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Taj Mahal to be inducted into Blues Hall of Fame



By JAKE COYLE
AP Entertainment Writer

NEW YORK (AP) – Taj Mahal, the blues legend whose vibrant, orldly music encompassed African-rooted sounds of all kinds, will be inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame.
Mahal, whose real name is Henry St. Clair Fredericks, has been selected along with New Orleans soul singer Irma Thomas, Chicago bluesman Son Seals and ragtime guitar player Rev. Gary Davis to join the Blues Hall in Memphis, Tennessee. They will be inducted in a ceremony on May 6, which will be followed the day after by the Blues Foundation’s 30th annual Blues Music Awards.
“I’m very happy that a group of my peers think it’s something I deserve after the years I’ve put into the music,” said Mahal, 66,speaking by phone from the San Francisco Bay area.
California is one place Mahal has spent a lot of time, though thenearly nomadic singer-guitarist notes: “I pretty much move around wherever I like.”
The same could be said of Mahal’s music, which has for fourdecades dug deeply into sounds of many places, particularly Africa, the Caribbean and Hawaii. The breadth of Mahal’s influences camepartly from his heritage and partly from a nurtured openness.
“He was into globalization long before the rest of us,” saysJay Sieleman, executive director of the Blues Foundation. “With Taj, it’s not just the music – although that’s of course the big thing. It’s the whole social history and musicology and awareness that comes with listening to his music.”
Mahal was raised in Springfield, Massachusetts. His mother was aschoolteacher from South Carolina and his father, of Caribbean roots, was a jazz pianist. Later, his stepfather came from Jamaica.
“As a youngster, my parents made me aware that all that was from the African Diaspora belonged to me,” said Mahal. “So I came in with Caribbean music, African music, Latin music, gospel music and blues.”
Mahal, a two-time Grammy winner, in 1968 released his self-titleddebut, which included contributions from Ry Cooder, an early collaborator. It included the great “Leaving Trunk” (in which he sings “I ain’t never seen no whiskey, but the blues made me sloppy drunk”). One of his most famous tunes is “She Caught the Katy (And Left Me a Mule to Ride),” which ended up in the 1980 film “TheBlues Brothers.”
With a full-bodied voice and predilection for blues that madepeople dance, Mahal’s continuous output through the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s was always with an adventurous spirit. One of his most acclaimed albums came in 1999 on “Kulanjan,” a collaboration with Malian kora legend Toumani Diabate.
The international influences, Mahal says, aren’t from his constant travels, but from always being fully invested in such music. He sees blues as running far beyond the Mississippi Delta and back through music.
“I was always taught that Latin, Caribbean people were cousins to me, as well as blues was a cousin to me, as well as Africans were direct relatives to me,” he said. “It was all a part of my language.”
Still, Mahal’s music was always blues at its foundation: “Sometimes the blues is like the whole meal. … Other times it’s like a spice that’s thrown in there.”

Henry St. Claire Fredericks, known as Taj Mahal

** FILE ** In this July 23, 2005 file photo, Henry St. Claire Fredericks, known as Taj Mahal, performs on stage during his concert at the Blue Balls Festival in Lucerne, Switzerland. (AP Photo/Keystone, Sigi Tischler, file)

On the Net:
http://www.tajblues.com
http://www.blues.org

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Posted by admin on Feb 25th, 2009 and filed under Entertainment. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response via following comment form or trackback to this entry from your site

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