OXFORD, Miss. – Bluesman Bill “Howl-N-Madd” Perry isn’t really howling mad.
Even when he opens the door of the Two Stick restaurant here
for our interview, he has a grin on his face as wide as the swath of sunshine
that follows him in. Sporting a black beret, a stud in each ear, a dark
pullover proclaiming Clarksdale, Miss., the Crossroads
to the Blues, he shakes my hand like we’re old friends.
It’s not long before he’s telling the story of how he got
the nickname. He was a country boy accepting a challenge from his uncle to butt
heads with a billy goat. “BAAAM! It seemed like boiling hot needles were
burning! I knocked the goat down, and my head didn’t hurt. It must have knocked
my brains down to my ankles. My feet were on fire!”
All of us at the table—Perry, his daughter “Shy”, Oxford
musician and Ole Miss biology instructor Wendy Garrison, me—are laughing. We
laugh a lot during my two-hour interview with Perry, 65, a Lafayette County
native bluesman who has been performing and recording since the 1960s.
One story leads to the next, such the time he and his family
performed at “Big Mama’s Juke Joint” in Hong Kong. “Very elegant,” Shy recalls.
(Shy Perry)
“They spent $10 million on the place,” Dad says. “One night
we had a tour group that flew down from Shanghai. They spoke no English except
for the interpreter. Seeing those people clap their hands, getting up,
hollering, dancing to the music, knowing they didn’t understand what we were
saying … ."
He shakes his head and grins. “Of course, we were a
good-lookin’ band!”
We’re sitting just a short walk from the Blues Trail marker
on Oxford’s Square. The marker includes Perry among the region’s blues greats.
Over his long career he has performed and worked with the likes of T-Bone
Walker, Freddie King, Clarence Carter and Little Milton. Today he teaches blues
as well as performs it.
Bill Perry’s blues trail has been long and winding. His
sharecropping father, a gambler and moonshiner, won him his first guitar in a
crap game. Young Bill sat in front of local bluesman Ned Bowles “like a bird
dog that spotted a bird” to learn licks on a guitar.
The Perrys were poor, but music and moonshine made their
house a popular destination. “Our house was the boogie house,” he says.
People bought moonshine and stayed to drink it and play
music on the front porch. “I made up my mind I wanted to be an entertainer.
Guys who played the guitar were always the center of attention. I never got
attention.”
Still, the Perrys were different from other folks. Bill had
a black father and a white mother. “I
was a tar baby with red hair.”
When the family moved from Mississippi to Chicago, life
stayed hard. “You find out how cruel people can be. I guess that plays into
what I call the blues.”
His father kicked him out of the house when he resisted a
beating. “My dad was a strict, super-duper country dude. He believed in busting
your butt if you got out of hand. I never was told I was loved. I was never
hugged.
Perry’s mother cared for him and helped him, but his father
laid down the law.
He started out playing gospel, worked at Chess Records, got
to meet the great Willie Dixon. “I tried to learn every doggone thing I could
about that studio.” With the help of Little Milton, he switched to the blues
and made his debut solo recording in 1970 with “I Was A Fool”. The song got on
the Billboard charts. A long career
of performing and touring followed.
Perry “is able to tell of some awful things from touring in
the segregated South in the ‘60s while seeing humor in how ridiculous the
people perpetrating the situation were,” says his friend Garrison, herself a
fine slide guitarist.
Perry moved back to Mississippi in the 1980s, a decision he
has never regretted. “Here you got room. I’m not saying we’re perfect in Mississippi,
but compared to Chicago we come about as close to perfection as you can get. I
had enough squeezed-up living, 27 years of my life.”
Yes, no more city life for Perry, who lives near the tiny
town of Abbeville, Miss., (population 421). “Oxford’s too big for me. Abbeville
would be too big!”
Despite a stroke in recent years and near blindness, Perry
travels constantly, performing solo or with other artists such as his own
family. Wife Pauline, daughter Shy and son Bill Perry Jr. are all accomplished
musicians. He also stays busy teaching young musicians at the Delta Blues
Museum in Clarksdale and other venues. He says one of his pupils, Christone
Ingram, is a future great.
“I try to pass on what I know to be the truth. … This is my
passion in life. My music and my family.”
Here’s Perry performing with harmonica player Adam
Gussow: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skGR_2nRXhw.
This is a performance of “I’m Going Back to the Crossroads” circa May 2010.
And check out this link to hear some of the other talent in this family. This is Bill Perry Jr. on the piano with his song "Jo-Lynn": http://www.frequency.com/video/bill-perry-jolynn-oxford-sessions/68447297/-/5-110056
And check out this link to hear some of the other talent in this family. This is Bill Perry Jr. on the piano with his song "Jo-Lynn": http://www.frequency.com/video/bill-perry-jolynn-oxford-sessions/68447297/-/5-110056
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