‘Twas a time in the 1980s wherein blues fell off the mainstream pop culture map during an era (error) of MTV fueled pomp and circumstance over substance. Akin to the punk invasion a decade previous, two torrid Texas ensembles came on the scene to set the rock and roll record straight once again: Stevie Ray Vaughan’s Double Trouble, and The Fabulous Thunderbirds!
Anchoring the T-Birds at the apex of their commercial success was bassist Preston Hubbard. An swingin’ upright and electric pocket player, Preston honed his craft with Room Full of Blues, and The Alley Cats with Tinsley Ellis– and even turned down an offer to join SRV’s incendiary trio.
Aside from his tenure with the T-Birds, Hubbard anchored tracks, slabs, and/or gigs with Bonnie Raitt, The Vaughan Brothers, Duke Robillard, Etta James, Professor Longhair, Carlos Santana, Albert King, Albert Collins, Nick Curran, and The Blues Brothers among others.
Sadly Hubbard’s career was derailed by substance abuse, however his legacy lives in his grooves!
Preston Hubbard Sound & Vision…
Fabulous Thunderbirds:
“Tuff Enuff” https://youtu.be/EcXT1clXc04
“Wrap It Up” (official video) https://youtu.be/51270i8F3mU
“Wrap It Up” by KYBP Adjunct Professor Tony Senatore with testimonial https://youtu.be/OjoN0Paq_fQ
“It Comes to Me Naturally” https://youtu.be/Y5XSzUGcmIk
“Stand Back” https://youtu.be/FDp195RuPjA
“Powerful Stuff” https://youtu.be/hzQ2Extfvj4
The T-Birds with Duke Robillard: https://youtu.be/r-bU7ZPwoUI
Bonnie Raitt: “The Road’s My Middle Name” https://youtu.be/cxoIXHiE9Q8
Courtesy of Fabulous Thunderbirds Com
Courtesy of Freebo Com
A Conversation with Freebo: The Bonnie Raitt Years
One name, one groovin’ cat!
A master of blues, folk, roots music, and a longtime associate of Bonnie Raitt (he anchored her stage and studio band from 1971-79), the bassist born Daniel Freidberg was an early proponent of the fretless in a pop context.
A multi-instrumentalist, composer, recording artist, singer, and producer, Freebo has waxed sides and shared stages with a wide array of iconic artists including Dr. John, Maria Muldaur, Neil Young, Willy DeVille, John Mayall, Ringo Starr, Crosby Stills & Nash, and Aaron Neville, among others.
Recalls bassist Gary Kelly: I saw him play duo with Bonnie one night when I was 17. It sold me on fretless and what a bass and guitar duo can do. It could’ve been a 10 piece band for the range of emotions and styles they conveyed. Freebo was great holding down the groove and so much more. A great inspiration!
Freebo Sound & Vision…
Maria Muldaur: “Midnight at the Oasis” https://youtu.be/3gKnnb24Eso
With Bonnie Raitt:
Bonnie Live ’77 https://youtu.be/dfOlQCZy8mc
“Love Me Like A Man” https://youtu.be/QXLP8_2B2sw
“Runaway” https://youtu.be/HPzcZNgVfpA
Freebo Solo:
“Something to Believe In” https://youtu.be/3I-7MIk6ktg
“Homeland Blues” with Alice Howe https://youtu.be/FtD3XWUvV1E
Notes bassist Tone Forrest: Freebo trades rhythm licks with Jon Hall on this early Bonnie release “You’ve Been In Love Too Long” https://youtu.be/Q43Je3ay2xY
When he first heard the Wilson Pickett Band on stage in a small New England town when he was 12, James Hutchinson knew exactly what he wanted to do in life!
A versatile multi-instrumentalist who doubles on upright, and extended range, Hutch plies his craft with an extensive array of tones and techniques to serve the singer and their songs – which is why he is among the elite session players of his generation.
Hutch was hatched in Lynn, Massachusetts, and as a young lad, he soaked up the sounds of the 60s folk boom in Cambridge and Sommerville. He honed his craft working in jam bands throughout the Bay Area, and Latin ensembles San Francisco’s Mission District wherein local legends Micky Hart (Grateful Dead) and John Cipollina (Quicksilver Messenger Service) took him under their respective wings. Cipollina tabbed John for his Copperhead debut slab and ensemble in 1970.
Spending significant time in Central America recording and doing live dates, Hutch landed in Austin with the fusion collective The Point – where they garnered the Top Jazz Group honors at the inaugural Austin Music Awards in 1977. There he met the Neville Brothers, who brought him to New Orleans wherein Hutch also such local acts as The Lastie Brothers, Professor Longhair, James Booker, Jesse Hill, Huey Smith, and The Wild Tchoupitoulas, among others. Hutchinson met Bonnie when the Neville Brothers opened for the Stones on their ‘82 tour, and the rest as they say, is Hutch history….
A first call session cat / sideman with Bonnie Raitt – he’s anchored her touring ensemble since 1983 or thereabouts. Hutch’s credits on stage and on record include the aforementioned Neville Brothers and their ‘Nawlins neighbors along with Brian Wilson, Ringo Starr, Jerry Lee Lewis, Stevie Nicks, CSN&Y, Al Green, Alejandro Escovedo, Jackson Browne, Joe Cocker, BB King, Merle Haggard, Eric Burdon, and Boz Scaggs, to cite a very, very, very few.
Among Hutch’s extensive bass collection is his beloved Signature Kala Electric U Bass.
Hutch Comments…
Jim Donavan: I was proud to work with him in 1999 on my 1st solo record. He’s the best, or at least in the top 5 ever, as far as i am concerned. and great stories come from him about other sessions, as he LIVES IN THE STUDIO. I sent Bonnie’s manager a tape right after she won the Grammies around 1990. Hutch told me later that the band loved like 5 different songs, and they fought for hours on which was best. they never could pick one, and she avoided them all, but the entire band respected me from that day on. I was going to record in NY, but was in LA, and offered a great deal at a studio owned by thew drummer of a harpist old buddy, Jimmy Wood. So i found out they have hutch’s number, they call him up, he says he doesnt know me, but shows up. once he sees me, he starts laughing, hugs me, says he is bad on names. We start trading stories -he had done the Bon Jovi gtrist 1st solo record, a real winner, and i shocked him by telling him that was what were chasing that day, that audience, that this was not a blues session, that i need him for hard rock. He grinned, admitted he doesnt get to do this often enough, and we rocked! See, he knew i was a bassist, with a ruined left shoulder/left elbow, and made sure I would love his work that day. When he asked about pay, i asked him if he didnt mind taking rolled up quarters. he looked at me like you gotta be kidding, which i was, lol. Then i pulled out my roll, and he laughed. See, a bassist will work hard for another bassist, but nobody wants to a wheelbarrow full of quarters. Hutch reads music, writes music and lives it!
David Fraser: Hutch is simply the best! Soulful, Smooth, Dedicated, Smart and a great guy too!
Courtesy of Kala Bass
Hutch Sound & Vision…
Bonnie Raitt:
“Right Down the Line” https://youtu.be/-T_aMNbXVdA
“Gypsy in Me” https://youtu.be/MzNSgAQR9yg
“Two Lights in the Nightmare” https://youtu.be/DxivzvshehE
“Unintended Consequence of Love” https://youtu.be/Aq62G_2iQVU
“Thing Called Love” https://youtu.be/krF6LpUXODc
“Love Sneakin’ Up Behind You” https://youtu.be/74JyGKvfAp0
“Burning Down the House” https://youtu.be/eqJcCmxZYdM
Copperhead “Kamakaze” https://youtu.be/w3bXsDtTlcA
Dig Hutch on the Kala with Abraham Laboriel, Steve Baily, and Bathiki Kumalo https://youtu.be/xXKMo0cAujo
Hutch talks U Bass https://youtu.be/doKO0XdqjHM
Eric Burdon “Soul of a Man” https://youtu.be/yGBmDUU4NFM
Boz Scaggs “Some Change” https://youtu.be/EaQ8H729kBE
Roy Orbison “You’re The One” https://youtu.be/2u6lNOgZgJY
Ringo “Weight of the World” https://youtu.be/k_S77XSXDe8
Courtesy of Bonnie Raitt Com