Amos Garrett & the Eh! Team
SONG: Early in the morning
*featuring Dale Spalding
Revered as one of the top guitar players in Alberta, the reputation Amos Garrett has spent over four decades building spans beyond the geography of the Prairies, reaching into the U.S. and overseas. Curling up with Garrett's beloved 14-year-old pointer, Maggie, on his plush sofa, which rests in the living room of his unpretentious country-style home in High River, AB, quickly makes one realize that despite the two-time Juno Award winner's impressive musical achievements, he leads a quiet home life, centered around his other passions: fly fishing, bird hunting and training bird dogs.
Born in Detroit, but raised in Toronto, Garrett moved through piano and trombone lessons, remarking that neither instrument suited him, before finding the guitar at the age of 14. Within a year, Garrett was gigging.
"I just sort of took to the guitar - it suited me and I guess I had gotten over my awkward years as a teen. I was getting little jobs playing within a year of picking up the guitar," remembers Garrett. Although known world-wide as a jazz and blues cat, Garrett's eclectic style of playing has allowed him to transcend beyond those genres that lie closest to his heart, rooted in childhood, into country-rock, pop and folk.
"Back then, we called everything rock 'n' roll. We didn't call stuff blues, rhythm and blues, rockabilly - it was all rock 'n' roll to us," reflects Garrett. He remembers 1954 as being "the year rock arrived," catapulting artists such as Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley and T. Bone Walker into a world that would never forget them.
By the time he had reached college age, Garrett began learning about early acoustic Delta blues players from the 1930s such as Robert Johnson and Leadbelly.
And while Garrett was hard at work developing his own sound and playing in bar bands in the Toronto area, including the Dirty Shames (which also included Chick Roberts, Jim McCarthy and Carol Robinson), the acoustic folk duo known as Ian and Sylvia Tyson were conjuring up a new sound of their own.
"My first break and ticket to the U.S. was courtesy of Ian and Sylvia Tyson," says Garrett.
The Tysons went to work with Garrett, taking their new band, Great Speckled Bird, and their new sound, hard-hitting country-rock, off to Nashville to record and spend the next two years touring. During this time, Garrett was rapidly developing his own technique: a method of bending more than one string at a time, which he teaches to students and through online lessons to this day. This innovation gave Garrett the ability to sound like a pedal-steel guitarist at times, while remaining rooted as a jazz player.
"Amos does that multi-note string bend like no one else. You can put on a disc with a dozen world-renowned studio guys and pick his solos out no problem. Totally unique," remarks contemporary Calgary bluesman, Tim Williams.
Garrett had become a skilled guitar player, one who could be picked up as a hired gun by any type of band and hold the music up. He spent the next number of years moving up through the guitar ranks and contributing his legacy to music history. He teamed up with folk artists Geoff and Maria Muldaur, played guitar in virtuoso harmonica player Paul Butterfield's band Better Days, later on reunited with a now-divorced Maria Muldaur as her guitar player and band leader and, finally, made the decision to part with Muldaur some ten years later to go out on his own.
Garrett was the player who performed the famed guitar solo in Maria Muldaur's 1974 hit, "Midnight at the Oasis."
"I wanted to sing. I loved to sing, but there was no way I could do so being a hired gun for bands," says Garrett, who has enjoyed a full life-spanning career both on his own as well as sharing the stage with other renowned artists such as Stevie Wonder, Emmylou Harris, Bonnie Raitt and Anne Murray (with whom he recorded her first five albums). Over the years, Garrett has recorded with over 150 artists. Edmonton's Holger Petersen of Stony Plain Records has been Garrett's manager since 1980. Garrett describes Petersen as "the patron saint of roots music in this country."
When asked what it's been like to represent Garrett over the last 30 years, Petersen responds, "It's been an honour and an education for me. Amos gave me, a relative newcomer to the music industry, a chance to represent him internationally and be a part of his musical circle. I'm very proud that we've worked together for so long."
These days, Garrett, who relocated to Alberta in 1989, keeps busy with his acoustic act, his blues band and his jazz trio. "It's nice to record things before performing too much and letting things get stale," says Garrett, who likes the idea of live recording at gigs, letting the genre of jazz shine through its improvisational characteristics.
Garrett's , Get Way Back (2008), delves this guitarist/vocalist back into the blues as a tribute to the late Percy Mayfield. It received rave reviews from the finest in the music business. Percy Mayfield's performance career prematurely dissipated due to a tragic car accident in 1952, but this blues vocalist led a highly successful career as a songwriter up until his death in 1984. Most notably, Mayfield was a songwriter for Ray Charles, writing hit tunes like "Hit the Road Jack."
At this point, there's not much Garrett hasn't accomplished, at least in the music sense.
"I'd like to keep walking on this side of the grass…and I'd like to catch an Atlantic salmon twenty pounds or bigger," muses the guitar guru. Whether or not he accomplishes this goal, Amos Garrett can look back on a musical journey well travelled, proof that hard work and persistence pay off.
DALE SPALDING
Dale Spalding grew up in Downey, California, in a family of four children. As a teenager, he became interested in harmonica after a friend got him listening to an album by Paul Butterfield. He also started playing the guitar. He is fascinated by rhythm and blues from New Orleans, Big Band Swing and British Invasion. He is also interested in blues legends like Muddy Waters, BB King, Charlie Musselwhite, Sonny Terry & Brownie McGee, Little Walter, Sonny Boy Williamson, James Cotton, Jr. Wells, John Lee Hooker, Canned Heat, Taj Mahal and George "Harmonica" Smith. Spalding also followed several renowned musicians playing in Los Angeles, such as The Ashgrove and The Golden Bear.
In 1969, Spalding moved to San Francisco, where he played in clubs and studied harmonica with bluesman Sonny Terry. Sonny Terry introduced Spalding to his friends, among them Brownie McGhee, Willie Dixon, Johnny Shines, Lafayette Leake and Big Walter "Shakey" Horton.
Spalding later formed a duet with Duke Burrell, the pianist of Louis Jordan. Duke discovers Spalding's talent as a vocalist and encouraged him to sing more. The duet played together during ten years, during which Duke taught him a variety of jazz classics and ballads.
After the death of Duke Burrell in early nineties, Spalding went back to Los Angeles, where he formed The Dale Spalding Band with bassist Tom Gargano, his long-time friend. The Dale Spalding Band regularly performs in Los Angeles and has played with various musicians, such as drummer James Gadson, saxophonist Lon Price and pianist Bruce "Funky Mal" Malament.
In 2000, Mexican Conguero Poncho Sanchez discovered The Dale Spalding Band. Spalding and Sanchez became friends and started working together. Spalding toured several times with Sanchez in US and Europe. He also worked with Poncho Sanchez on Latin Spirits and played the harmonica on 2003 Ray Charles recording of MaryAnn.
In 2005, Spalding moved to New Orleans, where some of his major influences are from. He soon started working with roots rock band The Iguanas and with several local musicians. Hurricane Katrina forced him to move once more, this time to Austin, Texas, where he is still living and performing solo and playing with Little Elmore Reed's band.
In 2007, his career took a new turn when he met Canned Heat drummer Fito de la Parra. After performing several times together, Fito invited him to join Canned Heat, with whom he continues to tour all over the world. In 2015, he released a live album with the band, Songs from the Road. Spalding is still performing solo and regularly plays with Poncho Sanchez.
Dale Spalding has also played and/or recorded with Dave Alvin, James Cotton, Marcia Ball, Ruthie Foster, Papa Mali, Otis Rush, Pinetop Perkins and Redd Volkaert.
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