"The blues is not just music; it is a point of view, a friend, a source of humor. In the day-to-day world it can be a constant companion. It brings with it a relationship for the self, and the ability to make the best of things, whatever, come what may."
Mark Adams: Blues Breaths
Mark Adams was born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area and it is where he honed his craft. Influenced by Little Walter, Paul Butterfield and Sonny Boy Williamson, Adams formed his own band in 1968, the Muskadine Blues Band. It played shows for rock and blues acts at local clubs, concert halls and festivals. After opening for blues artists Michael Bloomfield and Nick Gravenites, Adams was asked to join Michael Bloomfield and Friends and appeared with the group in clubs and concert venues throughout the '70s, as well as on recordings and live broadcasts. When Gravenites formed Blue Gravy in 1972, Adams became a featured member. He also joined blues and folk singer, songwriter and guitarist Alice Stuart and her band Snake and collaborated with San Francisco Bay Area musicians Mark Naftalin, Dan Hayes and Jules Broussard. Again, with Gravenites, he toured overseas with Animal Mind. Adams moved to Williams (Oregon) in July 2005, settling on a farm with his family to tend his horses and motorcycles, but never leaving the blues. In 2014, he formed the Muskadine Blues Quartet with guitarist Justin Wade, electric and stand-up bassist Jeff Addicott and myself on drums. The band is his current vehicle to further polish the blues, which he has become so adept at playing. Paying tribute to fathers and sons of the blues genre - Muddy, Wolf, Otis Spann, Big Walter Horton, Butterfield, Bloomfield and the rest - Adams is a living embodiment of this great American sound. He's a treasure trove of blues history with an uncanny ability to play all forms of blues effortlessly. He's also a teacher, at one time helping a young wannabe harp player named Huey Lewis. The same year Adams formed the new band, he released a new CD, "Gypsy Good Time," recorded at Thomas Hartkop Studio. The album gives nods to Bloomfield, Gravenites and Charlie Musselwhite with "Mellow Down Easy," "Christo Redentor" and the title cut, along with excursions into sounds such as "Canadian Sunset."
Intro infos by Tom Stamper (Mail Tribune) & Bay Area Bands / Photo by Mail Tribune photo studio
Playing with Adams is an educational experience. There are standards to approaching 12-bar blues, but he's always toying with that standard and improvising it. Gig after gig, I've seen the extent of his ability and creativity. He's constantly coming up with amazing twists or new ideas and stretching the band's limits. The Muskadine Blues Quartet hews closely to Chicago-style blues and at times dips into a blues-soul-jazz bag that leads to other corners of the blues tradition. When the music goes outside of the standard, it's an exciting, almost mesmerizing, thing that is new and magical. Blue Gravy included band members Nick Gravenites (guitar, vocals), Mark Adams (harmonica), Fred Burton (guitar), Doug Kilmer (bass) and Lee Bitner (drums). Although Blue Gravy existed for a short time only, they were very popular in the Bay Area. As a matter of fact, they didn't release any albums but made a three-song demo at the Record Plant in Sausalito for Warner Brothers. Mark Adams, who prior to Blue Gravy had been playing with the Muskadine Blues Band, Dan Hayes Group and Dan Hayes Blues Band, went on to play for Alice Stewart and then King Perkoff after that. Nick Gravenites teamed up with John Cipollina and worked on his solo career as well. In later years Gravenites, Adams and Kilmer played together again though. The Muskadine Blues Band was a Bay Area band that started at the end of the 60s. Bass player Doug Martin heard Mark Adams play at a cafe and suggested they start a band. Doug brought in Lane Hirabayashi on guitar and Brian Hogan on horn. This was around 1968. The band played gigs with The Flying Circus, Clover, Michael Bloomfield, Dan Hicks and his Hot Licks - to name a few. After Mark and Dan joined up and started the Dan Hayes Group, Muskadine continued without Mark.
What do you learn about yourself from the Blues people and culture? What does the blues mean to you?
Blues Music has always been Blues Family. My experiences playing, and being a part of the music for 50 years now has given me a lot of great moments and memories. When I play it’s always in the moment, the music draws from within, and as Nick Gravenites taught me, there is something that needs to come out, or needs to be said, and playing blues harmonica is my personal voice. I’ve met, played with and have had a lot of laughs with many of the great artists, and feel fortunate to have been able to be included in the company of the first white bluesmen.
How do you think that you have grown as an artist since you first started making music? What has remained the same about your music-making process?
My own musical growth can be attributed to Nick Gravenites. Nick was a "father figure" and mentor for me and was the centrepiece of my musical development. He taught me many of the nuances of blues styles and was always the critical second instrument to my harmonica playing in forming correct passages and voicing to my musical expression.
“The musical excitement and expressions for the past 60 years of my harmonica playing and vocalizing the Blues has always been generous to me in the fulfillment of my ideas and passions in all my endeavours and aspirations. I'm lucky to live a musical life as a bluesman!” (Photo: Blue Grave are Lee Bitner, Fred Burton, Nick Gravenites, Mark Adams, and Doug Kilmer)
What keeps a musician passionate after six decades in blues? What's the balance in music between technique (skills) and soul/emotions?
Staying completely true to the Blues and always feeling the same intense satisfaction when performances went well kept me going. Learning the correct form from Nick (Gravenites) and Michael (Bloomfield) always helped in contributing to my own skill and to convey true feeling in my music.
Why do you think that Bay Area Blues Scene music continues to generate such a devoted following?
The collective conciseness and foundations laid down by Blues, Rock, Jazz and Soul as well as all other music such as Classical and Folk with the enthusiastic followers makes it a open field for all to hear and enjoy. And to me it's always been the most beautiful city in the world!
Are there any specific memories of your career opened shows for rock and blues acts at the Fillmore Auditorium and Avalon Ballroom that you would like to tell us about?!
We (myself, Mike Bloomfield, Nick Gravenites, Barry Goldberg, Roger "Jellyroll" Troy (bass) and George Rains (drums) played as "The Electric Flag" at a Fillmore West show at Winterland in San Francisco. Backstage we visited with actor Michael Douglas who was a real fan and a kind gentleman who really enjoyed the show.
When did the idea of Muskadine Blues Band come about? How did you hook up with Blue Gravy?
Muskadine came about as the brain child of Doug Martin (bass) and myself on vocals and harp. I had been jamming and performing with loosely-formed quartets at casual gigs and coffeehouse venues during my high school years ('65-'69). Doug was an accomplished bassist and writer and we wanted to include a horn section to play blues and soul music. We formed a quartet and then added sax & trumpet and were certainly the first group playing that genre in our area as teenagers! It caught on and we were playing gigs every weekend, and went into a studio in Marin County called "The Church" to record a great first album of original material.
I went to the U.K. in early 1972 and when I returned Michael's manager Toby Byron had arranged an audition with Nick and Blue Gravy to fill a vacant spot made by the departure of the keyboard player. I got the spot and continued with Blue Gravy throughout 1973-74. Some of the best music I have ever played came out of that band!
Why is it important to we preserve and spread the blues? What is the role of music in today’s society?
I see the preservation and continued work of conserving the Blues as a musical form - a debt owed; with an obligation to pay it forward for all who have gone before us. All music is within all of us as humans, the Blues just a form and style which will always be valid and worthy as part of our collective soul.
How has your experience with the “golden era” of Rock & Blues influenced the way you compose and perform today?
The musical excitement and expressions for the past 60 years of my harmonica playing and vocalizing the Blues has always been generous to me in the fulfillment of my ideas and passions in all my endeavours and aspirations. I'm lucky to live a musical life as a bluesman!
What were the reasons that make the '60s to be the center of Blues Roots researches and experiments? (Photo: Mark Adams, Nick Gravenites & Doug Kilmer, 1999)
The ‘60’s brought a new generation discovering and recreating traditional folk and electric blues with a new view of social & racial equality that broke barriers down. This injected new energy in performances, recording, and production of festivals and venues that continued and revitalized the development of the artists, both old and new. And then for me personally, the real groundbreaker: The Paul Butterfield Blues Band’s first Elektra release.
How do you describe your sound? What touched (emotionally) you from the sound of harmonica?
I had taken up harmonica when I realized I wasn’t too good on electric guitar! I was fortunate to have grown up in Mill Valley, California and was dropping in to our local record store Village Music all the time. The owner, John Goddard, recommended a lot of records, gave me insights into the less known or obscure artists, and put the big world of The Blues in perspective. I went to concerts, the Fillmore and the Avalon Ballroom, and saw many of the greats. Then I was able to draw from Butter, Cotton, Musselwhite, Big and Little Walter, Sonny Boy’s and all the rest. More than anything I’m influenced and inspired by Butterfield’s early hot-rod sound.
Which acquaintances have been the most important experiences? What was the best advice anyone ever gave you?
By 1968 I was fronting my own blues band, and we opened for Michael Bloomfield and Friends. I was called up to sit-in and from there was able to work with Nick and Michael, in addition to my own groups. Being in the harp chair for Nick over these many years has been the greatest gift, and the lessons and advice from him have stayed with me. Nick (Gravenites) got me to take it seriously and taught me to “say something” when I play. Also, to stay true to the blues, keep it real, and put my own soul out there when I do. Michael too taught me a whole lot, and opened many other musical doors in his broad catalogue of songs and styles.
Are there any memories from gigs, jams, open acts and studio sessions which you’d like to share with us?
Great memories abound! Some sad and tragic ones too. Working my own bands and being a sideman with Michael and Nick gave me a lot of experiences. Travelling to Athens with Nick to headline the Blues Festival there in Sept ’99 was a great time. Playing with bassist Doug Kilmer meant a lot. Backstage with the Muddy Waters band a couple of times, once in London, that was especially magic. Big Mama Thornton was a hoot! Every true blues musician I’ve met has felt like family, like them or not, good or bad.
"The ‘60’s brought a new generation discovering and recreating traditional folk and electric blues with a new view of social & racial equality that broke barriers down. This injected new energy in performances, recording, and production of festivals and venues that continued and revitalized the development of the artists, both old and new. And then for me personally, the real groundbreaker: The Paul Butterfield Blues Band’s first Elektra release." (Photo: Mark Adams & the Muskadine Blues Band)
What do you miss most nowadays from the music of past? What are your hopes and fears for the future of?
As time goes on things change, and that’s good, but many of the great artists are gone. Their presence and their music will be missed. Remember we only have the time we get to make what we can from what we have. I guess my hope is to remember how lucky I am to play still with people I’ve grown to know and love, and I’m inspired that, in the words of Otis Spann: “The Blues Never Die”.
What are some of the most important lessons you have learned from your paths in music industry and circuits?
To be true to myself in my playing, and make the music alive. To stay within the forms but always be creative and bring a big presence to the songs. What I play really has to have meaning and be coming from inside. Blues harmonica is a “horn from the heart”. No sell-outs. No strings attached.
How has the Blues and Rock counterculture influenced your views of the world and the journeys you’ve taken?
The blues is not just music; it is a point of view, a friend, a source of humor. In the day-to-day world it can be a constant companion. It brings with it a relationship for the self, and the ability to make the best of things, whatever, come what may.
What is the impact of Blues music and culture to the racial, political, and socio-cultural implications?
Blues music can be a voice for love, for politics, for the human condition, for anything as a reference to the truth, and the feelings which overcome our divisions, our fears, and our personal trials.
"To be true to myself in my playing, and make the music alive." (Photo: Mark and his daughter Allison sings the Blues, 1996)
Let’s take a trip with a time machine, so where and why would you really want to go for a whole day?
So, with all the great music I’ve been privileged to hear, and all the great people I’ve been able to work with and meet, I never did get to meet or to hear Paul Butterfield! Bad luck, bad timing, busy schedules; a contradiction made even more ironic owing to the fact of my working with Nick and Michael, and Mark Naftalin for all these years! So, my time travel trip would be to go back to Newport in 1965, hang with Nick, and hear the original Paul Butterfield band perform, and then hear them back up Bob Dylan to boot! That would be my blues wish! Yeah, man.
Michael, thank you for the opportunity to put these thoughts down! I owe it all to the “bad talking bluesman”.
Veteran harmonica player Mark Adams talks about the Blues, Nick Gravenites, Bloomfield and the 1960s
by Music Network by Michael Limnios
on Sunday
"The blues is not just music; it is a point of view, a friend, a source of humor. In the day-to-day world it can be a constant companion. It brings with it a relationship for the self, and the ability to make the best of things, whatever, come what may."
Mark Adams: Blues Breaths
Mark Adams was born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area and it is where he honed his craft. Influenced by Little Walter, Paul Butterfield and Sonny Boy Williamson, Adams formed his own band in 1968, the Muskadine Blues Band. It played shows for rock and blues acts at local clubs, concert halls and festivals. After opening for blues artists Michael Bloomfield and Nick Gravenites, Adams was asked to join Michael Bloomfield and Friends and appeared with the group in clubs and concert venues throughout the '70s, as well as on recordings and live broadcasts. When Gravenites formed Blue Gravy in 1972, Adams became a featured member. He also joined blues and folk singer, songwriter and guitarist Alice Stuart and her band Snake and collaborated with San Francisco Bay Area musicians Mark Naftalin, Dan Hayes and Jules Broussard. Again, with Gravenites, he toured overseas with Animal Mind. Adams moved to Williams (Oregon) in July 2005, settling on a farm with his family to tend his horses and motorcycles, but never leaving the blues. In 2014, he formed the Muskadine Blues Quartet with guitarist Justin Wade, electric and stand-up bassist Jeff Addicott and myself on drums. The band is his current vehicle to further polish the blues, which he has become so adept at playing. Paying tribute to fathers and sons of the blues genre - Muddy, Wolf, Otis Spann, Big Walter Horton, Butterfield, Bloomfield and the rest - Adams is a living embodiment of this great American sound. He's a treasure trove of blues history with an uncanny ability to play all forms of blues effortlessly. He's also a teacher, at one time helping a young wannabe harp player named Huey Lewis. The same year Adams formed the new band, he released a new CD, "Gypsy Good Time," recorded at Thomas Hartkop Studio. The album gives nods to Bloomfield, Gravenites and Charlie Musselwhite with "Mellow Down Easy," "Christo Redentor" and the title cut, along with excursions into sounds such as "Canadian Sunset."
Intro infos by Tom Stamper (Mail Tribune) & Bay Area Bands / Photo by Mail Tribune photo studio
Playing with Adams is an educational experience. There are standards to approaching 12-bar blues, but he's always toying with that standard and improvising it. Gig after gig, I've seen the extent of his ability and creativity. He's constantly coming up with amazing twists or new ideas and stretching the band's limits. The Muskadine Blues Quartet hews closely to Chicago-style blues and at times dips into a blues-soul-jazz bag that leads to other corners of the blues tradition. When the music goes outside of the standard, it's an exciting, almost mesmerizing, thing that is new and magical. Blue Gravy included band members Nick Gravenites (guitar, vocals), Mark Adams (harmonica), Fred Burton (guitar), Doug Kilmer (bass) and Lee Bitner (drums). Although Blue Gravy existed for a short time only, they were very popular in the Bay Area. As a matter of fact, they didn't release any albums but made a three-song demo at the Record Plant in Sausalito for Warner Brothers. Mark Adams, who prior to Blue Gravy had been playing with the Muskadine Blues Band, Dan Hayes Group and Dan Hayes Blues Band, went on to play for Alice Stewart and then King Perkoff after that. Nick Gravenites teamed up with John Cipollina and worked on his solo career as well. In later years Gravenites, Adams and Kilmer played together again though. The Muskadine Blues Band was a Bay Area band that started at the end of the 60s. Bass player Doug Martin heard Mark Adams play at a cafe and suggested they start a band. Doug brought in Lane Hirabayashi on guitar and Brian Hogan on horn. This was around 1968. The band played gigs with The Flying Circus, Clover, Michael Bloomfield, Dan Hicks and his Hot Licks - to name a few. After Mark and Dan joined up and started the Dan Hayes Group, Muskadine continued without Mark.
Interview by Michael Limnios Special Thanks: Pat Adams & Mark Adams
What do you learn about yourself from the Blues people and culture? What does the blues mean to you?
Blues Music has always been Blues Family. My experiences playing, and being a part of the music for 50 years now has given me a lot of great moments and memories. When I play it’s always in the moment, the music draws from within, and as Nick Gravenites taught me, there is something that needs to come out, or needs to be said, and playing blues harmonica is my personal voice. I’ve met, played with and have had a lot of laughs with many of the great artists, and feel fortunate to have been able to be included in the company of the first white bluesmen.
How do you think that you have grown as an artist since you first started making music? What has remained the same about your music-making process?
My own musical growth can be attributed to Nick Gravenites. Nick was a "father figure" and mentor for me and was the centrepiece of my musical development. He taught me many of the nuances of blues styles and was always the critical second instrument to my harmonica playing in forming correct passages and voicing to my musical expression.
“The musical excitement and expressions for the past 60 years of my harmonica playing and vocalizing the Blues has always been generous to me in the fulfillment of my ideas and passions in all my endeavours and aspirations. I'm lucky to live a musical life as a bluesman!” (Photo: Blue Grave are Lee Bitner, Fred Burton, Nick Gravenites, Mark Adams, and Doug Kilmer)
What keeps a musician passionate after six decades in blues? What's the balance in music between technique (skills) and soul/emotions?
Staying completely true to the Blues and always feeling the same intense satisfaction when performances went well kept me going. Learning the correct form from Nick (Gravenites) and Michael (Bloomfield) always helped in contributing to my own skill and to convey true feeling in my music.
Why do you think that Bay Area Blues Scene music continues to generate such a devoted following?
The collective conciseness and foundations laid down by Blues, Rock, Jazz and Soul as well as all other music such as Classical and Folk with the enthusiastic followers makes it a open field for all to hear and enjoy. And to me it's always been the most beautiful city in the world!
Are there any specific memories of your career opened shows for rock and blues acts at the Fillmore Auditorium and Avalon Ballroom that you would like to tell us about?!
We (myself, Mike Bloomfield, Nick Gravenites, Barry Goldberg, Roger "Jellyroll" Troy (bass) and George Rains (drums) played as "The Electric Flag" at a Fillmore West show at Winterland in San Francisco. Backstage we visited with actor Michael Douglas who was a real fan and a kind gentleman who really enjoyed the show.
“I see the preservation and continued work of conserving the Blues as a musical form - a debt owed; with an obligation to pay it forward for all who have gone before us. All music is within all of us as humans, the Blues just a form and style which will always be valid and worthy as part of our collective soul.” (Muskadine Blues Band are Lane Hirabayashi, Mark Adams, Eric Schleiger, Brian Hogan, Doug Martin / Photo © by Mush Emmons - Mark Adams & Doug Martin on stage, Muir Beach California)
When did the idea of Muskadine Blues Band come about? How did you hook up with Blue Gravy?
Muskadine came about as the brain child of Doug Martin (bass) and myself on vocals and harp. I had been jamming and performing with loosely-formed quartets at casual gigs and coffeehouse venues during my high school years ('65-'69). Doug was an accomplished bassist and writer and we wanted to include a horn section to play blues and soul music. We formed a quartet and then added sax & trumpet and were certainly the first group playing that genre in our area as teenagers! It caught on and we were playing gigs every weekend, and went into a studio in Marin County called "The Church" to record a great first album of original material.
I went to the U.K. in early 1972 and when I returned Michael's manager Toby Byron had arranged an audition with Nick and Blue Gravy to fill a vacant spot made by the departure of the keyboard player. I got the spot and continued with Blue Gravy throughout 1973-74. Some of the best music I have ever played came out of that band!
Why is it important to we preserve and spread the blues? What is the role of music in today’s society?
I see the preservation and continued work of conserving the Blues as a musical form - a debt owed; with an obligation to pay it forward for all who have gone before us. All music is within all of us as humans, the Blues just a form and style which will always be valid and worthy as part of our collective soul.
How has your experience with the “golden era” of Rock & Blues influenced the way you compose and perform today?
The musical excitement and expressions for the past 60 years of my harmonica playing and vocalizing the Blues has always been generous to me in the fulfillment of my ideas and passions in all my endeavours and aspirations. I'm lucky to live a musical life as a bluesman!
What were the reasons that make the '60s to be the center of Blues Roots researches and experiments? (Photo: Mark Adams, Nick Gravenites & Doug Kilmer, 1999)
How do you describe your sound? What touched (emotionally) you from the sound of harmonica?
I had taken up harmonica when I realized I wasn’t too good on electric guitar! I was fortunate to have grown up in Mill Valley, California and was dropping in to our local record store Village Music all the time. The owner, John Goddard, recommended a lot of records, gave me insights into the less known or obscure artists, and put the big world of The Blues in perspective. I went to concerts, the Fillmore and the Avalon Ballroom, and saw many of the greats. Then I was able to draw from Butter, Cotton, Musselwhite, Big and Little Walter, Sonny Boy’s and all the rest. More than anything I’m influenced and inspired by Butterfield’s early hot-rod sound.
Which acquaintances have been the most important experiences? What was the best advice anyone ever gave you?
By 1968 I was fronting my own blues band, and we opened for Michael Bloomfield and Friends. I was called up to sit-in and from there was able to work with Nick and Michael, in addition to my own groups. Being in the harp chair for Nick over these many years has been the greatest gift, and the lessons and advice from him have stayed with me. Nick (Gravenites) got me to take it seriously and taught me to “say something” when I play. Also, to stay true to the blues, keep it real, and put my own soul out there when I do. Michael too taught me a whole lot, and opened many other musical doors in his broad catalogue of songs and styles.
Are there any memories from gigs, jams, open acts and studio sessions which you’d like to share with us?
Great memories abound! Some sad and tragic ones too. Working my own bands and being a sideman with Michael and Nick gave me a lot of experiences. Travelling to Athens with Nick to headline the Blues Festival there in Sept ’99 was a great time. Playing with bassist Doug Kilmer meant a lot. Backstage with the Muddy Waters band a couple of times, once in London, that was especially magic. Big Mama Thornton was a hoot! Every true blues musician I’ve met has felt like family, like them or not, good or bad.
"The ‘60’s brought a new generation discovering and recreating traditional folk and electric blues with a new view of social & racial equality that broke barriers down. This injected new energy in performances, recording, and production of festivals and venues that continued and revitalized the development of the artists, both old and new. And then for me personally, the real groundbreaker: The Paul Butterfield Blues Band’s first Elektra release." (Photo: Mark Adams & the Muskadine Blues Band)
What do you miss most nowadays from the music of past? What are your hopes and fears for the future of?
As time goes on things change, and that’s good, but many of the great artists are gone. Their presence and their music will be missed. Remember we only have the time we get to make what we can from what we have. I guess my hope is to remember how lucky I am to play still with people I’ve grown to know and love, and I’m inspired that, in the words of Otis Spann: “The Blues Never Die”.
What are some of the most important lessons you have learned from your paths in music industry and circuits?
To be true to myself in my playing, and make the music alive. To stay within the forms but always be creative and bring a big presence to the songs. What I play really has to have meaning and be coming from inside. Blues harmonica is a “horn from the heart”. No sell-outs. No strings attached.
How has the Blues and Rock counterculture influenced your views of the world and the journeys you’ve taken?
The blues is not just music; it is a point of view, a friend, a source of humor. In the day-to-day world it can be a constant companion. It brings with it a relationship for the self, and the ability to make the best of things, whatever, come what may.
What is the impact of Blues music and culture to the racial, political, and socio-cultural implications?
"To be true to myself in my playing, and make the music alive." (Photo: Mark and his daughter Allison sings the Blues, 1996)
Let’s take a trip with a time machine, so where and why would you really want to go for a whole day?
So, with all the great music I’ve been privileged to hear, and all the great people I’ve been able to work with and meet, I never did get to meet or to hear Paul Butterfield! Bad luck, bad timing, busy schedules; a contradiction made even more ironic owing to the fact of my working with Nick and Michael, and Mark Naftalin for all these years! So, my time travel trip would be to go back to Newport in 1965, hang with Nick, and hear the original Paul Butterfield band perform, and then hear them back up Bob Dylan to boot! That would be my blues wish! Yeah, man.
Michael, thank you for the opportunity to put these thoughts down! I owe it all to the “bad talking bluesman”.