Donnie Walsh
thinks a hat
might make a
difference.
“Something that
will help the
band fit in … or
stand out,” says
the veteran
Canadian
bluesman by way
of explaining
the title of the
new Downchild
album, I
Need A Hat.
It’s a joke, of
course.
Downchild
doesn’t need a
hat, or a
ticket, a tag, a
bag, a niche, or
a flashing neon
sign.
Forty years on,
Downchild
remains a blues
force, true to
itself and
without equal.
For just about
every waking
moment of the
four decades
since he formed
the Downchild
Blues Band –
Canada’s best
known and best
loved blues
outfit – Walsh
has been living
the dream that
changed his life
back in the
early 1960s,
when someone
dropped a Jimmy
Reed album onto
the turntable at
his girlfriend’s
16th
birthday party
in suburban
North Toronto.
It’s a moment
Walsh – he also
answers to his
“given” name,
Mr. Downchild,
taken from a
song by Sonny
Boy Williamson
II – says he
will never
forget.
“That was it. I
was hooked. I
never wanted to
play anything
else.”
He drove his
girlfriend crazy
learning Reed’s
lip-splitting
harmonica
technique, then
James Cotton’s.
He locked
himself away
from the world
while he picked
apart Muddy
Waters’ and
Albert King’s
guitar licks,
reconstructing
them in his own
inimitable style
on a beat-up
electric guitar.
And when he did
venture out, it
was to one of
Toronto’s
legendary blues
dives to catch
his heroes
Luther Allison,
B.B. King, Buddy
Guy and
Junior Wells,
all of them
regular visitors
in those days to
Walsh’s
hometown,
Canada’s blues
capital.
Walsh was a good
student. He is
recognized
around the world
as both a blues
harp virtuoso
with few equals,
and an unusually
expressive
guitarist.
He wasn’t the
only one, of
course. They say
Toronto’s built
on the blues,
but all across
Canada the
blues,
particularly
jump-style and
Chicago blues
that used to
blast across the
border from
radio stations
in northern
U.S., is a
basic, shared
language.
Singer Chuck
Jackson, tenor
sax player Pat
Carey, drummer
Mike
Fitzpatrick,
bassist Gary
Kendall, and
pianist/organist
Michael Fonfara
– Walsh’s
compadres in
Downchild
for the past
decade and a
half, and, he
says, the “best
musicians I’ve
ever played
with” – were
soaking
up the blues in
their teenage
years as well,
in different
parts of the
country.
Their shared
dedication has
served them
well. And with
the release of
their 16th
album,
I
Need A Hat,
on the Canadian
independent
label Linus
Entertainment,
Donnie Walsh and
his buddies are
celebrating
their collective
longevity big
time.
Comprising a new
batch of Walsh
originals –
edgier, darker,
more caustically
humorous than
ever before –
I Need A Hat
boasts a cluster
of stellar
guests. Dan
Aykroyd – a
long-time friend
and admirer of
Downchild
– on harmonica,
second-generation
Canadian
blues-rocker
Colin James and
Nashville-based
Canadian roots
music veteran
Colin Linden
on guitars,
and Stax Records
legend Wayne
Jackson of the
Memphis
Horns on
trumpet, all
make muscular
and eloquent
contributions to
the album, which
Walsh produced
over five days
earlier this
year in
Toronto’s famed
Metalworks
Studios.
“It’s not really
producing,” says
Walsh, a
self-deprecating
homegrown star –
when he’s not on
the road, he’s
fishing his
favorite
pickerel hole at
his secret lake
in northern
Ontario – and a
ribald raconteur
with a
lacerating dry
wit.
“We’ve been
together long
enough to know
just how
everything fits,
every groove,
every note,
every piece of
punctuation.
It’s not as if
we have to go
looking for
hooks – they
just happen.
That’s one of
the great things
about a band
that’s been
together for as
long as we have.
It just gets
better and
better.”
“I get a buzz
doing the final
mix, tweaking
the nuances, the
little elements
I know are in
there, hiding
somewhere. Those
little bits are
like pure gold
to me. I love
shining them
up.”
“And it was
really exciting
this time to
have so many
great guests
adding their own
parts.”
During the past
40 years and
against all
odds, Walsh and
his band mates
have won
countless music
industry awards,
including
a Juno
(Canada’s
Grammy) for
“Best
Roots and
Traditional
Album” in 1991.
They also
received a Juno
Award nomination
in 2005 for
“Blues Album of
The Year” for
their album
“Come On In.” In
2007 Downchild
was named
“Entertainer of
The Year” at the
annual Maple
Blues Awards
(the
Canadian
equivalent of
the Blues Music
Awards in the
U.S.).
With more than
80 great
musicians on the
payroll during
its long life,
Downchild
is a robust road
beast, having
racked up
thousands of
performances at
concert halls,
fairgrounds,
saloons and
roadhouses in
every corner of
the continent.
The inspiration
for
Aykroyd’s and
the late John
Belushi’s
fabulous
creation, The
Blues Brothers
– they
recorded
Downchild’s
“Shotgun Blues”
and Walsh’s “(I
Got Everything I
Need) Almost”,
the latter
shortlisted as
one of Canada’s
Essential Songs
in a survey
conducted by the
Toronto
Star in
2007 –
Downchild is
an institution
in their
homeland, and
revered by blues
fans around the
world.
America’s
National Public
Radio service
pays regular
tribute,
featuring
Downchild in
concert specials
and blues
programs.
For years a
favorite on the
North American
festival
circuit, the
band made its
first concert
appearance in
Europe in 2008,
at the Lille
Blues Festival
in France,
returning in
2009 for the
Tobakken Blues
Festival in
Esjberg,
Denmark. More
trips to Europe,
where
Downchild’s
reputation is
almost mythical,
are in the
works.
Apart from its
earliest
incarnations,
with Donnie’s
brother, the
late “Hock”
Walsh as singer,
Downchild
was always more
than a bar band.
A party band,
sure – good
times
guaranteed, just
as it says on
one of
Downchild’s
album titles.
But musicianship
of the highest
order, sharp
arrangements,
strict adherence
to its
legitimate
sources, slick
pacing and a
steely fix on
the moods of its
audiences, have
always set
Downchild
apart. This has
been a class act
for the better
part of its
40-year life.
Drummer Mike
Fitzpatrick
credits the
quality and
individual
character of the
songs Walsh and
singer Chuck
Jackson – he
contributed
“Down in the
Delta” and “I’ve
Gotta Leave” to
I Need A
Hat –
have brought to
the band. “The
songwriting is
exceptional,” he
says. “There’s
always some
unexpected slant
to the story in
each song, or a
line that cuts
straight to the
bone.”
Bassist Gary
Kendall hears
something old
and something
new each time he
listens to
I
Need A Hat.
“The more I play
it, the more I
get it,” he
says. “This is
vintage
Downchild –
straight up
blues, no
frills, no R&B,
nothing slick.
But Donnie’s
doing something
new with his
lyrics,
commenting on
what’s happening
in the world,
reaching out to
people who’ve
lost their jobs
and are facing
hard times.
That’s
different. His
songs are
usually much
more personal.”
About the
reasons for
Downchild’s
success, Walsh
is succinct and
unequivocal.
“First, it’s
knowing your
audience, and
knowing when to
give them what
they want,” he
says. “If they
want to dance,
you step up the
groove. If they
want to watch,
you give them
lots of solos.”
“As for keeping
a band together
for as long as
Downchild
has been around,
it’s an unspoken
thing, finding a
balance between
what I need and
what I know each
musician can
give. Every
member of this
band is well
equipped to do
what each of us
wants and needs.
Downchild
has always been
bigger than the
sum of its
parts, and I
can’t really
explain why.“
“But I do know
that after 40
years doing
this, I’m
happier than
I’ve ever been.
The hard parts
are easier. I’m
writing songs
all the time –
and better songs
– which
surprises me. I
get to
experience new
things all the
time, and see
new places.”
“And I get to
make my own
records. I will
never sell
enough of them
to put me out of
work … but
that’s probably
a good thing.”