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Uncle John Turner 7/2007

July 26, 2007 – Uncle John Turner – Unc to his friends was born and raised in Port Arthur Texas, hometown of Janis Joplin as well, on August 20th 1944. He was one of the founders of the blues-rock style of drumming and therefore a Texas legend.

Uncle John Turner was born and raised in Port Arthur, Texas. He first played drums with Jerry LaCroix. Then Unc met the Winter brothers and performed with them a few times as a substitute. In 1968, Unc convinced Johnny to try a full blown blues band and sent for his friend Tommy Shannon to play bass. This group quickly got natonal recognition and began making records and shortly after that played Woodstock, with Edgar Winter as the fourth member.

By late 1970, they had split up and Uncle John and Tommy moved to Austin and formed a band called Krackerjack, which had Stevie Ray Vaughan as one of the major guitarists, along with Jesse Taylor, John Stahely, and Robin Syler.

Unc then moved to Houston for a while and made records with Isaac Payton Sweat, Ezra Charles, and Joey Long and played and recorded the next four years with Alan Haynes.

After this, Johnny Winter, Tommy Shannon, and Uncle John did some recording on Johnny’s Third Degree album.

Uncle John then joined Paul Orta and made three albums with him before he and Appa Perry began the Blues Power project, which was Uncle John and Appa and different artists, including Alan Haynes, Mike Keller, Matt Farrell, Matthew Robinson, John McVey, Mark Goodwin, Erin “Icewater” James, Eve Monsees, Gary Clark Jr., Shawn Pittman, Nick Gibson, and others.

Uncle John has jammed with B. B. King, Jimi Hendrix, Freddie King, Muddy Waters, Junior Wells, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Johnny Copeland, Albert Collins, James Montgomery, Paul Nelson. and many more. Unc has also recorded with Walter “Shakey” Horton, Willie Dixon, Albert Collins, Nuno Mindelis (the Blues King of Brazil), Benoît Blue Boy (the godfather of French blues), Lazy Lester, and many more.

He died on July 26, 2007 from complications of hepatitis C. He was 62.

My job sucks today, as it does on any day when the world tilts to one side and then straightens, one soul lighter. At least that’s the way it felt to hear about Uncle John Turner’s death on this sky-is-crying Thursday morning.

There’s so much to be said about Turner’s legacy to Texas music and the blues that if I were queen of Austin, we’d already have a statue of him next to the statue of Clifford Antone next to the statue of Biscuit next to the statue of Doug Sahm next to the statue of Stevie. While you most likely know those last four names, chances are that Uncle John Turner’s name draws a blank.

There’s a bit of irony to the announcement I heard on KUT while driving home, thinking about Uncle John. Jay Trachtenberg was saying that today is Mick Jagger’s birthday as well as the day that Emotional Rescue went No. 1 in the U.S. 27 years ago. It reminded me that the Stones made their initial foray on the rock scene as a blues band, as did the Animals, the Yardbirds, and numerous other British Invasion bands circa 1964. It would take the stateside bands another few years to reclaim the blues, and that was done in large part by two Texans: Janis Joplin and Johnny Winter. And what Johnny Winter knew about the blues, he learned from Uncle John Turner.

Turner, like Winter, grew up in East Texas. His hometown of Port Arthur and the neighboring state of Louisiana came by the blues naturally and Turner absorbed it all. It must have been quite the day when Turner sat down with Winter and a stack of vinyl, elucidating the differences between field hollers and Chicago blues, Delta rhythms and Texas shuffles. Winter got it all and the Johnny Winter Trio, with Tommy Shannon on bass, went on to make blues history. Somehow, Turner’s role went largely unacknowledged.

After leaving Winter, he relocated to Austin and played in Krackjack with Shannon and Stevie Ray Vaughan, while plying his blues trade sitting in, backing up, and recording with artists such as Jimi Hendrix, B.B. King, Freddie King, Muddy Waters, and Lightnin’ Hopkins. Turner kept a low profile the last 20 or so years but stayed busy playing with Alan Haynes, Appa Perry’s Blues Power, and Erin Jaimes. In November 2006, Uncle John Turner reunited with Johnny Winter and Tommy Shannon at La Zona Rosa, their first live performance together in more than 20 years.

Almost exactly two months ago today, I was in Chicago eulogizing my former husband Rollo Banks. In the comfortably numb state of shock that got me through that weekend, I walked down South Michigan Avenue from my hotel to the Art Institute of Chicago, wandering its glacial marble halls for hours. Then I stumbled across a contemporary painting by a Chicago artist named Ivan Albright.

The painting itself was striking: tall, slender, and mostly black. A door with a funeral wreath on it and a disembodied hand reaching for the knob. The name of the painting struck me like the clawhammer of the gods on my head: “That Which I Should Have Done I Did Not Do.” The title echoed like a Chinese gong until I went searching in the museum gift shop, found a print, and bought it. It hangs in my living room, a reminder that life is merciful and merciless.

I should have written about Turner before his death. I should have harangued my editor about why this man so few know about is so worthy and maybe those cute twentysomethings playing Emo’s next week can wait for their 15 minutes while we give ink to someone who earned it years ago.

I got close a few months back, interviewing Turner about trios. I even interviewed Tommy Shannon and did a separate piece on him. I kept Turner in the main story and, dammit, now I wish I’d spotlighted him too.
Uncle John Turner’s gift to Texas was his music and his life in it. We are all the richer for that but poorer without him.  The benefit show scheduled for Wednesday at Antone’s will go on with Johnny Winter, 7pm.

Margaret Moser – The Austin Chronicle July 26, 2007

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