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Holy rollers

The Blind Boys of Alabama and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band
By TED DROZDOWSKI  |  March 24, 2009

090320_blindboys_main
DIVINE PROOF: "When people hear our songs and tell me that we have touched their lives, well, that's what me and the rest of the band are all about," says Jimmy Carter (third from left).

Soul survivors: A short list of gospel essentials. By Ted Drozdowski.
The double bill of the Blind Boys of Alabama and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band at Symphony Hall on Friday is a match made in New Orleans, where the two venerable groups met to record the Blind Boys' 2008 album. But the music they make together, insists Blind Boys tenor singer Jimmy Carter, comes from a higher place. "When I am singing, I am an instrument of God, and all of the music we make is carrying his message. I am his spirit. And when people hear our songs and tell me that we have touched their lives, well, that's what me and the rest of the band are all about."

If that seems a bit pretentious, consider the band's history, which Carter describes as a "mission." It began in 1939 when a group of students at the Talladega Institute for the Blind led by lion-voiced baritone Clarence Fountain banded together as the Five Blind Boys of Alabama. Carter joined five years later, while the group were touring the tent-revival circuit and performing on radio like their heroes, the Golden Gate Quartet.

"We were influenced by them and the Soul Stirrers and the Pilgrim Travelers," he explains over the phone from his 102-year-old mother's house in Alabama. "My voice was a little less scratchy back then, but it's still in good shape. The secret is getting plenty of rest." Even though these singing septuagenarians play 150 to 200 shows a year, Carter does get more sleep than he did during his first 57 years with the band — especially in the early years, when low-paying one-nighters in churches, tents, and community centers were the norm.

Although the Blind Boys' recording career began in 1948, it wasn't till 2001 and Spirit of the Century (Real World) that they crossed over to the mainstream and became a festival and major-concert headliner. That disc's covers of Tom Waits, Ben Harper, and Rolling Stones songs — along with producer John Chelew's rock-savvy arrangements — took them to a new, younger audience. The cover of Waits's "Way Down in the Hole" became the themesong for the first season of HBO's The Wire, in June 2002.

The series of discs they've made since have done the same thanks to their album-to-album reinvention. In 2002, Higher Ground (Real World) found them diving into blues, soul, and reggae. For last year's Down in New Orleans (Time Life), they convened in the Crescent City over a songbook that included tunes by that music mecca's greatest gospel voice, Mahalia Jackson, "Down by the Riverside," and the traditional blues spiritual "You Got To Move." They were joined in the studio by the Hot 8 Brass Band and pianist Allen Toussaint.

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Related: Jim nauseam, Carter vs. the Clamshell: round one is a standoff, Jimmy C. and Teddy K., More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Entertainment, Music, Jimmy Carter,  More more >
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