ORIGINALLY POSTED ON STRAIGHT.COM, APRIL 24, 2013
By Steve Newton
When music legend Taj Mahal calls from a tour stop in Phoenix, it’s been just a few days since he played Eric Clapton’s Crossroads Guitar Festival at Madison Square Garden in New York. He’d been asked to play the event before, and never had the time, but this time around he took Slowhand up on his request. The two blues greats go back quite a ways.
“We played a lot over the years,” says Mahal. “When he was first out, actually back in the Disraeli Gears years, we were opening for [Cream] when they came through on their big tours of California. And then when we played on the [Rolling Stones] Rock and Roll Circus he was playing in John Lennon’s Dirty Mac band, and I met him.
“Over the years I’ve heard his music,” he adds, “and he’s always been a strong supporter of the blues, you know. He’s done a lot to create general interest in it around the world.”
Mahal—who also plays on Clapton’s latest album, Old Sock—didn’t actually trade licks with him at the Crossroads Fest, but he did sit in with the Allman Brothers on Blind Willie McTell’s “Statesboro Blues”, which is cool for a couple of reasons. First off, it’s the song that—after Mahal recorded it on his self-titled debut album of 1968—first inspired Duane Allman to pick up slide guitar.
It’s also the lead-off track on the earliest album included in the new 15-disc Taj Mahal boxed set, The Complete Columbia Albums Collection. Rising Sons Featuring Taj Mahal and Ry Cooder opens with ”Statesboro Blues”, and also includes versions of timeless blues gems by Robert Johnson (“Dust My Broom”), Reverend Gary Davis (“Candy Man”), and Sleepy John Estes (“Diving Duck Blues”).
“That’s when we were all workin’ to try to take those songs and make them palatable to an audience that didn’t have any idea what the raw stuff sounded like,” recalls Mahal.
The Rising Sons album was the first recording he and Cooder had ever made, together or separately, and though its tracks were laid down back in 1965 and ’66, it didn’t see the light of day until Sony Music’s catalogue division, Legacy Recordings, released it in ’92.
“The record company didn’t know what to do,” Mahal explains. “And then eventually somebody said, ‘You know, this guy’s actually been around for a long time! He’s not going away. He’s not dying of an overdose, he didn’t drive his car off a cliff.’ No, I wasn’t about that.”
Speaking of overdosing, Mahal’s former guitarist Jesse Ed Davis—whose playing on the Taj Mahal album so hugely influenced Duane Allman—did just that back in 1988. But his tragic passing at the age of 43 didn’t shock his former frontman.
“I was always worried because he tended to push things pretty hard sometimes,” remembers Mahal. “But I wasn’t so much shocked as I was pissed off. I really was. It was like ‘There goes another incredible talent’, you know?
“Maybe somebody’ll come along and really hear his sound and get it,” he adds, “but there really wasn’t but the one guy that played like that. I’ve been very fortunate to have recorded him at the time when he had everything working for him. And it worked for me.”
Davis joined Mahal after the Rising Sons broke up and played on his first three albums—Taj Mahal, The Natch’l Blues (also from ’68) and the ’69 double album Giant Step/De Ole Folks at Home—all of which are included on the boxed set. As well as blues standards, those early discs feature a lot of Mahal’s arrangements of traditional folk and country songs.
“I enjoy music wherever it’s coming from,” he relates. “I don’t care if it’s somebody else’s song. Most of the time you’ll find that I’ll put my own stamp on it. But I started writing more because, you know, it’s easy to regurgitate what somebody else is doing, but it’s exciting to be able to come up with your own writing.”
Mahal has experienced a multitude of amazing artists during his 70 years on Earth. (As he puts it, “I’m old enough to chew my peas and corn without choking.”) But when asked to choose his favourite musical moment, he doesn’t hesitate for too long.
“If what you’re talking about is seeing someone perform, then I’ll have to say that in the rhythm-and-blues side of things, seein’ Otis Redding live was it, you know? The Rising Sons opened for Otis for a whole week when he recorded Live on the Sunset Strip. I’ve seen a lot of players, and I’ve seen a lot of performers, but I never saw nobody like that. No-body.
“Yet.”
To hear the full audio of my 2001 interview with Taj Mahal subscribe to my Patreon page, where you can eavesdrop on nearly 300 of my uncut, one-on-one conversations with:
Dave Martone, 2020
Ian Gillan of Deep Purple, 2006
Joss Stone, 2012
Glenn Tipton of Judas Priest, 2005
Jack Blades of Night Ranger, 1984
Vivian Campbell of Def Leppard, 1992
Colin James, 1995
Kim Simmonds of Savoy Brown, 1998
Tom Cochrane of Red Rider, 1983
Ed Roland of Collective Soul, 1995
Taj Mahal, 2001
Tom Wilson of Junkhouse, 1995
Mike McCready of Pearl Jam, 2003
David Lindley, 2002
Marty Friedman of Megadeth, 1991
John Hiatt, 2010
Nancy Wilson of Heart, 2006
Jeff Golub, 1989
Moe Berg of the Pursuit of Happiness, 1990
Todd Rundgren, 2006
Chad Kroeger of Nickelback, 2001
Steve Earle, 1987
Gabby Gaborno of the Cadillac Tramps, 1991
Terry Bozzio, 2003
Roger Glover, 1985
Matthew Sweet, 1995
Jim McCarty of the Yardbirds, 2003
Luther Dickinson of North Mississippi Allstars, 2001
John Rzeznik of the Goo Goo Dolls, 1995
Steve Hackett from Genesis, 1993
Grace Potter, 2008
Buddy Guy, 1993
Trevor Rabin of Yes, 1984
Albert Lee, 1986
Yngwie Malmsteen, 1985
Robert Cray, 1996
Tony Carey, 1984
Ian Hunter, 1988
Kate Bush, 1985
Jeff Healey, 1988
Richie Sambora of Bon Jovi, 1993
Colin Linden, 1993
Kenny Wayne Shepherd, 1995
Justin Hayward of the Moody Blues, 1986
Elliot Easton from the Cars, 1996
Wayne Kramer from the MC5, 2004
Bob Rock, 1992
Nick Gilder, 1985
Roy Buchanan, 1988
Klaus Meine of Scorpions, 1988
Jason Bonham, 1989
Tom Johnston of the Doobie Brothers, 1991
Joey Spampinato of NRBQ, 1985
Patterson Hood of the Drive-By Truckers, 2003
Andy Powell of Wishbone Ash, 2003
Steve Kilbey of the Church, 1990
Johnette Napolitano of Concrete Blonde, 1990
Dan McCafferty of Nazareth, 1984
Davy Knowles of Back Door Slam, 2007
Jimmy Barnes from Cold Chisel, 1986
Steve Stevens of Atomic Playboys, 1989
Billy Idol, 1984
Stuart Adamson of Big Country, 1993
Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull, 1992
Warren Haynes of Gov’t Mule, 1998
John Bell of Widespread Panic, 1992
Robben Ford, 1993
Barry Hay of Golden Earring, 1984
Jason Isbell, 2007
Joe Satriani, 1990
Brad Delp of Boston, 1988
John Sykes of Blue Murder, 1989
Dave Mustaine of Megadeth, 1998
Alice Cooper, 1986
Lars Ulrich of Metallica, 1985
Shannon Hoon of Blind Melon, 1992
Myles Goodwyn of April Wine, 2001
John Mellencamp, 1999
Mike Campbell of Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, 1999
Kenny Aronoff, 1999
Jon Bon Jovi, 1986
Dickey Betts of the Allman Brothers, 1992
Little Steven, 1987
Stevie Salas, 1990
J.J. Cale, 2009
Joe Bonamassa, 2011
…with hundreds more to come