Label: Blue Suit Records
Release Date: August 1, 1995
Recording Time: 61 minutes
Releases: August 18, 1998 (Arhoolie); January 25, 2011 (Arhoolie)
Styles: Songster, Acoustic Blues, Vaudeville Blues
As easy as it is to characterize Howard Armstrong as the last link in the once great African-American string band tradition, he really had the kind of personality and talent that transcended simple genre labels. A visual artist as well as a consummate musician (he is rumored to have been able to play 22 different types of instruments), his grasp of musical styles was panoramic, ranging from blues, jazz, country, and pop to all manner of jigs, reels, waltzes, and spirituals, and he could sing and entertain in four languages, including German, Polish, and Italian as well as English. Although he tended to concentrate on fiddle and mandolin in his later years, no musical style or instrument was ever safely out of reach of Armstrong's sweeping vision. This marvelous disc was originally released in 1995 (it won a W.C. Handy Award that year) and it stands as Armstrong's only solo project (although he is helped here on bass by his son, Ralphe Armstrong, a veteran of stints with John McLaughlin and Jean-Luc Ponty, and the swing-style guitar of Ray Kamalay). Armstrong was 86 years old when these sessions were recorded, but there is no sign of declining skills as he tackles spirituals ("Wading Through Deep Water," "When He Calls Me I Will Answer"), traditional folk pieces (a wonderfully swinging "John Henry"), classic jazz ("St. Louis Blues," which takes on a gypsy swagger with Armstrong's ragged mandolin fills), and even a pair of Gershwin compositions ("Oh, Lady Be Good," "Summertime"). Armstrong's version of "Summertime" is particularly stunning, his moaning and swooping fiddle lines highlighting perfectly his casual (but careful) vocal. In the end, Armstrong is really more street jazz than he is blues, and this disc hints at the full range of his musical possibilities. Taken with the Arhoolie collection that goes by the same title, Louie Bluie, a complete portrait of this charming and versatile musician begins to emerge.
by Steve Leggett
Credits: Harry Akst - composer; Howard Armstrong - composer, performer, primary artist; Ralphe Armstrong - bass; Ted Bogan - performer, primary artist; James Cavanaugh - composer; Lonnie Chatmon - composer; George Gershwin - composer; Ira Gershwin - composer; W.C. Handy - composer; DuBose Heyward - composer; Doug James - engineer; William Jerome - composer; Sam M. Lewis - composer; Russ Morgan - composer; Yank Rachell - guest artist; Banjo Ikey Robinson - primary artist; Steve Scharren - mixing; Jean Schwartz - composer; Bob Seeman - producer; Larry Stock - composer; Traditional - composer; Walter Vinson - composer; Joe Young - composer.
Tracks: 1) Oh, Lady Be Good; 2) St. Louis Blues; 3) You're Nobody 'Til Somebody Loves You; 4) John Henry (Intro); 5) John Henry; 6) Sitting On Top of the World; 7) Howard's Rag; 8) Louie Bluie; 9) Louie Bluie Blues; 10) This Little Song of Mine; 11) Dinah; 12) Wading Through Deep Water; 13) Bogan's Secret; 14) Chinatown; 15) Betty 16) Instruments; 17) Summertime; 18) When He Calls Me I Will Answer.