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Mick Martin and the Blues Rockers



Last Updated: 1/1/2010

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Status: Single
City: Sacramento
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 10/25/2005

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Friday, January 01, 2010 

Current mood:  vibrant
Category: Music
Living Blues Top 25 -- Mick Martin's Blues Party -- December 2010

1. Laurie Morvan/Fire It Up/Screaming Lizard Records

2. Zora Young/The French Connection/Delmark Records

3. Bryan Lee/My Lady Don t Love My Lady/Justin Time

4. Eugene Hideaway Bridges/Live in San Antonio/Armadillo Records

5. Shaun Murphy/Livin  the Blues/Vision Wall

6. Long John Hunter/Looking for a Party/Blues Express

7. Hamilton Loomis/Live in Europe/Ham-Bone Records

8. David Gerard/Hell and Back/David Gerard Productions

9. Sean Chambers/Ten Til Midnight/Bluesbeat Records

10. Boo Boo Davis/Ain t Gotta Dime/Crossroads Record

11. Ian Siegal/Broadside/Nugene Records

12. David Maxwell & Louisiana Red/You Got to Move/Vizztone Records

13. Debbie Davies/Holding Court/Vizztone Records

14. Quintus McCormick/Hey Jodie!/Delmark Records

15. Mac Arnold & Plate Full O Blues/Vizztone Records

16. Cash Box Kings/Cuttin  Heads/Blue Midnight Records

17. Sandy Mack/Still Going Strong/Blue Leaf Records

18. Murali Coryell/Sugar Lips/Murali s Music Records

19. Pete Anderson/Even Things Up/Little Dog Records

20. Ronny Sessum - Funk'n Blues Man - Blues Destiny Records 

21. Will Tucker/Stealin  the Soul/Will Tucker Music

22. Coco Montoya/Essential/Blind Pig Records

23. Todd Wolfe Band/Stripped Down at the Bang Palace/Blue Leaf Records

24. Billy Lavender/Memphis Livin /55 Productions

25. Julius Pittman & the Revival/Bucket List/Marco

Submitted by Mick Martin, host/producer of "Mick Martin's Blues Party" 1-5 p.m. Saturdays on 90.9 FM KXJZ Sacramento, 90.5 FM KKTO Tahoe City/Reno, 91.3 FM KUOP Stockton/Modesto, 88.1 FM KQNC, Quincy and www.capradio.org. Mick Martin, the Blues Party, 3912 Little Rock Drive, Antelope CA 95843; (916) 348-1955
Thursday, December 03, 2009 
Wednesday, November 25, 2009 

Introduction
Mick Martin has played blues harmonica professionally since 1968 and, since 1983, led "Mick Martin and the Blues Rockers." On March 31, 1994, Mick did something highly unusual for a harmonica player: he performed at Carnegie Hall for the nationally-broadcast "Blues in Jazz" concert with mentor Jimmy Smith, Jimmy Witherspoon, Grover Washington Jr., Carrie Smith and Mark Whitfield. That same year, he was featured on Jimmy Smith's Fantasy/Milestone Records release, Sum Serious Blues. Mick has played harmonica on stage behind Freddie King, Jimmy Rogers, Bo Diddley, Mick Taylor, the Yardbirds, Roy Brown and many others. He is a featured artist on Dig Music's Bob Dylan tribute, "Positively 12th & K," which also features Sal Valentino and Jackie Greene.

Mick shared the “Best West Coast Blues Harmonica Player” nod with Mark Hummel in 2001. Mick Martin and the Blues Rockers have won the Sacramento Area Music Award (a.k.a. the SAMMIES) for “Best Blues Band” three times, thus entitling them to a place in the SAMMIES Hall of Fame.

Mick has been producing and hosting the Blues for over 20 years, beginning with "The KZAP Blues Show" in August of 1989. He joined the staff of KXJZ in July 1991 to create "Mick Martin's Blues Party."  

 Information taken from the Bands website

Welcome to my show, well Blog. Thank you for taking the time to speak with us. I am glad to return the favor you did for us. You host a show on the radio called Mick Martin’s Blues Party and you aired my former bands first CD on that show back in 2005.  I remember taking my boom box with me to work and threatening the whole job site to be quiet when you first aired my band on your show. Its funny how just hearing yourself for the first time on the radio is so special. Even though you’ve already performed the tune live so many times you don’t even like it anymore! It was really cool too because friends all over the state called me to say they just heard my band on the radio. We first met briefly at a gig in Lodi California where we performed at an event together. Since then we have met a few other times. You were very nice and even remembered my name which blew me away! I think we were at Blues on the river in 2006. We were on the side stage watching Shane Dwight. You looked over at me and said, “We gonna act like we don’t know each other?”  I said ah...well, I know who you are but you might have me confused with someone else.  You said I know who you are! I said I really doubt it, I am nobody! You laughed and said, “You’re Big Wayne and you play trumpet with Highway 61 Blues Band!”

 We only performed together two or three times and very briefly met! That was so cool! A photographer happened to be there and he took a shot of us talking and then you went on to perform.  A great show I might add!

So Mick, how did it all begin? What made you choose and want to learn to play Harmonica?

I was in a band in my teens and one of the guitar players brought in a harmonica. I think he had learned “Little Child” by the Beatles. For some reason that made me angry – that he could play two instruments and I couldn’t play any. So I bought a harp and learned the solo on “You’re Gonna Miss Me” by the 13th Floor Elevators. Then I heard “Little Red Rooster” by the Rolling Stones and fell in love with the blues. I looked on the LP to find  the songwriter’s name and saw “Willie Dixon.” So I went out looking for more albums with songs by him. I found “The Best of Muddy Waters,” “Howlin’ Wolf (also known as the “Rockin’ Chair” album) and “More Real Folk Blues” by Sonny Boy Williamson. Once I heard Sonny Boy, I knew I had to learn to play the harmonica right, but I wasn’t able to get that beautiful tone and almost gave up.

What encouraged you to continue on to become proficient on Harmonica.

When the first “Paul Butterfield Blues Band” LP came out, I knew “white boys could play the blues.” Before Butterfield’s record, and shortly after, Charlie Musselwhite’s “Stand Back” LP, all I heard were the British guys, who didn’t quite get the playing right. Brian Jones (of the Rolling Stones), Keith Relf (of the Yardbirds) and Ray Davies (the Kinks) sounded sloppy compared with Sonny Boy, the Wolf and the guy I heard on the Muddy Waters album (who turned out to be Little Walter Jacobs, of course). Paul Jones (Manfred Mann) was the closest thing to a real harp player of the “Caucasian persuasion” I had heard up to the point of discovering Butterfield , Musselwhite, Rod Piazza (with the Dirty Blues Band at the time) and Alan “Blind Owl” Wilson of Canned Heat. Once I heard them, I knew I had to knuckle down and do it right. I was 16 and, by the time I was nearly 50, I finally was able to play what I heard in my head.

Was your family or anyone in your family musically talented?

My mom and dad used to sing at piano bars. For my 12th birthday, I asked to join them for one night and was allowed to play maracas with an organist named Clyde Derby. I was a Jimmy Smith fanatic, so I was in heaven, even though Derby was pretty much an “easy listening” artist. So my folks sang, especially my mother. My cousin, Steve Peterson (the son of my father’s sister), is a singer, songwriter and pianist who has toured the country and made recordings, but it wasn’t until our generation that anyone in my family went on stage or into the studio.

What were the early years like when you were starting out onto the local music scene?

At first, we played teen centers; places set up by churches in the Sacramento area where bands could play and teens could hang out under supervised conditions. Of course, we played high school dances when we could get them. Then the “Summer of Love” hit and we had a place in Sacramento called the Sound Factory, our own local version of the Fillmore Auditorium and the Avalon Ballroom. I did anything they needed: swept up, took tickets, ran errands for the artists (most memorably for Muddy Waters and James Cotton), whatever they needed. That was where I played my first professional gig in 1968 as a last-minute addition to a band from Davis called Wake Forest. I walked in during their rehearsal – I was there as often as possible during the week as well as weekends-- and the manager, Whitey Davis said, “Go get your harmonicas. This band needs a lead singer.” So, after that one rehearsal, we opened up for Pink Floyd that weekend. Our name isn’t on the poster, but we were there in front of a packed house. I can still see the lights over the tops of the heads of the members of the audience as I sang and played Sonny Boy’s “Help Me.”After the band broke up, Whitey set up an after-the-sets jam session as, believe it or not, a favor to me, and one night I jammed with the Peter Green version of Fleetwood Mac. Whitey had me form another band called The Mick (he named it, not me) and we opened up for Savoy Brown, the Son of Champlin, the Family Tree from Stockton and other Bay area bands you probably wouldn’t know. It was a great time in my life. When the Sound Factory closed – the last show was us with Savoy Brown – I kept playing. With my best-known bands of the period, Timothygrass and Joshua, we played many free concerts in William Land Park and Carmichael Park, Freeborn Hall at UC Davis and anywhere we could get a booking – usually playing for free. We mixed blues with originals, just as Mick Martin & the Blues Rockers do today.

How has the Local Blues scene changed through the years?

When we were old enough to play bars, I found myself in a cover band, which I found profoundly unsatisfying. So I found some kindred spirits and we evolved into Smith, Martin & Shaw, which had a local “hit” with Jim Shaw’s bluesy “Oh, the Road.” When the band split in two directions, I ended up in Mick Martin & the Orion Express, which also had FM success with “Hey Mama.” We later released two LPs, “Orion Express” (1974) and “Prisoner of the Sky” (1979). As long as it was original music, I felt comfortable playing rock, but I never truly strayed from the blues at nightclubs like the Shire Road Pub, the Oasis Ballroom/Crabshaw Corners, Slick Willy’s, C Street North and others. When the original Shire Road Pub burned down in 1977, I gave up music – for two years. I kept stopping and starting over. Disco has brought the original music scene to a dead halt in the ‘80s and then the blues came back full force because of Stevie Ray Vaughan and Phil Givant’s Sacramento Blues Festival , which I was fortunate to play from 1983 to 1993 with Mick Martin and the All Stars. The All-Stars turned into the Blues Rockers in 1984, and started off pretty much with members of Smith, Martin & Shaw. Before the Torch Club became the dominant downtown blues club in Sacramento, the best blues bands played at Sam’s Hof Brau. It was there that Johnny Heartsman reigned supreme as the godfather of Sacramento blues. If you could get into Sam’s, you’d made it. We finally got in after being rejected over and over again. Then they got a new manager, Bob McCook, and we had to prove ourselves all over again …  In Folsom, the Sutter Street Saloon emerged and a kind phone call from Norton Buffalo to owner Kirby Jones got us into the  mix that included Elvin Bishop, Cold Blood, Charlie Musselwhite, Little Charlie & the Nightcats, the Fabulous Flames and other top bands.

What challenges did you encounter or still encounter?

The recent economic crisis has had a negative impact on the music business, but it seems to be recovering. If it weren’t for help from drummer Bruce Pressley and guitarist Obie Dee, I would probably have give up booking and promoting the band. It is the hardest part of keeping your music out there, since few musicians really want to deal with that kind of thing and the so-called leader ends up with the responsibility.. After 18-plus CDs, three European tours and, most recently, playing Woodstock’s 40th Anniversary West Fest as part of Harvey Mandel’s SnakeCrew, I still find that something comes along to inspire me to stay in the game get back on the phone to book gigs. When people ask us how much we charge per hour, I always laugh, telling them the music is free; it’s the loading and unloading of equipment, setting up and driving to the gigs that they’re really paying us for.

Mick, you have played harmonica on stage behind Freddie King, Jimmy Rogers, Bo Diddley, Mick Taylor, the Yardbirds, Roy Brown to name a few. At the time did it feel like you were making a part of music history. Did it feel special at the time?

No, not really. It was just an incredible honor. I remember being so blessed out having backed Bo Diddley at the Sacramento Blues Festival in 1991 that I left without getting paid. (I wondered why Bo and the band looked at me so funny when I shook their hands and floated out of the concert grounds) Before I heard of having a “bucket list,” I made up a list of people I would love to play with and set out to do that. I didn’t think of it as making history, just as realizing a dream. It started when my ultimate musical hero, Jimmy Smith, moved to Sacramento in the ‘80s. This was a miracle to me. The next thing I knew I was playing harmonica with him locally, then recording a CD (“Sum Serious Blues”) with him for Fantasy Records in Los Angeles and, finally, on stage at Carnegie Hall doing the harp part on “Hobo Flats” with this amazing orchestra. This emboldened me to actively pursue sitting in with my heroes. Being in Harvey Mandel’s band is a mind-blower, as his music has always been among my favorites, In addition to being on Musselwhite’s “Stand Back” (recently selected as one of the top 100 blues albums of all time), John Mayall’s “USA Union” and “Back to the Roots,”  Canned Heat’s “Future Blues” and The Rolling Stones’ “Black and Blue,” he has made a number of classic albums as a leader, beginning with those great LPs he did for Phillips/Mercury Records. I’m truly honored to be on his latest CD, “Harvey Mandel & the SnakeCrew Live” with an amazing all-star group.

You were honored to perform on stage at Carnegie Hall for the nationally-broadcast "Blues in Jazz" concert, a rare thing for anyone, yet alone a blues harmonica player! How was the experience? 

It was breathtaking. To do that lonesome-sounding harp part at the beginning of “Hobo Flats,” then have the orchestra pick up the theme sent chills up my spine. I truly felt I had arrived, and it made up for all the concerts and festivals I might have played if I hadn’t chosen to stay home and be there for my daughter, Francesca. I kept getting in trouble, though, with the conductor, trumpet player Jon Faddis, because I kept turning around to watch Jimmy Smith play. I wanted to enjoy the show just like the audience. Playing with great musicians brings out the best in anybody, so it was deeply satisfying. Afterward, a group of us went out for drinks and jazz drummer/singer Grady Tate, another hero of mine, kept staring at me. I started to get uncomfortable after awhile, then he said “Mick Martin, you’re the party starter, man!” Coming from him, it was the highest compliment I’ve ever received..

You were on stage with some great Musicians, Jimmy Smith, Jimmy Witherspoon, Grover Washington Jr., Carrie Smith and Mark Whitfield. I could ask a lot of questions about all these cats but got to ask about Jimmy Smith. He is one of my favorite Keyboardists of all time! He really played from his heart. You say in your Bio that Jimmy Smith was one of your mentors. Can you tell us more about how he influenced you and your relationship with him?

He was like a father to me, sometimes stern but always encouraging. The first time we met at the Palms Playhouse in Davis, I gave him a hug. This shocked his band members, but I LOVED this man. He brought music alive for me with “Walk on the Wild Side,” “The Cat,” “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Wolf,” “Back at the Chicken Shack,” “Midnight Special,” “Bucket,” “I’m Movin’ On” and so many great recordings.He had that “thing,” you know? He could create such intense power then break into a groove. I still listen to him with awe. Plus,  I learned more from him in one night than I had in the in the 20-plus years of playin I’d done before he allowed me to come up on stage. The first time, I thought, “Well, I did it; I played with my number-one hero.” When he called me up a second time, I really felt I’d “made it.” Playing with him in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago and New York made me feel like I was a member of a very special fraternity.

I asked some of my readers to participate with questions to ask you:

Akarsha Kumar: Harmonica Player with Tip Of the Top Blues Band asks: I'd be interested in any advice you have for younger blues harp players today.

 

Keep playing – and learning. I’m always trying to stretch. Sitting in with Café R&B was a pretty bold move for me, since their tight, inventive arrangements don’t really leave room for harmonica, but I found a niche and it turned out to be a great experience. My young protégé (if I may call him that), Kyle Rowland, is an example of a humble but serious player who learns from everyone he plays with or hears. He’s always copping a lick here or a groove there. When I produced and arranged his new CD, “Messin’ With the Kid,” I wanted to make something he could still listen to without wincing when he was 30. I think I accomplished that, BUT the amazing thing is how much better a harmonica player he is now in the short time since we cut those songs. Recently, he sat in with James Cotton and Hubert Sumlin on “Got My Mojo Working,” and played a near-perfect 24-bar solo. It was really something to see and hear. Afterward, Kyle was kind enough to take me backstage and Hubert kept patting my leg or shoulder and saying, “Thank you for what you’ve done for us with this young man. He’s going to keep our music alive.” Does it get any better than that?

 

Aloha Henry from Hawaii Asks:

What are the difficulties involved with playing Dates/Gigs in Hawaii?

 

The cost of airplane tickets and housing are major concerns. I have friends over there, guitarist Colin John in particular. So does Bruce Pressley. It’s just the logistics and getting paid enough to not take a loss on the trip. The Blues Rockers always just barely scraped by when we went to England, Italy and Belgium. That said, I’d play in Hawaii in a heartbeat.

 

Larry Underhill asks: A couple of general-interest questions are: 1. How old were you when you started playing harp? and 2. What variety of harp do you most like to play?

1. I was a junior in high school, so I was about 15.2. I used the $2 Old Standby Hohner harmonica for songs in G and spent the extra buck on Marine Bands for everything else because they were the only harmonicas I ever saw! 

Darrell Mansfield had a question for you and here it is ''What is THE most or ''one''of the most embarrassing things you've done or said on stage?”

It was during my experience with playing at Carnegie Hall that I had my most embarrassing moments. First off, during the first two rehearsals, I became used to playing a certain length of time on “Hobo Flats.” So, during the third and final rehearsal, I stopped at the same point but the orchestra kept playing. Conductor Jon Faddis turned to me and said, “You don’t stop until I tell you to stop.” That was a big “oops.” Then, more recently, I discovered why jazz musicians were always giving me weird looks. In blues, you play two times through and then stop unless encouraged by the band leader to do a third time around. In jazz, it’s always three times around. So when I’d do two times or four times when playing with Jimmy, he always would give me a funny look and I didn’t know why. One night, I went four times and he got a look on his face that seemed to imply, “Oh, so you think you’re hot stuff.” So he kept pushing me until I played eight progressions. My face was color purple, but I made it through and the audience went wild. And, oddly enough, that was the night I learned more about playing than I ever had before. I had to top myself with each new progression. Fortunately, Jimmy was a master accompanist and would change the groove every 12 bars, so it was like having a rocket strapped to my back and crashing through 20 floors of a skyscraper. However, the absolute worst thing I ever did was when I became comfortable with just bringing my Bb harp to Carnegie to play on “Hobo Flats.” I was so dumb. On the big night, after every song on the program was played, they had a grand finale. When Jon Faddis called me out, he had to say me name twice I was so stunned. I had left my harp case back at the hotel, so I had only one harmonica. I was terrified. They went into the song and I played quietly to myself and, sure enough, it was the wrong key for cross harp. Grover Washington Jr. was finishing his solo and Faddis was eyeing me. I knew I was next. I tried one last thing and played first position, also quietly to myself. Rick Estrin had been giving me some tips on how to play Jimmy Reed style, so the first time I EVER played first position in front of an audience was at Carnegie Hall. The band members actually laughed when they heard me “tweet tweet” in the upper register, but somehow I made it through – twice. The audience gave me a big round of applause and that’s when I realized the orchestra was still playing, building a third backing progression. So I hurriedly got back on the mic. It sounds terribly amateurish to me when I listen to the “Jazz in Blues” recording of the whole show (the encore was omitted from the broadcast, fortunately), but that was the part Grady Tate liked best. So, as all musicians know, it’s your worst nights when people seem to like you or your band the best. You know, when someone says, “I felt I had nothing to live for and hen I heard your band.” That said, I can still feel that ice-cold feeling in the pit of my stomach that came as part of “my” not-so-grand finale.

Do you have any ideas or suggestions that would help bands to promote themselves?

Just keep at it. Use everything you can think of and look at what the more successful bands are doing. Try EVERYTHING!

Do you have any suggestions or requests for my website www.LiveBluesTonight.com that would help bands signed and un-signed in regards to tools and resources we could provide that would help bands and venues.

Just its existence is a help. I appreciate the exposure you’re giving me. We’re all in the same boat, so let’s try to row together. The blues is a calling, and we owe so much to the originators. Muddy Waters never said a bad word about any other artist, so I take my attitude from him. In other words, just keep doing what you’re doing!

I know your Radio show has helped my former band (Highway 61 Blues Band) and your show has attributed to countless bands and performing artists. On the behalf of all of us Thank You for all you do and especially for letting the world know about some local small bands tiptoeing on the threshold of greatness.

It’s my honor to be able to play music on the radio. I am one of the fortunate few disc jockeys who can play whomever and whatever they want, so I take that gift seriously. My goal is to support other blues musicians and to give listeners a quality, no-repeat show every Saturday.

Again thank you for taking the time to answer a few questions.

Peace….

 Big Wayne

Visit Mick on myspace...

http://www.mickmartinblues.com

Listen to Mick Martin's Blues Party
Saturdays 1-5pm for Great!
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Your Choice for NPR

KXJZ 90.9 Sacramento

·         KKTO 90.5 Tahoe City

·         KUOP 91.3 Stockton

KQNC 88.1 Quincy
Wednesday, October 28, 2009 
Last chance to sign up for Sunday blues harmonica classes in November at the Learning Exchange.
Call (916) 929-9200 and join in on the fun!

Learn blues harmonica from Mick Martin at The Learning Exchange:

After a triumphant concert appearance at Woodstock’s 40th anninversary West Fest in Golden Gate Park, Mick returns to the Learning Exchange for harmonica sessions at 111 Howe Avenue (near Hurley Way). Call (916) 929-9200 to sign up. All you need after that is a professional model "C" harmonica from Hohner or Lee Oskar (no children's harmonicas please).

The Sacramento Music Awards Hall of Fame harmonica player has a time-tested, easy-to-understand approach to the fundamentals of harmonica playing. In four easy lessons, Martin can help you sound like a seasoned player.

The 10-hole harmonica took Martin to Carnegie Hall for their "Blues in Jazz" Concert. Why not try his class and find out how much fun harmonica playing can be? In addition to appearing on the just-released “Harvey Mandel & the Snake Crew Live,” Martin has released 15 CDs on his own label, Blues Rock Records, as well as doing projects for Fantasy/Milestone Records ("Sum Serious Blues" with Jimmy Smith), DIG Music ("Tip of the Hat," a tribute to British blues), "Long Distance Call" (a tribute to Chicago Blues masters, recorded and released in Belgium), and "Good Reaction" (for the British record label, JSP).

He also hosts "Mick Martin's Blues Party" every Saturday 1-5 p.m. on 90.9 FM KXJZ Sacramento, 91.6 KUOP Stockton/Modesto and 90.5 FM KKTO Tahoe City/ Reno. Classes begin on November 1 and continue every Sunday throughout that month. Come on down and join in on the fun!

Friday, March 20, 2009 

Current mood:  blessed

1. Music has always helped me get through the tough times. I can't stop playing without going through withdrawl or searching out that exciting new CD. I close my eyes and my troubles just float away. (Example: Dennis Wilson's "Pacific Ocean Blue" 2-CD set and Brian Auger's "Live at the Baked Potato.") My wife, Diane, has put up with me for 38 years as of this September. I don't know how she did it.
2. My daughter, Francesca, is the joy of my life -- even when she's bossing me around. I'm glad I stayed in Sacramento to be there for her rather than going on the road to try to "make it" in the music business.
3. I just watched a bunch of British horror movies (with Christoper Lee, Peter Cushing, Vincent Price, Boris Karloff, Donald Pleasance, etc.) and relived what some might call my misspent youth, remembering the late Forry Ackerman (the ultimate scifi-fi fan who called me when I was 14 years old to thank me for a letter) and "Famous Monsters of Filmland" magazine. Of course, there were comic books, too. I was lucky enough to latch on to comics from the 1940s by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby. "Captain America" seemed to jump off the page! Thank goodness my mother would shush anyone who said anything derogatory about comics by saying, "He's reading-- leave him alone!" Now some of the best movies are based on comics: "Iron Man," "The Dark Knight," "Sin City," "Wanted" etc.
4. Mom is 86 now and I try to spend as much time as I can with her. We watch movies together. Last week, we laughed so hard at a scene in "A Fish Called Wanda," we had tears streaming down our faces.
5. The latest edition of the Blues Rockers gives me great joy. Thank you Jimmy Pailer, Donna Proctor, Obie Dee and Bruce Pressley. Plus Kyle Rowland, Grant Urias, Joel Ray Hensley, Marshal Wilkerson, Fred "The Deacon" Baker and Burwell Briggs for some recent memorable gigs!I never thought it would just keep getting better.
6. I miss Jimmy Smith. Who else would turn in his frequent flier miles and argue with the powers that be so I could play harmonica on "Hobo Flats" at Carnegie Hall? He was like a second father to me and he could still make shivers go up your spine with his amazing Hammond B3 playing right up to the end.
7. I miss the Sacramento Blues Festival. Someone should do a list of all the great bluesmen who played during its 17-year run. Phil Givant achieved the impossible year after year. I never realized it would just go away ...
8. Without Pat Still at KZAP and Gary Vercelli at KXJZ, I wouldn't be able to look forward to doing "Mick Martin's Blues Party" every Saturday. I am sooo lucky. And the listeners, such great ideas for artists to feature and sets to play. Lately, Brian Auger and Ray Charles have been kicking my you-know-what!
9. I'm still reeling from Random House deciding to cancel our movie book, "The DVD & Video Guide." I'd love to see it "rise from the dead."
10, Still, I have great memories from interviewing stars while I was at the Sacramento Union newspaper. I had lunch with Christopher Lee, breakfast with Akira Kurosawa, walked Steven Spielberg to his limo and made such great friends with other movie buffs who happened to get paid for seeing movies.
11. Touring England, Italy and Belgium was great. That first year, playing a blues festival in London and opening up for Peter Green on his fourth gig since his comeback. Hanging out before Green's set with Cream lyricist Pete Brown and talking about Howard Hawks, John Ford and war movies was an amazing experience. So was being on the BBC with Paul Jones.
12. I always felt sorry for Beatles drummer Pete Best. The guy who got left behind. But John Lennon was right when he said, "Pete was a good drummer, Ringo was a good Beatle." Pete's new CD, "Hayman's Green," is terrific.
13. Being a blues fan meant getting to meet Muddy Waters, Albert Collins, Norton Buffalo, Willie Dixon, Charlie Musselwhite, Elvin Bishop, John Mayall, Coco Montoya, Angela Strehli, Walter Trout, etc. over the years because they appreciate that you appreciate their music. I'll never forget the night James Cotton was at the Sound Factory (Sacramento's version of the Fillmore) and showed me the scars from seven bullet holes in his chest (put there by a harmonica student who thought James was having an affair with his wife)! I was 19 and blown away.
14. I wish I could thank Whitey Davis for giving me my first concert gig -- opening for Pink Floyd at the Sound Factory. I was there every night. We played the last show on a bill with Savoy Brown, who played an extra set whiile members of our band got in our cars and drove around town trying to get people to come down and spend the $3 apiece to keep it going. I can thank Russ Solomon for my years at Tower Records -- THE hippest place in Sacramento -- and Mike Farrace for putting me on staff at Pulse magazine. My education goes on. And we can still browse the aisles at R5 Records and the Beat!
15. I miss horror movie TV host Bob Wilkins, who pushed me relentlessly until I got my movie reviewer job at the Sacramento Union. He called every week! We played a fundraiser for Alzheimer's disease, Bob was the guest of honor and he no longer knew who I was. Luckily, I had seen him at Harlow's a couple of years before and had a chance to thank him for all he did for me (and my family). This is why I joined with Marshal Wilkerson in support of the Alzheimer's Research cause.
16. Pay it forward: My greatest joy comes from doing "Blues in the Schools" for the Sacramento Blues Society (thanks Cynthia, Dave and Liz) and teaching for Foster Youth Services as part of the Placer County Office of Education. It was because of working at the juvenile hall with Patty Archer-Ward in the mid'90s that I've had some of the most moving experiences of my life. An example: A young man walked up to me at Constable Jack's and said, "I'd like you to meet my wife and kids. I'm the general manager of a store now and I want to thank you for telling me that I didn't have to be the person everyone else was telling me I was."
17. Loved beng at the 40-year KZAP Reunion with Fuzzy Bill Thomas and all the folks from the station's many incarnations. It was like a high school reunion where you had something in common with everyone there. Amazing! If it hadn't been for these people, especially Jeff Hughson and Dennis Newhall, I wouldn't have heard what was possible on radio. Heroes -- I have so many.
18. I miss going to Europe on tour. Tim Barnes, Steve Schofer, Jerry Banks, Bill Estrada and Phillip Guy Davis, all of us packed in a run-down van and just barely making it from Southern Italy to Belgium. The van even caught on fire! What adventure!s I've got to get back there ... where else can you sit in with members of your favorite bands at Christmas jams?
19. It's been 10 years now since we lost John Mitchum, a fine character actor (the first three "Dirty Harry" movies). He had such respect for all the character actors in movies, especially westerns, that publisher John Stanley and I had a tough time getting him to write about himself or Brother Robert in his autobiography, "Them Ornery Mirchum Boys." And you didn't dare mention liking a certain actor. I was telling him how much I admired gravelly voiced western actor James Gammon ("Nash Bridges," "Silverado," "The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez," etc.) when John got up and left the room. He came back and handed me the phone, saying nothing. It was James Gammon and all I could do was stutter!
20. Throughout the years, I've been lucky to play in some wonderful bands: Joshua, Tiimothygrass, Smith, Martin & Shaw, The Orion Express, The Panama Hat Band (with Richard Leathers), Harvey Mandel & the Cannibus Healers, plus so many of my favorite performers have let me sit in on harmonica. Musicians are such a wonderful family to be a part of -- you share a nonverbal communication that is almost spiritual in nature.
21. I miss Joe Murazzo, a great drummer and friend, every day.
22. Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters, Albert Collins, Charlie Musselwhite, Norton Buffalo -- these are just some of my role models. Always polite and warm-hearted toward people who like their music. That's another reason I love the blues. The people who play it are so down-to-earth and approachable.
23. Until Facebook, I didn't much care for getting on the computer. Now, I feel like I'm part of a community. Thank you Carol Gale and Peter Rizzo for making me do this.
24. I don't have an iPod. I prefer to read liner notes, see who's playing what and listen to a CD as a complete work.
25. Thanks to Robert B. Parker, Robert Crais, "Babylon 5," "Iron Man," "Lost," "Firefly" and so many other writers, movies and musicians for filling my life with joy and keeping alive my sense of wonder. I'm a fan of John Lennon AND John Wayne and don't feel I have to apologize to anyone.....

Tuesday, February 10, 2009 

Current mood:  cheerful
Mick says: It's been a long time since we've seen our friends up in Cool at the Milestone Saloon, so we're hoping there will be a party on Valentine's Day (this coming Saturday) when we celebrate the good times. (Remember that great blues festival we used to have up there?)  From Auburn to Placerville, we're sending out a "clarion call" to come on down and hear your favorite Blues Rockers songs. ("Louise," once the most popular song on the Milestone's jukebox, WILL be performed!) Requests are encouraged. Bring someone you love! We'd sure love to see you!
Thursday, December 11, 2008 

Category: Music
Northern California Blues Festival 2008
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56v3_S1vXgU


Ceasar Chavez Park Concert
www.youtube.com/watch?v=CRqro8BZKCM
Thursday, December 04, 2008 

Mick Martin at The Learning Exchange

Sacramento Music Awards Hall of Fame harmonica player Mick Martin has a time-tested, easy-to-understand approach to the fundamentals of harmonica playing. In four easy lessons, Martin can help you sound like a seasoned player. The 10-hole harmonica took Martin to Carnegie Hall for their "Blues in Jazz" Concert. Why not try his class and find out how much fun harmonica playing can be? Martin has released 15 CDs on his own label, Blues Rock Records, as well as doing projects for Fantasy/Milestone Records ("Sum Serious Blues" with Jimmy Smith), DIG Music ("Tip of the Hat," a tribute to British blues), "Long Distance Call" (a tribute to Chicago Blues masters, recorded and released in Belgium), and "Good Reaction" (for the British record label, JSP). He also hosts "Mick Martin's Blues Party" every Saturday 1-5 p.m. on 90.9 FM KXJZ Sacramento, 91.6 KUOP Stockton/Modesto and 90.5 FM KKTO Tahoe City/ Reno. Classes begin on February 8 and continue every Sunday throughout that month at the Learning Exchange, 111 Howe Avenue (near Hurley Way). Call (916) 929-9200 to sign up. All you need after that is a professional model "C" harmonica from Hohner or Lee Oskar (no children's harmonicas please).

Copyright 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, & 2007 by Mick Martin and the Blues Rockers

Submitted by: Mick Martin, KXJZ 88.9 FM Sacramento; KKTO, 90.5 FM Tahoe City/Reno; KUOP, 90.3 Stockton/Marysville/Modesto;
"Mick Martin's Blues Party" 1-5 p.m. Saturdays. (916) 348-1955; 3912 Little Rock Drive, Antelope, CA. 95843

Wednesday, January 30, 2008 

Current mood:  blissful
Category: Music
As Pete Sargent says in his liner notes for March's upcoming, two-CD retrospective, Gambling on the Blues, "It's often the case of bands that people come and go. Sometimes the key figure in a group becomes a sonic catalyst and members past and present will concede that they had a chance to play at their personal best as the band leader gave them the chance to do so" before taking flight and following their own musical muse. So it is with Dana Moret, Jim Papastathis and Steve Schofer, formerly the Stratocastros, who will be appearing as Mr. December at Constable Jack's on February  2. The debut of the new Blues Rockers at the Torch Club on January 25 was a sold-out success, as people actually waited in the rain to slip in as others slipped out while Mick and Bruce Pressley were proudly presenting the new line-up of vocalist-guitarists Jimmy Pailer & Obie Dee and bass player Donna Proctor, returning to the position she held in the original version of the band (1983-1991). Aaron King sat in for three songs and many commented on Mick's inability to stop smiling. "I'm back to what I love: the blues. I just can't hide how happy I am," Mick said. Catch the next flight of the Blues Rockers on February 9 at the Elk Grove Brewery Restaurant with special guest, Kyle Rowland on harmonica.
Saturday, December 08, 2007 

Current mood:  excited
Category: Music
After a wonderful night at Constable Jack's -- with the Murazzos in the house -- the Blues Rockers are off hiatus, playing tonight at Louie's Cocktail Lounge. Come on down! We've got a special show planned for our friends -- without you, there's no party! Some blues specialties by Mick, new songs from Dana and Jim in high gear! Bruce and Steve will be singing on their featured tunes. Mick is on the Blues Party on KXJZ whuppin' up a tasy stew of music as this is being written. Celebrate the music 90.9 FM (Sacramento), 91.3 FM (stockton) and 90.5 FM (Reno/Tahoe/Truckee). Hey! Hey! the blues (and rock, soul, etc.) is all right!