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Okay, so here are the pics
from my recent trip to the Delta, the home of the Blues!!! This was my
fouth trip in as many years and I've really begun to feel like Clarksdale
is my second home. I even had people recognize me in town from my last
trip, which was very cool!
The first two nights in town
I stayed at the Shack Up Inn
which you may recognize from
the back cover of the CD. The Shack Up is on Hopson's Plantation and they
have turned the shotgun sharecropers' shacks into rooms. I stayed in the
Cadillac Shack, as usual. The "sh*t box Dodge" in the front
is actually from the Blues Brothers movie. It has the dent on the roof
from the megaphone to prove it!

On Wednesday I headed Greenwood,
MS where Robert Johnson lived, played, and died. There is an empty lot
where the house stood that he spent his last days in agony after being
poisoned by a jilted lover. Rule#1 of the blues-never sleep with the bar
owner's girl. Hoover's grocery stands across the street from that spot
and they were having a little gathering with a band and of couse, BBQ!
I met up there with the owner of Cat
Head Music and Blues Revue columnist, Roger Stolle. A super cool guy
that is a wealth of knowledge.

I next headed up the road about 6 miles north of Greenwood, MS in the
middle of nowhere and stopped by Robert Johnson's grave. It is only one
of three, but this one is widely accepted as his "true" grave.
It's kinda funny who you run across in graveyards. Today, Corey
Harris was there visiting.

On the way back to Clarksdale, I decided to head up to Stovall's Plantation
to see where Muddy Water's cabin used to sit. Muddy was born and raised
in a small cabin that stood there for many years, but it was damaged by
a storm in the '90s. It has since been reassembled and resides inside
(yes, inside!) the Delta Blues
Museum in Clarksdale.

Thursday I moved into The Riverside Hotel on Sunflower Ave. in downtown
Clarksdale. Talk about a blues history. The Hotel opened in 1944, but
was used as an African-American hospital before that. In 1937, Bessie
Smith and her manager were travelling through the area early one morning
headed to another gig. Their car was struck by a truck and Bessie was
severely injured. A doctor happened by on his way fishing and attended
to her until they could get her to the hospital. Bessie died a few hours
later on the operating table of the hospital, which is now the Riverside
Hotel. The son of the original owner, Frank "Rat" Ratliffe,
runs things there now and has been there for 50-some years. He has seen
it all. His frequent guests have included John Lee Hooker, Sam Cooke,
and Ike Turner among countless others. Rat gave me a tour of all the rooms,
each bearing the name of the person that stayed in that room. I was fortunate
enough to be put in the John Lee Hooker room. It still has the original
furniture of when he stayed there. Pictures 1&2 - Bessie Smith's room
(the one she passed in), 3 - John Lee Hooker's room, 4 - Sam Cooke's room,
5 - Ike Turner's room, 6 - Rat and me at Red's, 7- the hallway at night
- very erie...

Thursday night I headed down to Ground
Zero Blues Club, which is partly owned by Morgan Freeman. A cool larger
venue, with good food! It still manages to keep a juke joint feel while
being so big. Lightning Malcom was playing there that night and I was
able to get up and jam most of the evening. Lots of fun!!!
Friday night came around
and James "Super Chikan"
Johnson was playing at Ground Zero. You know it's gonna be a good
show when he starts the night off with Freddie King's Hideaway.

After a set of Chikan, I headed down the street and across the tracks
to Reds, a real juke joint. When I mean a real juke joint, I mean there
were no windows, no phone, and I didn't recall seeing any bathrooms. Awesome
place that oozes the blues. Burnside
Exploration was playing there that night. The band consists of Gary
Burnside (R.L.'s son) on guitar, Cedric Burnside (R.L.'s grandson and
longtime drummer) on drums and vocals, and Lightning Malcom on bass. They
play some kick-ass modern hill-country blues! I was there for a little
while and Gary asked me to play harp the rest of the night. Very cool.
He broke a string on his tele and ended up using my Strat after that.
2am rolled around and we were still going when Super
Chikan rolled in a sat in a couple of songs (he ended up playing the
Strat too!) Very cool. They were all a great bunch up guys, and awesome
musicians.
Pictures from my December 2004 trip to Mississippi
First row l-r: Robert
Johnson's Grave; The Crossroads from the movie "Crossroads";
The Crossroads (Hwy 49 & Hwy 61); Red's Voodoo Shop - Memphis, TN;
Second Row: Club Ebony; Where the Southern crosses The Dog; The Shack
Up Inn - Clarksdale, MS; Thrid Row - Sonny Boy II's (Rice Miller) Grave
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