REVIEW

Music Review: Robert Jr. Lockwood Steady Rollin' Man

Written by Richard Marcus
Published April 14, 2007

Have you ever noticed the how the sound of a Blues guitar is instantly recognizable? Using the phrase Blues guitarist to describe the way a person plays gives you an immediate idea of what they can play. Sure you can wonder if they played like Eric Clapton, or more along the lines of the late Stevie Ray Vaughn, or if they're going to be playing Mississippi Delta style or the sound of Chicago? But the guitar is going to have the same sort of sound quality to it no matter what.

When it comes right down to it that pretty much applies to every Rock and Roll, Rhythm and Blues, Soul, and Pop music guitar sound. All you have to do is listen to the earlier albums of such bands like The Rolling Stones or Led Zeppelin for that to be obvious. The sound hadn't really changed that much since Robert Johnson went down to the Crossroads and came back with the devil in his hands.

But every so often there's been a Blues musician who perhaps hasn't broken the mold but has changed or added enough elements that his sound has a something that makes it stand out from the pack. While Robert Jr. Lockwood (the junior was for his stepfather, the above mentioned Robert Johnson) played Blues music all his life the sound of his guitar was as distinctive as his fingerprints were from other players.
Robert Jr Lockwood.jpg
Robert Jr. was born in Arkansas in 1915 and obviously had exposure to Blues music from a young age. His main teacher was his stepfather of course, but two other guitar players also played an important role in developing the sound that would become his signature. Charlie Christian and Eddie Durham were both Jazz players and it's most likely that Lockwood 's smooth sound and texture originated with them.

Texture may seem like an odd word to describe sound but think of the difference between a Jazz and a Blues song. A Blues player's chords that are rough and tumble like the juke joints and bars from the wrong side of the tracks it came from. Jazz on the other hand is slick and smooth with the elegance of the speakeasies and nightclubs where you'd find combos laying down some cool elegance.

Listening to Robert Jr. Lockwood's 1970 release Steady Rollin' Man, just reissued by Delmark Records you can hear the Jazz influence on his guitar loud and clear. It's not that he is playing Jazz songs, but playing Blues music and Blues chords and progressions on a guitar that sounds like it should be playing Jazz.

Have you heard an electric Jazz guitar? They are usually the large hollow body type guitars that look a lot twelve string guitars that the Birds would have played on songs like "Mr. Tambourine Man". But something about their set-up makes them sound far more melodic than anything the Birds would have played.

Each note rings out clean and distinct and carries a slight bell like echo and has a cleanness that one doesn't normally associate with an electric guitar. Now imagine that sound playing a blues song and you've got a fairly good idea of how Robert Jr. Lockwood sounds.

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Copy02-11-Richard portrait-72-4x4.jpgRichard Marcus is a long-haired Canadian iconoclast who writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees it at Leap In The Dark and Epic India Magazine.
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Music Review: Robert Jr. Lockwood Steady Rollin' Man
Published: April 14, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Adult Alternative, Music: Blues, Music: Roots Rock, Review
Writer: Richard Marcus
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