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Guitar King: Michael Bloomfield's Life in the Blues
By
David Dann
776 Pages
ISBN: #978-1477318775
University of Texas Press
2019
Through a combination of journalistic objectivity, scholarly attention to detail and the passion of a fan, author David Dann accomplishes exactly what he professes to achieve in his 'Prologue' to Guitar King. That is, his publication will ..."contribute to that worthy eventuality..." [whereby]..."[Michael Bloomfield will] assume his rightful place among those guitar players whose artistry has shared the evolution of American popular music and culture."
If nothing else, the writer has researched and assembled a a tome that does not fall prey to the bane of such biographies, i.e., rushing through the early history of the subject and limping to a conclusion during the latter-day, more recent segments. Quite the contrary, as Dann offers close to eight-hundred pages virtually all of which are worth equally careful reading. Even the play-by-plays of studio and stage performances, including the ill-conceived super-group KGB, conjure a palpable sense of suspense.
The main content efficiently educates on the timeline of the native Chicagoan's early existence in his native city, while the 'Notes,' Acknowledgments,' 'Other Resources,' etc., outline the scrupulous process by which the author assembled Michael Bloomfield's Life in the Blues. All that research by the man who acted as consultant on the superb audio/video compendium From His Head to His Heart to His Hands (Legacy, 2015) verifies the veracity of his storytelling. But it also substantiates how the writer renders such nuanced accounts of the comparatively low-profile and often idiosyncratic creative endeavors during Bloomfield's later years; he was rightfully proud of creating estimable soundtrack music for Steelyard Blues (Warner Bros., 1973) among others (including porn cinema!?)
More musicological than mercenary, it is this work by which Michael redefined the role of guitar hero for a generation. In his increasingly expansive projects such as the acoustic duets with Woody Harris, Bloomfield not only set himself apart from contemporaries such as

Eric Clapton
guitar and vocalsb.1945

Jeff Beck
guitar1944 - 2023

Howlin' Wolf
vocals1910 - 1976
The well-to-do, non-conformist Jewish boy's activities alongside

Bob Dylan
guitar and vocalsb.1941
Certainly, those activities are not so colorful as playing with the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, organizing and launching his eclectic, horn-propelled band, the Electric Flag, or collaborating with

Al Kooper
composer / conductorb.1944
There's a memorable cast of characters populating Michael Bloomfield's Life in the Blues from its very beginning. And they're not all wholly famous names like

Jimi Hendrix
guitar, electric1942 - 1970

Muddy Waters
guitar1915 - 1983
The album that deliberately introduced blues to an whole new (read: white) audience also served as recognition of the influence its progenitors wielded over contemporary rock. And it's arguable that, once Michael Bloomfield decided he had no patience for what

Joni Mitchell
vocalsb.1943
Granted his business alliance with manager Albert Grossman led inextricably to his work with Janis after her split from big Brother and the Holding company. But Bloomfield saw and heard a kindred spirit in the aforementioned Texas chanteuse as she formed the Kozmic Blues Band, one just as vivid as the that which he also sensed in

Buddy Miles
drums1947 - 2008
Barry Goldberg
keyboards
Duane Allman
guitar1946 - 1971

Otis Rush
guitar, electricb.1934

Allman Brothers Band
band / ensemble / orchestraRelocating to California following his fling with stardom, Bloomfield's was a lifestyle grounded in personal value preference. Comprised of the occasional gig in between voracious reading, music listening and television watching, such an existence might well stand as the archetype for a healthy detachment from careerism, under ever-so-slightly different circumstances. In Michael's case, however, it did not carry with it a sense of purpose deep enough to withstand an inexorable dissipation, compounded by his chronic insomnia and substance usage. With his eventual concession to drinking, his support system slowly dissemled from its once stalwart membership including, among others, producer/business partner Norman Dayron, one-time spouse Susan Smith and romantic companion Christine Svane, plus loyal co-musicians such as keyboardist Mark Naftalin.
The near-terminal ennui only more deeply implanted depression that began to afflict Bloomfield earlier in life, so David Dann's theories about Michael's mental health issues become only more astute as this narrative progresses. Bloomfield's ambitions in life did not seem to include gaining the approval of a father who once committed his son for psychiatric evaluation, but to ratify the choice(s) he himself made in both vocation and avocation. Empathetic mother Dorothy prevailed upon

B.B. King
guitar, electric1925 - 2015
Compelling reading from start to finish, Guitar King contains its own sense of logic. In fact, as David Dann reasonably hypothesizes the circumstances of his subject's passing, he brings a palpable sense of closure to his chronicle of this truly progressive artist, if only because there's an intimation the musician had in fact completed his life's work by this time. Besides Michael Bloomfield's Life in the Blues (and perhaps the website from which it evolved), only this prolific artist's music itself could be a more vivid act of advocacy.
Tags
Book Reviews
Doug Collette
University of Texas Press
Eric Clapton
jeff beck
Howlin' Wolf
Bob Dylan
Paul Butterfield Blues Band
the Electric Flag
Al Kooper
Jimi Hendrix
Janis Joplin
Muddy Waters
Joni Mitchell
Moby Grape
Buddy Miles
Barry Goldberg
Duane Allman
Otis Rush
Allman Brothers Band
B.B. King
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