Flyersâ Bass Player Takes a Solo Flight : Blues: The founding member of the Orange County R&B; band has joined other local artists to make a whole lotta Big Noise.
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Thereâs a joke about an anthropologist who thinks he knows all the ways of the remote tribe heâs been living with for two years, but one night a frantic, desperate drumming commences, and the chief will say only that if the drumming ever stops, a terrible, terrible thing will occur.
Finally, as the night wears on to morning and the drumming pounds on, the anthropologist pleads with the chief, âPlease, weâre blood brothers, tell me, what is the terrible, terrible thing that happens if the drumming stops?â
âBass solo starts.â
Fortunately, Mighty Flyersâ bassist Bill Stuve knew better than to fill his recently released solo album with lengthy pronouncements from his unwieldy stand-up bass. Instead, his low notes mostly just provide the solid support that has marked Stuveâs 13 years as a founding Flyer, while his singing and the solid ensemble swinging of his assembled blues stars make his âBig Noiseâ album live up to its title.
This Sunday, Stuve is going live with his Big Noise, performing at Crawfordâs Nightclub in Lakewood with most of the albumâs artists, who compose a large chunk of the local blues scene.
Thereâll be harpists James Harman and Johnny Dyer (Dyer doesnât appear on the album), sax giant Lee Allen (a former Blaster and featured soloist with Little Richard and Fats Domino), pianist Steve FâDor, and fellow Flyers Alex Schultz on guitar and Jimi Bott on drums. Rounding out the group are Jeff Turmes (bassist with the Harman Band), Brett Wheeler on saxes and Eddie Reed on guitar. (The albumâs Jr. Watson, a former Mighty Flyer and Canned Heat member, has a conflicting gig on Sunday.)
The Mighty Flyers have been a staple on the Orange County blues scene for more than a decade (they perform one of the final shows at the fading Sunset Pub tonight; see story on F1). More recently, theyâve become a major festival attraction in Europe. Two people not appearing on Stuveâs album are Flyers lead singer/harmonica player Rod Piazza and his keyboardist wife, Honey Alexander, but thatâs not because of a falling out.
Rather, Stuve said, âI just thought if I got them on it, it would be too much like a Flyers record, and I wanted to do some different things, like using horns. There are only two or three songs with harmonica on the album.â
The album boasts three Stuve compositions as well as a Stuve/Bott arrangement of the title track, adapted from the Bob Crosby standard âBig Noise From Winnetka.â The other selections--including tunes from Clarence (Gatemouth) Brown, Muddy Waters, Otis Spann and rockabilly obscurity Lew Williams--are mostly songs Stuve has performed onstage with the Flyers but never recorded with them.
Rather than creating a conflict with the Flyers, Stuve feels his solo outing helps his relations with the group.
âWhat happens in bands, Iâve found, with a lot of cats is theyâre writing and doing songs on the bandstand, but itâs a different priority when the recording comes along,â Stuve said. âIn this situation, itâs Rodâs band, and heâs such a monster on the harp that itâs kind of tough to get my stuff out there (on the Flyersâ records). So instead of getting all negative and bummed out and quitting the band or anything, Iâve got this optimistic outlet, which I think has been a healthy thing for me and the band.â
Stuve said the solo project is something heâd always wanted to do. âThen when we were touring in Europe these companies said, âBill, if you ever record anything weâd like to hear it.â So I said what the heck and booked some studio time.â
The âBig Noiseâ CD has been released only in Europe. Stuve hopes to make a distribution deal with Rounder Records in the United States. In the meantime, he is distributing the imports himself. âIâm doing like Colonel Parker in the old days,â he said, âtaking them to the record stores and to the gigs.â (The CD can be found locally at the Music Market in Costa Mesa and Lamarâs Records in Long Beach.)
Stuve, 39, started in music as a youngster, providing drum accompaniment for his piano-playing grandfather. âThen came the Stones and the Beatles, and I said, âForget that!â and got a guitar. Then I found I was always showing bass players their parts--maybe it came easier because of my drum education. There were always a lot of guitar players around, so I got a gig playing electric bass, and from there went on to the stand-up.â
He cites such influences as Willie Dixon, early Muddy Waters bassist Big Crawford and Slam Stewart, and he says bass (which he calls âthe big doghouseâ) never gets boring for him.
âI think thereâs a lot you can do with it,â he said. âPeople say, âOh, itâs just three chords,â but thereâs all these colorings, interactions between the band members, and of course working with the audience. So I donât have a problem with it.â
The Flyers have a new album, called âBlues in the Dark,â due in January on the Rounder-distributed Blacktop label. They also have a new publicist and booking agency.
âHopefully weâll go to another plateau,â Stuve said, âbut I really canât complain about our success. Everything Iâve wanted to do since I was a child has come true.
âItâs something just being able to play music and make a living doing it. And weâve been able to travel in Europe extensively where, boy, are they appreciative of American music. Finland was our first stop ever outside the U.S. It was the middle of winter, freezing cold, but the audience was amazing, like something youâd imagine the early Stones and Beatles things were like. They wouldnât stop clamoring.
âItâs always a little frustrating because at home, the style of music weâre playing really doesnât get the acceptance youâd hope for. But I think now blues seems to be making a little turnaround. And sometimes when youâre touring thereâs going to be the night-after-night drudgery, but overall, I think if you can be happy 75% of the time up there on the bandstand, then thatâs better than most other guys got.â
Bill Stuveâs âBig Noiseâ performs Sunday at 8 p.m. at Crawfordâs Nightclub, 11529 Carson St. (west of the San Gabriel River Freeway), Lakewood. The Deep Blue Sea band opens at 6 p.m. Admission: $2. Information: (213) 924-0446.