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A Cultural Imperative
By Harvey Pekar
DECEMBER 21, 1998:
Though considered a small independent label, Chicago's Delmark Records has produced
hundreds of LPs and CDs over the past five decades. Their catalog contains a variety
of albums, mostly blues, both acoustic and electric, and jazz, ranging from the boogie
woogie piano of Speckled Red to the New Orleans style of George Lewis to bop and
post-bop to AACM avant-garde. Delmark has also purchased and re-released great material
from other labels, including Apollo, which recorded Coleman Hawkins with Dizzy Gillespie
doing some of his first fully evolved bop trumpet playing, United, which provided
some great efforts by the criminally neglected alto saxophonist Tab Smith, and Transition,
which had some great Sun Ra in their vaults.
Delmark's output mirrors the broad musical interests of owner Bob Koester who founded
the label in 1953 while a student at St. Louis University; the company was originally
called Delmar, after a street in that city. Initially, Koester was a fan of blues
and traditional jazz, his first recording project being the Dixieland Windy City
Six. More significant was the material he cut with Speckled Red (Rufus Perryman),
who cut the classic The Dirty Dozen in 1929 and was living and working day
jobs and playing in bars at night. Perryman had dropped out of the national spotlight,
but Koester located him with the aid of jazz-loving local policeman Charlie O'Brien
in 1954 and subsequently captured him on wax. Success in this project and a few others
whet Koester's appetite, and he devoted an increasing amount of time to record production
as well as record sales via mail order and through a store front.
During Koester's stay in St. Louis, he met a number of local musicians who later
appeared on his label: Bob Graf, a veteran of Woody Herman's band; another Mound
City tenor saxophonist, Jimmy Forrest, who played with Andy Kirk and had a big R&B
hit with "Night Train," cut a jazz LP with Elvin Jones and the then-unknown
guitarist Grant Green; alto saxman Chris Woods, another fine St. Louis cat, never
made a national name, but happily Koester issued stuff by him. Big Joe Williams was
yet another major St. Louis-based bluesman that Koester recorded.
In 1958, Koester moved his operation to Chicago, where he bought Seymour's Jazz
Record Mart, which eventually became known as the Jazz Record Mart, one of the most
well-known retail jazz record stores in the nation. Koester followed the example
of labels like Musicraft, Keynote, and Commodore, which also owned retail stores,
and understood that one enterprise could support the other during lean times. Once
settled, Koester documented the music scene in Chicago as he had in St. Louis.
The mainstream jazz movement at that time was post-bop. Among the local post-boppers
to appear on Delmark were multi-instrumentalist Ira Sullivan, highly regarded in
Chitown and also briefly a member of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. The great tenorman
Johnnie Griffin appeared on one of Sullivan's albums, the promising saxophonist Nicky
Hill on another. Other Delmark post-bop LPs were cut by Chicago pianists John Young
and Jodie Christian, and guitarist George Freeman, with his "legendary"
brother Von on tenor. Koester has also put stuff out by internationally famed boppers
and post-boppers Sonny Stitt, Bud Powell, Donald Byrd, and Wynton Kelly.
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Since it was founded, Delmark's commitment to pre-bop forms of jazz hasn't wavered.
Koester has issued albums by New Orleans clarinetist Alfred Nicholas, Barney Bigard,
another wonderful New Orleans clarinetist who gained fame with Duke Ellington, pre-Louis
Armstrong New Orleans trumpeter Bunk Johnson, and a number of local traditional bands.
Early jazz and blues piano stylists who did albums for Delmark include Roosevelt
Sykes, Little Brother Montgomery, Sunnyland Slim, Memphis Slim and Curtis Jones,
as well as the magnificent Earl Hines. Just recently the label put out an important
Albert Ammons boogie woogie CD with Pete Johnson and Meade Lux Lewis containing rare
and previously unreleased selections. There's little doubt, however, that the strongest
part of Delmark's jazz catalog is the avant-garde material cut in the late Sixties
and Seventies.
At that time, Chicago's AACM (Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians)
had a leading role on the cutting edge of jazz. The free jazz movement began around
1960, when the recordings of Ornette Coleman began having an impact. Initially, many
free jazz recordings, on which improvisation was not based on pre-set foundations
such as chord progressions, could get monotonous and repetitive. AACM members, however,
began bringing new structures to free jazz. Anthony Braxton didn't go back to playing
"I Got Rhythm" and blues changes, but placed a new emphasis on composition
and not letting performances get out of hand; his composing was quite influential.
The Art Ensemble of Chicago, containing trumpeter Lester Bowie and woodwind players
Joseph Jarman and Roscoe Mitchell, mixed their music with theatrical elements. Koester
recorded them all, as well as other new artists like Muhal Richard Abrams and Kalaparusha
Maurice McIntyre, who had an impact internationally.
It seems strange that Koester, who was such a big fan of traditional jazz, would
record so much experimental stuff, but his explanation for why he did it is quite
candid.
"That was pretty much a business decision," he says. "I knew that
every era had its own developments in jazz. I couldn't record Louis and Jelly [Roll
Morton], one was dead and the other was beyond my means. Delmark's equivalent to
Armstrong's King Oliver work is the AACM recordings. I didn't feel it was better,
because it was new, but I didn't think it was worse either just because it was different."
Koester credits some associates of his with helping persuade him to record the
AACM.
"Chuck Nessa moved to Chicago in 1966 to manage the store," recalls
Koester. "He, Terry Martin, John Litweiller, and Jerry Figi served on the unpaid
advisory board that encouraged me to record the new AACM jazz, which was seriously
over my head. At a time when the blues albums paid their own way, it wasn't the obvious
move, but I sensed a cultural imperative."
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Delmark's blues catalog may be even more significant than its jazz recordings. Blues
came up the Mississippi in the Twenties to Chicago, but it wasn't until the Forties
that the city became the center of intense innovation in the form. T-Bone Walker
had gained much popularity with his blues guitar playing, and following his example,
Chicago bluesmen switched to the electric guitar. Another characteristic of the Chicago
blues sound was the amplified harmonica style perfected by Little Walter Jacobs by
cupping the instrument in his hands along with a microphone. Chess recorded many
examples of outstanding post-war Chicago blues in the Forties and Fifties by artists
including Little Walter and Muddy Waters.
During the Sixties, though, as the music continued to evolve, Delmark became arguably
the major blues label. The company issued recordings by Magic Sam, Jimmy Dawkins,
Otis Rush, and Luther Allison, all of whom played more complex, jazz-like solos than
most blues guitarists of earlier decades. Magic Sam, also a superb singer who exhibited
some gospel influence, made a couple of magnificent Delmark recordings, West Side
Soul and Black Magic. Harmonica man Junior Wells cut a memorable LP, South
Side Soul, with another guitar great, Buddy Guy, and Otis Spann, considered by
some to be the premier post-war blues pianist. Another top harmonica man, Carey Bell,
who does some unique single-note line work, also recorded for Koester.
Rural blues styles are also a specialty of Delmark. In addition to Big Joe Williams,
Koester has issued albums by Sleepy John Estes, mandolinist Yank Rachell, and Arthur
"Big Boy" Crudup. The outstanding blues shouter Eddie "Cleanhead"
Vincent, who came to the fore with Cootie Williams' big band, can be heard on Delmark's
Kidney Stew Is Fine.
Koester continues to issue albums by young jazz and blues artists, though some
are revivalist or retro performers. Happily, he's still steadily reissuing his earlier
material on CD. The latest batch contains three albums he originally produced and
five CDs full of material he acquired, mostly stuff originally issued on United,
a black-owned label that operated from 1951-57. Mandolin Blues by Yank Rachell
reunites the mandolinist with some of his associates from the Twenties and Thirties:
nine-string guitarist Big Joe Williams, guitarist Estes, and harmonica player Hammie
Nixon. Cut in 1963, it finds the veteran performers still full of vigor; they're
joined on some tracks by an up-and-coming youngster, Mike Bloomfield.
Fast Fingers, cut in 1968-69, was Jimmy Dawkins' first album and may be
his best. He's joined by a stellar cast including guitarist Mighty Joe Young, tenorman
Eddie Shaw, and pianist Lafayette Leake. Dawkins' technically impressive guitar work
and somber vocals stand out. Mighty Joe Young and Dawkins also appear together on
Blues With a Touch of Soul, but here Young's the leader. A solid, creative
performer, he was an important figure in the Chicago blues scene from the Fifties
through the Seventies, and was well-admired by other musicians, including Dawkins,
who called him Chicago's best guitarist. This CD is a reissue of his first LP, cut
in 1970. If you're a serious electric blues collector, you'll want to have it.
Bricks in My Pillow by Robert Nighthawk contains recordings from United's
first session in 1951. Nighthawk played all over the South as well as in St. Louis
and Chicago, and he was one of the great slide guitarists, as this CD indicates,
influencing the playing of Elmore James, Muddy Waters, and Earl Hooker. Blues
Hit Big Town is just as good, featuring the first recorded efforts by harmonica
player Junior Wells, who replaced Little Walter with Muddy Waters and went on to
become one of the most popular blues artists of the past few decades. Cut in 1953-54,
these recordings have work on them by Elmore James, pianist Otis Spann, and bassist
Willie Dixon -- quite a lineup. These are classic Chicago blues performances, featuring
Wells' hard-bitten vocals, strong harp playing, and excellent group interplay.
Doug Engel, Delmark's director of publicity, says these kind of reissues are the
label's strong point.
"Delmark tends to be more of a catalog-oriented label," he explains.
"We're not attempting to make hit records. We want to make records that sound
good to us by artists that we like. We consider ourselves art dealers in that we
make records that may not be appreciated instantly, but over time their value will
be revealed."
Delmark has been around for 45 years, and has just issued a 2-CD anthology drawn
from its catalog, Forty Five Years of Jazz and Blues. Koester's longevity
as an independent record producer is amazing. Small labels like Delmark are vitally
important in today's music scene, because they put out work by unknown artists that
the big labels won't risk taking a risk on. In the process, they've discovered a
huge number of outstanding singers and instrumentalists, who, ironically, often leave
them when they develop a degree of popularity. That must be a kick in the teeth for
guys like Koester, but they know it's inevitable and keep on keepin' on, constantly
on the lookout for new talent. These are the guys that need to be honored at Grammy
presentations.

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