News Release
2004 Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival to celebrate the
great Howlin' Wolf
PORTLAND , Ore.— The late Howlin’ Wolf, arguably
the greatest bluesman to emerge from the Chicago blues scene
of the late 1950s and 1960s, was a major influence on such
rockers as Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix and Stevie Ray Vaughan.
The 2004 Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival will
pay homage to this central figure of the genre through films,
special interviews and a main stage performance with Wolf’s
longtime guitarist Hubert Sumlin and Portland blues
harmonica ace Paul deLay and his band and Jimmy
Vivino, guitarist for the Conan O'Brien Show.
The Northwest Film
Center presents Reel Blues 7
The Northwest Film Center invites you to two
special outdoor screenings on the Oregonian A&E Front
Porch Stage.
“Hubert Sumlin: Living the Blues”
Friday, July 2, 10 p.m.
A&E Front Porch Stage
Directors: Jim Kent, Sumner Burgwyn
U.S. , 1987, 60 minutes
Born in Mississippi in 1931, Hubert Sumlin
moved to Chicago in the 1950s. He soon began a 25-year association
as guitarist with the great Howlin’ Wolf. As Wolf’s
steady sideman and in his own career, Sumlin has recorded
dozens of classic performances that remain influential favorites
for blues and rock guitarists. Sumlin’s career provides an
overview of the evolution of the blues from its origins in
the Delta to the electric Chicago era that transformed modern
American music. Kent and Burgwyn’s loving film gives eloquent
testimony to the remarkable career and impact of a living
legend. Director Jim Kent will introduce the film.
Hubert Sumlin will perform with the Paul
deLay Band and Jimmy Vivino, guitarist for the
Conan O'Brien Show at the Waterfront Blues Festival
on July 5.
“The Howlin’ Wolf Story”
Saturday, July 3, 10 p.m.
A&E Front Porch Stage
Director Don McGlynn
U.S. 2003, 90 minutes
Don McGlynn’s film is the definitive
film portrait of one of the blues’ most forceful artists.
Uncut performances of classic tracks, countless excerpts and
interviews with fellow musicians, band members, friends and
family, tell the story of Wolf’s tragic early years in the
Mississippi Delta, family difficulties, little known military
service (in Oregon!) and amazing musical legacy. The directors
include vintage performances of many of the Wolf’s and Hubert
Sumlin’s timeless cuts including “Moanin' at Midnight,” “Shake
for Me,” “Dust My Broom,” “Smokestack Lightning,” “Killing
Floor” and “Back Door Man.”
Wolf biographer Mark Hoffman, co-author
of the just released biography “Moanin’ at Midnight: The
Life and Times of Howling Wolf” will introduce the film.
Interview: Mark Hoffman, co-author, "The
Life and Times of Howlin’ Wolf”
Saturday, July 3, 3:15 to 4 p.m.
Household Workshop Stage
Mark Hoffman, co-author of a new biography
of Howlin’ Wolf will discuss one of the greatest bluesmen
of all time. Ray Varner, former blues DJ, nightclub
manager, music writer and concert promoter and co-founder
of the Washington Blues Society, will interview Hoffman.
"This fluid, fascinating and thoroughly
researched biography is a long overdue tribute to one of the
two giants of post-WWII Chicago-style electric blues music.
Music writers James Segrest and Mark Hoffman do a superb job
of capturing the many facets of Wolf's long career, making
it a worthy companion to Robert Gordon’s “Can’t Be Satisfied:
The Life and Times of Muddy Waters,” the other Chicago blues
giant. But while Waters was controlled and sexy, Segrest and
Hoffman show, in contrast, how Wolf was ferocious, angry and
unpredictable, a large man with a powerful, raspy voice and
a keen intelligence. Born Chester Burnett in Mississippi in
1910, Wolf, as the authors show, endured crushing poverty
and almost constant physical abuse, the source of much of
the anger in his music.”
—Publishers Weekly (starred review), April 12, 2004
Howlin’ with Hubert: Hubert Sumlin with the
Paul deLay Band and Jimmy Vivino
Monday, July 5, 2:15 to 3:30 p.m.
Credit Union Stage
Jimi Hendrix called Hubert Sumlin, “My Favorite
Guitarist.” Stevie Ray Vaughan described him as the “heaviest,
most original guitar player I’ve ever heard in my life.” “Rolling
Stone Magazine” named him “One of the 100 Greatest Guitarists
of All Time.”
Quiet and unassuming off the bandstand, Hubert
Sumlin developed an incendiary guitar style that provided
the perfect foil for the legendary Howlin’ Wolf. Sumlin's
twisting, darting, unpredictable guitar lines energized such
Wolf classics as “Wang Dang Doodle,” “Howlin’ for
My Darlin,” “The Red Rooster,” “Backdoor Man,”
“Killing Floor,” “Smokestack Lightnin’” and “Sittin' on Top
of the World.” They are songs that helped define the Chicago
blues of the late 1960s and inspired cover versions by the
Cream, the Doors, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Jimi Hendrix, the Grateful
Dead and the Rolling Stones.
At his Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival appearance,
the Paul deLay Band, joined by Sumlin’s pal and musical
director, Jimmy Vivino, guitarist for the Conan
O’Brien Show, will back Hubert Sumlin. In the late 1970s,
not long after the Wolf’s death, Portland harmonica ace Paul
deLay played with Sumlin in a band backing the legendary Chicago
blues pianist Sunnyland Slim on a West Coast tour. Sumlin
and deLay have remained friends and admirers ever since. deLay
considers Sumlin the greatest of the Chicago blues guitarists.
Sumlin says of deLay, “For my money, he’s the best harp player
on the planet.”
Dick Waterman interviews Hubert Sumlin
Monday, July 5, 4 to 4:45 p.m.
Household Workshop Stage
Following Sumlin’s main-stage performance, blues
photographer and historian Dick Waterman will interview Sumlin
about his years with Howlin’ Wolf.
Oregon
Food Bank
Oregon Food Bank is a nonprofit, charitable
organization. It is the hub of a statewide network of more
than 800 hunger-relief agencies serving Oregon and Clark County,
Wash. Oregon Food Bank recovers food from farmers, manufacturers,
wholesalers, retailers, individuals and government sources.
It then distributes that food to 20 regional food banks across
Oregon. Eighteen are independent charitable organizations.
OFB directly operates the two regional food banks serving
the Portland metro area. Those two centers distribute food
weekly to more than 300 food pantries, soup kitchens, shelters
and other programs helping low-income indivdiuals in Multnomah,
Clackamas, Clark and Washington counties. Oregon Food Bank
also works to eliminate the root causes of hunger through
advocacy and public education.
Festival
sponsors
Oregon Food Bank thanks festival sponsors for
making the 2004 Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival possible.
The 2004 Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival is presented by
First Tech Credit Union with major sponsorship by CO-OP Network,
Household, Miller Genuine Draft, KINK fm102 and The Oregonian
A&E.
Supporting Sponsorship is provided by iQ Credit Union, Pepsi,
Snapple, Safeway Refreshe, Beringer Wine, Henry's, Tully's
Coffee, Frito Lay Snacks, Dreyer's Ice Cream, Yoshida Sauce,
Smuckers, Stonyfield Farm Yogurt, Zenner's Sausage and Smoked
Meats, Gillette, POVA, Riverplace Hotel, OregonLive.com, KBOO,
KOIN TV6, Northwest Film Center, Spring PCS, Day Wireless
Systems, Green Mountain Energy, Edge Design, Music Millennium,
Guitar Center, Beard Frames, Karolyn H. March, Attorney, Cascade
Blues Assocation, Oregon Potters Association and Cascade Zydeco
Association.
###
Contacts:
Jean Kempe-Ware, public relations manager
Oregon Food Bank
503-419-4170 (office)
503-572-7588 (cell)
jkempe-ware@oregonfoodbank.org
Peter Dammann, talent coordinator
503-283-3225
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