jazz musicians, like
Coltrane, Bird, Coleman Hawkins. This is not to say that I sound
anything like the jazz musicians I just mentioned--their techniques and
their vocabulary are certainly more sophisticated than what I currently
have--but the point is that giving these guys hard, concentrated listens
influenced my sense of phrasing, gave me ideas and notions as to how to
skip around during an improvisation and not merely rattle off scales,
how to be precise in executing my ideas, in how and where to bend, to
slur, to insert chord textures, trills, triplets, octaves. I do tell
others who are learning their craft to listen to as much music as they
possibly can and to learn as many different styles as possible, to learn
riffs from blues, country, swing, classical and to mix them all up, and
to practice, practice, practice and after that, practice some more. And
more after that. I place maximum emphasis on practice and playing in live situations
because for me this is the most effective means of sloughing the most
copy-cat aspects of your influences and moves you toward your own style.Having never had a lesson, having never learned music theory, having never learned to read nor write music, how I learned was by an obsessive preoccupation with listening closely to harmonica players, rock guitarists and jazz improvisors by the score and woodshedding for hours for decades on end. It's always been a one day at a time thing. Everyday in every way I get just a little bit better. On good days I even myself when I say it.