Coming from the same Mississippi blues tradition as
Muddy Waters (who may or may not have been
his half brother), Spann was a self-taught piano prodigy who worked
as a member of the Chess Records house band before beginning a solo
career in 1960s. He died at forty, at what was called the height of
his career.
The new disc is a labor of love for Peter Malick, a veteran eastern
seaboard blues guitarist who played with Spann on those final
nights. By that time, the then eighteen-year-old Malick had played
with Spann for more than a year, recording an album and becoming
part of Spann's extended family.
"When I first played with Otis we had this instant rapport," Malick
said. "We didn't have a lot to say to each other verbally but had
an incredible musical connection. He wanted me to come play with
him right away, but I told him no, I had to finish high school
first. But as soon as I graduated I went out to Chicago." Malick,
who never attended college, subsequently played with Boston's
James Montgomery Band and as a solo artist
before battling drug addiction in the Eighties. Throughout this
time, along with his re-emergence over the past few years, he
believed that the tape of Spann's final show was lost to the
ages.
Two years ago, Malick got a call from a friend in L.A. who "thought
he had an Otis Spann tape of mine." Not only did it turn out to be
the lost gig, it was in excellent condition. So he edited the tape
down from its two hours, then signed a contract with Spann's
survivors and intends to release the album on his own label later
this month.
The performance is not at all typical for Spann. In the first
place, he was unable to sing due to side effects from the cancer.
(Vocals were handled by Luther Georgia Boy "Snake" Johnson and
Lucille Spann, who told the crowd her husband could not sing
because of laryngitis.) The edited performance features only two
Spann originals, a couple of Muddy Waters tunes as well as the most
left-field selection of all, a subtle reworking of Lenny Welch's
1963 weeper, "Since I Fell For You."
That Malick's playing is more subdued than his current aggressive
style isn't only because he was a shy kid. "We all knew what was
happening, that it would be his last show," he recalls. "So I tried
to rein myself in, and give him more of a chance to play. Lucille
was doing the same thing. She tended to over-sing sometimes, but
restrained herself here. So this may also be her best performance."
(Lucille Spann died in 1993.)
At a gravestone dedication last June in Chicago, Malick met a
number of people who had been touched by Spann. Some will be
providing other unpublished photos which will either appear on the
CD or on his record company's Web site, www.mrcatmusic.com. He hopes
the real beneficiaries will be Spann's descendents, who are
"struggling to make ends meet."
"They have received very little for Spann's extensive body of
work," Malick said. "I'm hoping that this CD will make some
difference in their lives."
CHARLES BERMANT
(June 28, 2000)
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