
“So
what can one say about Robben Ford? He is just mesmerizing!”
Ann Wickstror.
Robben Ford is one of the premiere electric guitarists today,
particularly known
for his blues playing as well as his ability to be comfortable
in a variety of musical contexts.
A four-time
Grammy nominee,
he has played with artists as diverse as
Joni Mitchell, Jimmy Witherspoon, Miles
Davis, George Harrison, Phil Lesh,
Bonnie Raitt, Claus Ogerman, Michael McDonald, and many,
many others.
Born in 1951 in Ukaih, California, Robben was the third of
four sons in a musical
family. His father Charles was a country and western singer
and guitarist before
entering the army and marrying Kathryn, who played piano
and had a lovely
singing voice.
Robben’s first chosen instrument was
the saxophone, which he
began to play at age ten and continued to play until his
early twenties.
He began
to teach himself guitar at age thriteen upon hearing the
two guitarists from The
Paul Butterfield Blues Band, Michael Bloomfield and Elvin
Bishop.
In the late
1960’s, Ford frequented the
Filmore
and Winterland Auditoriums in San
Francisco to see Jimmy Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Cream, Led
Zeppelin, Albert King,
B.B. King and all of the progenitors of blues. “
It
was an incredible time for electric
guitar,” Ford recalls.
On his interest in jazz, Ford says,”
I
fell in love with the sax playing of Paul
Desmond and The Dave Brubeck Quartet, and before long found
Ornette
Coleman, Archie Shepp, Yusaf Lateef, Roland Kirk, John Coltrane,
Wayne
Shorter, and of course, Miles Davis.”
These influences
have stayed with Ford,
playing a large part in his particular blend of jazz and
blues that define him as a
guitarist and allow him to play in a wide variety of settings.
After high school,
Robben and
his
brothers Patrick (a blues
drummer) and
Mark (a blues harmonica player)
formed
The Charles Ford Blues Band (named after
their father) and recorded for the
Arhoolie
label.
Robben
(on sax and guitar) and
Patrick went on to tour the U.S. with Chicago harmonica player
Charlie
Musselwhite, again recording for Arhoolie.
Robben’s first attempt at forming his own jazz quartet
was picked up by
legendary blues singer
Jimmy Witherspoon, bringing Robben
to L.A.
He toured
the U.S. and Europe with Witherspoon and was seen by Tom
Scott, and
members of The L.A. Express, who were about to begin a promotional
tour with
Joni Mitchell for her recording “
Court
and Spark”.
Ford was invited to play guitar
on the tour and played on two recordings with Mitchell and
The L.A. Express.
“
The two years I spent with Joni
were the most formative of my musical life. Joni
was just brilliant and very accessible then, and the members
of The L.A. Express
became good friends and teachers to me. It was great.”
Beatle George Harrison invited Robben to join him on his “
Dark
Horse” tour of the
U.S. and Canada, raising Ford’s musical profile even
further. Shortly after the two
month stint with Harrison, Ford moved to Colorado to take
a much needed break
from music and to study with Buddhist teacher Chogyam Trungpa.
In 1977, he
was approached by Elektra records to record for them, which
produced his first
solo recording “
The Inside Story” with a group
of musicians who went on to
become The Yellowjackets.
Elektra closed their doors in the early 1980’s, leading
to a time of uncertainty for
Robben.
He moved to San Francisco to be close to family and
his early musical
history.
Soon his career would take another upward swing,
recording and touring
with
Michael McDonald, securing a recording contract with
Warner Brothers
Records, and meeting his soon-to-be wife, actress Anne Kerry.
After moving to
New York with Anne, he was called to play with musical icon
Miles Davis.
“
Producer Tommy Lipuma played
Miles my work with the Yellowjackets, then
three days later, Miles called me personally to join his
band. Shocking!” Ford
lamented having to leave Miles after only six months because
of recording
commitments with Warner Brothers, but was told by Miles that
if he ever wanted
to come back, “
just come back.”.
Robben’s 1988 release for Warner Brothers, “
Talk
to Your Daughter” brought his
first Grammy nomination (Best Contemporary Blues Recording)
and he started
touring the world under his own name. Still based in New
York, he backed David
Sandborn on the television music show “
Nite
Music”,
in which Sandborn hosted a
variety of musical acts. Ford toured with Sandborn in 1990,
then moved back to
southern California shortly thereafter to be closer to his
own band.
After leaving Warner Brothers, Robben signed with
Stretch/GRP
records, where
he finally found a real home for his creativity, recording
three CDs for them with
his band “
The Blue Line” (Tom Brechtlein on drums
and Roscoe Beck on bass).
After a very fruitful eight years, Robben disbanded the group
and recorded two
more CDs for the label which had then become Stretch/Blue
Thumb: “
Tiger Walk” (an instrumental recording done in New York with Keith Richard’s
rhythm section)
and “
Supernatural”, Ford’s most accomplished
work up to that point as a
songwriter.
As his contract was up at Stretch/Blue Thumb, Robben signed
with
Concord
Records, the largest independently owned record company.
In 2002, he released “
Blue
Moon”, and in 2003
“Keep on
Runnin’”,
a recording full of the 60’s
blues/R&B feeling with which he grew up.
Ford’s third release for Concord is entitled “
Truth”. “
I
feel this is the best work I
have done in terms of a solo recording. It is my most realized
work as a
songwriter, and I feel like I am reaching higher ground as
a guitarist. “Truth” represents
the blues as they are today; some of the songs are sociopolitical
in essence, but not without humor, and the musical setting
is fresh.”
Robben currently lives in Ojai, California with his wife
Anne, with whom he
collaborates with on various musical projects including her
recent CD “
Weill",
which Robben produced on their own Illyria label.
official website: www.robbenford.com
Line up:
Robben FORD -
voice, guitar
Travis CARLTON -
bass
Anastios PANOS -
drums