It
has just been announced that the English blues legend, John Mayall, died at his
home in California on 22 July 2024, at the age of 90. Mayall has often
been described as the 'Godfather' or
'Father' of British blues.
I
probably first heard of John Mayall in the late 1960s, when a friend let me
listen to a Mayall album called 'Bare
Wires'. I also saw him at the MEN Arena in Manchester, when his band were
the supporting act for the BB King band. A cousin once told me, that he
remembered John Mayall playing a gig at Audenshaw Grammar School.
In
a moving and very emotional tribute posted on YouTube, Eric Clapton, referred
to Mayall as a friend, 'mentor' and 'surrogate father' who had "rescued him from oblivion" when
he'd invited him to join his band the Bluesbreakers in 1965. He had just quit
the Yardbirds because he was unhappy with their commercial direction and he
says he was on the verge of giving up on a musical career. Clapton was
one of many guitarists who became more famous after joining Mayall's Bluesbreakers.
As
a band leader, Mayall was a good talent spotter and his band was a school of
excellence. He sang, composed songs and played guitar, harmonica and keyboards.
Among those guitarists who played with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, were Peter
Green, Jeff Beck, Buddy Whittington, Mick Taylor, Walter Trout, Henry 'Coco'
Montoya and the British bassist, John McVie. Walter Trout once said in an
interview that John Mayall and Carlos Santana had rescued him from descending
into drug and alcohol abuse. Mayall, sacked John McVie and replaced him with
Jack Bruce, because of his drink problem.
Mayall
was born in Macclesfield on 29 November 1933 but grew up in Cheadle Hulme, a
prosperous suburb of Stockport. His father, Murray Mayall, had played the
guitar in local pubs. When his parents divorced, Mayall went to live with his
mother at his grandfather's house on Acre Lane, Cheadle Hulme. He claimed that
he lived in a tree house which was in his grandfather's garden, until he got
married. After serving three years of national service, much of it in Korea,
Mayall enrolled at Manchester College of Art. After graduation, he worked as an
art designer.
It
was another blues legend called Alexis Korner, who persuaded Mayall to become a
full-time musician and to move to London. He also introduced him to other
musicians and helped him to get gigs. In the 1960s, Mayall started to live
part-time in the U.S. and in the early 1970s, he bought a house in the
Hollywood Hills of Laurel Canyon. The house was destroyed in a bush fire in
1979 and he lost a lot of personal property. He married twice and had six
children from both marriages.
1 comment:
Thanks for the piece. I have been away on holiday and I hadn't heard the news. I recall Rod once telling me that he had seen him at the Twisted Wheel in Manchester in the 1960's. I don't claim to have a detailed knowledge of his work, but I was acutely aware of the respect in which he was held by many leading musicians.
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