Photo by Jay Lee
Rocks Off will assume Dan Aykroyd needs no introduction to most of the English- and Canadian-speaking worlds. Every bit as passionate and knowledgeable about music as Harley-Davidsons, Aykroyd also co-founded House of Blues in 1992. In case you somehow hadn’t heard, House of Blues Houston (1204 Caroline) is smack in the middle of its opening week, which climaxes at tomorrow night’s invite-only show – click here for a chance to win passes – with Aykroyd, Jim Belushi and the rest of the Blues Brothers Band.
Around noon, Rocks Off sat down with the star of Ghostbusters, Grosse Pointe Blank and the forthcoming War, Inc. – and the first Saturday Night Live alum to be nominated for an Oscar, for 1989’s Driving Miss Daisy – in HOB Houston’s hyper-posh VIP lounge the Foundation Room to talk about as much as we could squeeze into 15 minutes.
Rocks Off: First of all, whoโs in the band tomorrow night?
Dan Aykroyd: Our keyboard and Hammond B-3 player is Glen Clark, who was a major collaborator with Delbert McClinton for many years; they wrote many songs together and Glen traveled with Delbert. Our drummerโs Tony Brownigal โ heโs from Houston, and he is also the producer of the Phantom Blues Band and he produces Taj Mahalโs records.
Johnny Lee Shell is a Texas-born guitar player who played with Bonnie Raitt for many years. He was her right-hand man. J.J. Holliday is our guitarist from California. Heโs played with Bob Dylan and also has his own band the Imperial Crowns. Fantastic artist. Larry Derma is from Texas I believe โ heโs definitely from Texas, I donโt know what town. Dime Box, I think, or Farwell or some place. Heโs a bass player whoโs been in numerous records and bands over the years.
We have the Texicali Horns, Joe Sublett and Darrell Leonard, who were named by Stevie Ray Vaughan. They are two horns who sound like four. Itโs just a compilation of the best studio cats around, and recording cats and producers and Grammy winners. Itโs very strongly a Texas band.
Photo by Jay Lee
RO: Any guests? I heard Eddie Floyd might be around.
DA: Ahhhh. If heโs around, heโs more than welcome to jam with us. I love him. Heโs great. We have Wanda King opening and Guitar Shorty, so thatโs going to be very exciting, and Iโm bringing Jeff Baxter from the Doobie Brothers and Steely Dan, one of the great world-class guitar players. Heโll be there as well.
RO: What was your first blues experience?
DA: Well, I grew up in Ottawa, Canada. It was a government town, an academic town, and there was a booker there named Harvey Black who used to bring the best musicians in the world to his club. I guess Howlinโ Wolf was the first artist I saw, and I saw him dozens and dozens of times.
Howlin’ Wolf/ www.artsbycraft.com
RO: Did many people like that come up that way?
DA: Ummmโฆ yep. We had John Lee Hooker, we had Howlinโ Wolf, we had O.V. Wright, we had Otis Spann, S.P. Leary. I jammed behind Muddy Waters one night onstage there. B.B. King, Paul Butterfield, Charlie Musselwhite, Albert King โ saw โem all, because it was a university town, an academic town, a town that appreciated blues music and culture. And so as a kid I saw basically everybody โ James Cotton, everybody.
RO: Which style of blues are you most partial to?
DA: My favorite movement in American music is the Stax/Volt movement. Eddie Floyd, Wilson Pickett, Sam & Dave, Otis Redding, Carla Thomas, Rufus Thomas. When Steve Cropper and Duck Dunn joined the Blues Brothers Band, thatโs when we really became a legitimate act and when the music really became dominant. They were Otis Reddingโs guitar players, and for them to recognize that we were doing a valid musical thing really, really put the stamp on the band as a real element.
RO: I wanted to show you this. This is something that just opened last week โ itโs a local artistsโ collective in the Third Ward that just brought in several artists to create โ each house is like a different gallery. I just wanted to ask you about Lightninโ Hopkins.
DA: Yeah, well, he is right there in the Texas pantheon. Lightninโ, T-Bone Walker, Freddie King. The thing about Lightninโ is he sort of redefined electric guitar. He was a sharper player than many others, more of a lead player than say like Charlie Christian or some of the other players who were rhythm/acoustic players. Lightninโ really plugged in, and he is responsible for influencing so many other guitar players. A massive influence.
RO: If he were alive today, do you think he would play House of Blues?
DA: Sure. If we paid him enough. Absolutely. He would be perfect. You know, weโve had [longtime Howlinโ Wolf guitarist] Hubert Sumlin come and play, and weโve had all the artists that are in the field today. They come. Buddy Guy โ I jammed with him the other night. It was great. He played New Orleans for us.
Photo by Chris Gray
RO: What do you think of this venue, the Houston club?
DA: Well, itโs like the Dallas club in that itโs a big, jumbo, Texas-size club. Beautiful, beautiful big showroom โ couldnโt be happier. Our preference when we build these House of Blues is to come in to a place and build a place thatโs one-off, thatโs purpose-built for the audience and the musicians to have an interface together. Weโve had to wedge ourselves into a couple of Woolworthโs stores โ we had one in Cleveland, one in San Diego.
But we donโt like that as much as being able to build from raw space. Here, we were able to work with the developer and get everything we wanted. Big huge, huge kitchen, massive loading-dock facility, great big stage, so I think this is perfectly, perfectly Texas-style. And perfectly jumbo for the community. Of all the clubs, I think the Dallas and Houston ones are the ones where weโve been able to do everything weโve wanted.
RO: Is this the first House of Blues thatโs part of a big development like the Pavilions?
DA: No, we had one in Cleveland, the downtown Flats district. The one in Dallas is also part of the Victory development. Downtown Disney, the Disney West in Orlando, same kind of thing.
HOB Houston’s Foundation Room/ photo by Jay Lee
RO: How hands-on were you in the process of getting this thing off the ground?
DA: Well, I was an investor. I put money into it, and I put my name and, you know, the celebrity value behind it and the ability to get media to come to it. But itโs Isaac Tigrett’s concept. He is the genius designer behind what you see here โ the dรฉcor and the food. He designed everything, right down to the Louisiana menu. The dining room, the whole concept. I was merely the mouthpiece and actually remain that today.
Photo by Mark C. Austin
RO: Did you get a chance to see any of Jay-Zโs show last night?
DA: I did not. I was at a gallery viewing the works of my friend John Alexander, who is a Texas-based artist who has been a good friend of mine for many years. I went to this incredible, incredible gallery to see Johnโs work. Heโs doing drawings of oil wells. Theyโre great. I forget the name of the gallery, but you should get over there. Great stuff. [Ed. Note: Elder Street Gallery, 1101 Elder, Suite 109.]
RO: Have you spent much time in Houston?
DA: I have kin here, actually. My wifeโs cousin lives here. So we get down to see them. We played the Childrenโs Charities benefit last year. Jimmy [Belushi] and I did.
RO: Do you still do your radio show?
DA: Yes. Weโre in the sixteenth year of production on that. Advertising new bands and treating the veterans with respect. [Ed. Note: The station closest to Houston that airs House of Blues Radio Hour, which Aykroyd hosts in character as Elwood Blues, is Victoria’s KLUB 106.7 FM, Sundays 8-9 a.m.]
RO: Who are some of the newer people youโve been playing lately?
DA: Well, of course I love Jonny Lang and Kenny Wayne Shepherd and [Blues Travelerโs] John Popper โ theyโre not so new-new-new, but certainly the next generation coming up. I love all the new artists: J.W. Jones, from Ottawa my hometown.
Dap-Tone Records
RO: Do you play stuff like Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings?
DA: Love Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings. We play her a lot, have interviewed her. I like Duffy too, that same kind of R&B sound. I hope thatโs where live music is going. I think the Dap-Kings are heroes to me โ theyโre just great. Theyโre recreating that old Stax/Volt sound.
RO: Do you think music is getting more soulful these days?
DA: Certainly that type of music is, yeah. Absolutely. Sure. I donโt know โ I donโt listen to radio too much. I just buy CDs.
RO: That kind of stuff seemed like it was gone for a long time, but now itโs really starting to come back. Why do you think that is?
DA: I think people are looking for more warmth in their music, and certainly horns give you that. A little more rhythm, and less of these staccato beats of rap and hip-hop. People are looking for something more warm and comfortable and soulful.
The original cast of Saturday Night Live
RO: As someone whoโs done your fair share of both, whatโs harder, music or comedy?
DA: Comedyโs the hardest thing to do. No doubt about it. Itโs an exercise โ you feel like youโre the astronaut who has to keep the ping-pong ball above the red line at all times. You have to continually keep an energy โ stoke, stoke, stoke a performance. With comedy you canโt just lay back and sort of let it happen.
With music you can get in the groove of the song and the cradle of creativity, but with comedy, youโve got to push it. You always have to push it. You have to keep it ignited, otherwise it disappears, it just no longer works. Itโs got to be a focused, concentrated effort. You feel like youโre engraving when youโre doing comedy. For that intense time when the camera rolls and youโve got three or four minutes to engrave that scene, and your energy has to be very high. I find it hard.
RO: Did you ever get starstruck by some of the musical guests on Saturday Night Live?
DA: [Laughs] Yeah, well, the Stones. Definitely the Stones, and Linda Ronstadt. All the time. Absolutely.
Tina Fey as Gov. Sarah Palin
RO: What do you think of the showโs prominent role in this campaign right now?
DA: I think theyโre doing the best political satire of anybody on TV, because [of] the impressionists and the writing, and I believe it has an influence. Either way, itโs got an influence. People are affected when they watch it. I donโt know if itโs going to swing any votes either way, but it definitely makes people think about the candidates and, you know, how real or how deceitful they can be.
RO: Do you think it does a good job spoofing both sides of the aisle?
DA: It does. I think it does. I think itโs fair. Thatโs always what Lorne [Michaels] wanted. Heโs not coming out on the side of one candidate or the other.
Bill Murray, Aykroyd and Harold Ramis in Ghostbusters
RO: I keep hearing that Bill Murrayโs in town. Have you seen him?
DA: In Houston? No. I donโt know why heโd be here.
Jay Lee (photographer): Heโs supposed to be shooting a film.
DA: In town? Really?
RO: He was definitely at the Austin City Limits festival. Have you ever been to that?
DA: I havenโt. I hear itโs great, though.
RO: Last thing Iโll ask you: Do people ever come up to you and quote lines from your movies, and you have no idea what theyโre talking about?
DA: Let me try to think. I usually know the references. I donโt think thereโs too many that I wouldnโt know. โ Chris Gray
This article appears in Oct 16-22, 2008.
