
The Delta is calling.... Come to the
crossroads.... Rocky Lawrence heard that call when he put down
his electric guitar, picked up his acoustic and started the odyssey
into the songs, music and life of the founding father of Rock
& Roll, Mr. Robert Johnson.
Rocky Lawrence had already made a reputation for himself as a
brilliant electric blues guitarist on the East Coast and in the
Midwest. A student of Muddy Waters, Hubert Sumlin and Johnny "Clyde"
Copeland, Lawrence was no stranger to the blues scene. At the
time of his musical rebirth, his band The Rocky Lawrence Project,
was one of the top Blues bands in the Northeast.
For three years, fifteen hours a day, seven days a week, Rocky
learned and relearned every note, every tuning, every vocal inflection
of the fabled 29 songs. At times he almost gave up out of frustration.
The songs had to be exact. They had to sound perfect. This was
not Rocky's interpretation of the Johnson songbook that so many
others had tried before him. These were Robert's songs played
and sung as if Robert was alive today sitting on a stool at a
Mississippi roadhouse.
After this time Lawrence emerged with the songs and soul of Robert
Johnson. To start his task of educating the masses, Rocky played
two shows at the Riverfront Blues Festival in Peoria, IL. He stepped
on stage; suit, hat and Gibson in hand. When Rocky opened with
"Steady Rollin Man" the festival erupted and for the
next 70 minutes, thousands of people were swept into the voodoo.
The spirit of Robert Johnson had taken over.
Rocky's first CD, "The Songs Of Robert Johnson As Performed
By Rocky Lawrence", was recorded in April of 1999 at Highland
Grounds in Hollywood, California. The 12 songs featured on the
record are bright, clear recreations of the material. This is
what Robert would of sounded like had he been recorded today.
Mr. Lawrence currently tours the country educating University
students on the historical significance of the Robert Johnson
songbook as it relates to the history of popular music worldwide.
Using Robert Johnson as the starting point, Mr. Lawrence traces
the family tree of music through its triumphant climb over the
last 70 years, and then drives the point home with a 60 minute
performance that truly says it all.
"If this CD could be reissued
on a scratchy vinyl album you would think you were listening to
something made fifty or sixty years ago. Its that authentic.
This disc is a heartfelt and (dare I say) loving tribute to the
music of Robert Johnson. If it was Rocky Lawrences goal
to learn the intricacies of delta blues then he has succeeded
tremendously. The twelve songs on this disc is just Rocky accompanied
by only his mid fifties model Gibson LG-1 acoustic guitar."
Bill Harriman