Here, mostly about music; oldtime-radio research at JHeroes; more general blog, other journalism; and on Mastodon as newsie.social/@BobStep
Saturday, April 28, 2018
A Leon Redbone story and picture
A musician friend -- singer, guitarist, radio host, and scholar of pre-WorldWar II music -- posted on Facebook that he would like very much to meet Leon Redbone... so I told him my story.
In the 1970s, another friend of mine, Jim Rigby, freelanced music articles for a hip alt-weekly, the Hartford Advocate, and called me up to say he'd gotten an interview with Leon Redbone. I had been at the daily Hartford Courant for years and also knew a little about blues/ragtime guitar, so Jim asked me to come along and help with the interview... backstage at the legendary The Shaboo Inn near Willimantic, Conn.
Two memorable things about the meeting:
1. A musical revelation (to me, anyway): Among his influences, Leon mentioned singer and guitarist Lee Morse, which was the first time I'd heard of her. (Thanks to YouTube, she's much easier to find today.)
2. Style:
From his "Ah yes, the gentlemen of the press..." Leon remained in character, which sounded like he was channeling W.C. Fields and Groucho Marx simultaneously, with a touch of Chaplin. As he said those ".. gentlemen of the press" words, he began rummaging through his pockets -- pants, suitcoat, vest, shirt -- muttering about how he had too many pockets, "... counted them once..." -- finally producing a business card and giving it to Jim, who glanced at it and put it in his pocket. And off we went with the interview.
At the end, I said (approximately), "Leon, when you were up in Lenox, Mass., last year with John Prine, I took some pictures of you on stage and I really like the way one of them came out. I'd like to send it to you. Could I have one of your cards?"
He went through the whole pocket-searching shtick again, finally producing the card, which I pocketed, and said goodnight.
Here's the picture I was telling him about, and the card. I never sent him a copy of the photo, for lack of an address...
The front of the card says "How do you do."
The other side is blank.