Lucky strikes!
10/31/2012 22:26
A blues prodigy at age 5, Peterson has played with some of the all-time r&b greats.
Lucky Peterson Photo: Courtesy PR
Some child prodigies lose their steam by the time they reach adulthood. For
every Michael Jackson, there are countless pre-teen stars in the entertainment
world who are washed up by the time they reach their teens.
Lucky
Peterson was a prime candidate for the hall of obscurity. By the age of six, the
gifted child blues musician had recorded a single produced by the legendary
Willie Dixon, and had appeared on national TV in the US on both The Ed Sullivan
Show and The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson (as well as the popular quiz show
What’s My Line).
A precocious kid playing expert blues guitar and
keyboards and singing like an old soul – what better recipe for disaster as an
adult? But true to his nickname, the 48-year-old Peterson was lucky enough to
stay the course and develop his talent into a sustained career that has seen him
evolve from novelty act to blues veteran, fusing soul, R&B, gospel and rock
and roll.
“I performed onstage for the first time when I was five, but I
don’t remember it at all,” said Peterson last week from his home in
Dallas.
Born Judge Kenneth Peterson in Buffalo, New York, the bluesman
took after his father, James, a blues singer who owned the Governor’s Inn,
described as a northern version of a Deep South “chitlin’ circuit” roadhouse
club. Virtually growing up on stage, Peterson began playing almost before he
began talking. And he had the cream of the blues-making crop for his
faculty.
"We had everyone coming through town – people like Buddy Guy,
Junior Wells, Koko Taylor, Jimmy Reed, Muddy Waters, Freddy King, James Cotton,
Lightnin’ Hopkins and John Lee Hooker – they were my teachers,” said
Peterson.
“I never had any formal lessons, I just picked things up by
ear. My father showed me the basics and I just took it forward.”
Before
long, Peterson was in the studio with Dixon in 1969, recording the novelty
R&B hit “1-2-3-4,” which paved the way for his national TV exposure and a
dizzying array of accolades. Peterson admitted that he wasn’t really aware of
all the attention at the time.
“I knew I was on TV, but I didn’t realize
that millions of people were watching me,” he said, adding that he went on to
experience a relatively well-adjusted childhood. “I played basketball and
football, and had friends in the neighborhood. It was pretty
normal.”
Peterson also continued his musical path, though, studying at
the Buffalo Academy for Visual and Performing Arts, where he played the French
horn with the school symphony. But the blues beckoned when R&B great Little
Milton showed up in Buffalo to perform and his organ player took
ill.
Hearing about Peterson’s talent, Milton asked him to sit in, fell in
love with his playing and invited the 17-year-old Peterson to join the
band.
“It was my first time away from home and my first time playing in a
big band,” said Peterson. “It was a wonderful experience.”
Within seven
months, he had become Milton’s bandleader, and opened the shows with his own
45-minute set on vocals and keyboards. His three-year stint with Milton led to an
equally long gig with Bobby “Blue” Bland as Bobby’s featured soloist.
“I
learned so much from both of them – how to be a showman and take care of an
audience, and be the best you can be every time you go onstage. You not only
have to make sure people have a good time, but you have to love what you do,” he
said.
The lessons proved valuable when by 1988 Peterson decided to
concentrate on forming his own band and launching a solo career. He hooked up
with the premier blues label in the US, Alligator Records, and not only released
his own albums but accompanied label mates like Rufus Thomas and Kenny Neal on
their records. Peterson soon realized that the job of fronting his own band
didn’t end when the lights went up onstage.
“You’re responsible
financially for the other band members, and you have to deal with any problems
that come up,” he said. “You have to balance being the manager and being
onstage. At first it was like, ‘wow, it’s a lot of work doing this.’ But it was
too late for regrets – I was already out there. And I learned to handle
it.”
Peterson has continued to regularly release albums and perform
upwards of 200 shows a year.
But it will be his Israeli debut when he
performs on December 5, 6 and 7 at Zappa Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Herzliya
respectively.
“I’m coming with my wife and we’re really looking forward
to it, it’s something spiritual for us,” said Peterson, who performs every
Sunday at his Dallas church when he’s not on tour. “They have an open spot for
me and I never miss a Sunday when I’m home. My wife is in the choir and I play
the organ. Our lives revolve around the church – that’s what we do when we’re
not out on the road.”
Despite their seemingly opposite foundations,
playing the blues and spiritual music is not that far apart, according to
Peterson.
“The lyrics are different, but the feeling is the
same.”
And with Lucky Peterson, whether it was at age six or age 48, it’s
all about feeling.