| Talkin' Music With Tinsley Ellis |
| Written by Mike Tobin | |||
| Thursday, 12 January 2012 04:23 | |||
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Times Square (TS): What made you want to be a musician? Tinsley Ellis (TE): I saw the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan show in 1964, and I begged my parents for a guitar. I’ve been playing music ever since. I was about six or seven years old. TS: So why did you go down the blues route, as oppose to rock and roll or jazz, or any other genre? TE: Well, the Beatles got me into the British invasion music, but then the Rolling Stones, The Animals, and The Yardbirds all had the same thing in common. They were all doing the Muddy Waters/Howlin Wolf/BB King thing. Then I went to see BB King when he was playing at a hotel lounge in North Miami Beach (I grew up in South Florida). He was playing there for a week and he did a teen show, which meant they shut the bar down and sold soda pop and stuff like that. He stood in the lobby and greeted all the kids. I was about fourteen at the time and it just knocked me out. And it wasn’t the BB King that had U2 fame with “When Love Comes To Town” or anything like that. It was a BB King that was playing weeks at a time with more of a stripped down band; he didn’t have an orchestra, he had maybe a six or seven piece band. He even broke a guitar string and gave it to me. I kept it in remembrance of my blues baptism. Since then we’ve done a lot of concerts opening for him. He’s always very nice to me. I guess that’s what brings us to BB Kings in New York City. TS: You’re playing at his namesake bar on January 30th. What are your thoughts on the New York blues scene? TE: Well, we’ve done a lot of blues concerts in New York City, all the way back to 1983, when I played at the Lone Star café. It was a legendary place where Stevie Ray Vaughan made his debut, and it was a great hangout in the early eighties. Then we worked our way up and played all the big nightclubs like the Beacon Theatre with John Lee Hooker and Buddy Guy – that was a great show. Anyway, this (playing New York City) is an opportunity to further the blues tradition, and we have so many friends and fans there, so we look forward to seeing them at the concert. TS: Who comes out to Tinsley Ellis show? TE: Guitar players, primarily, and also just blues fans. TS: Do you take the time to talk to the crowd after a show? TE: We’re all very accessible and approachable. It’s a business model and a personal model that I got from BB King after he hung out with us kids after his concert and signed autographs. There may be rock stars that hang in the back room after the show, but that’s not us. TS: Let’s shift gears and talk about songwriting. What comes first – music or lyrics? TE: Music always comes first. A lot of times I’ll write after listening to something else that I really like, and want to write something similar. But the hard part is the lyrics. If I don’t put lyrics to a song that right after I write the music, the song probably won’t get finished. It all has to come together at once. Very rarely have I waited to for lyrics to come. When I do write lyrics, it’s all over the map. I don’t write about politics, because there’s enough of that out there. I sing a lot about relationships. Some of it’s dark, some of it’s light. Tom Dowd taught me to open my albums with positive songs, and so I do that. TS: Tell me about your latest album, Speak No Evil? I’ve heard the old saying, but why make it the album title? TS: A friend of mine is a music teacher in Atlanta, and I noticed this title in a book of jazz charts. TS: Sure, the Wayne Shorter tune. TE: Exactly. It just sounded like it could be the name of a great blues song. So I wrote it for Guitar Shorty, who was going to record it for his album. When he didn’t record it, my label suggested that I should. Then it became the title of the album. TS: Alright Tinsley, one last broad question. What does music mean to you? TE: (pause) Music is and always needs to be a conversation.
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