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Dr. John

Malcolm John Rebennack Jr. (November 20, 1941 – June 6, 2019), better known by his stage name Dr. John, was an American singer and songwriter. His music combined New Orleans blues, jazz, funk, and R&B.[1]

"Doctor John" redirects here. For the TV series, see Doctor John (TV series).

Dr. John

Malcolm John Rebennack Jr.

  • Mac Rebennack
  • Dr. John Creaux
  • Dr. John the Night Tripper

(1941-11-20)November 20, 1941
New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.

June 6, 2019(2019-06-06) (aged 77)
New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.

Musician

  • Vocals
  • piano

1950s–2019

Active as a session musician from the late 1950s until his death, he gained a following in the late 1960s after the release of his album Gris-Gris (1968) and his appearance at the Bath Festival of Blues and Progressive Music. He typically performed a lively, theatrical stage show inspired by medicine shows, Mardi Gras costumes, and voodoo ceremonies. Rebennack recorded thirty studio albums and nine live albums, as well as contributing to thousands of other musicians' recordings. In 1973, he achieved a top-10 hit single with "Right Place, Wrong Time".

Early life and career[edit]

Rebennack was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, on November 20, 1941.[2][3] He was the son of Dorothy (Cronin) and Malcolm John Rebennack, and had German, Irish, Spanish, English, and French heritage.[4][5] His father ran an appliance shop in the East End of New Orleans, fixing radios and televisions and selling records.[6] Growing up in the 3rd Ward of New Orleans, he found early musical inspiration in the minstrel show tunes sung by his grandfather and a number of aunts, uncles, sister, and cousins who played piano. He did not take music lessons before his teens and endured only a short stint in choir before getting kicked out.[7] His father exposed him as a young boy to jazz musicians King Oliver and Louis Armstrong, who later inspired his 2014 release, Ske-Dat-De-Dat: The Spirit of Satch. Throughout his adolescence, his father's connections enabled him access to the recording rooms of rock artists, including Little Richard and Guitar Slim. Later he began to perform in New Orleans clubs, mainly on guitar, and played on stage with various local artists.[8]


When he was about 13 years old, Rebennack met Professor Longhair. Impressed by the professor's flamboyant attire and striking musical style,[7] Rebennack soon began performing with him, and began his life as a professional musician.[8] He later recalled that his debut in the studio, in about 1955 or 1956, came when he was signed as a songwriter and artist by Eddie Mesner at Aladdin Records. He joined the musicians' union at the end of 1957, with the help of Danny Kessler, and then considered himself to be a professional musician.[9]


At age 16, Rebennack was hired by Johnny Vincent as a producer at Ace Records.[9] There, he gained experience working with many artists, including James Booker, Earl King, and Jimmy Clanton. While a struggling student at Jesuit High School, he was already playing in night clubs, something the Jesuit fathers disapproved of. He formed his first band, The Dominoes, while at the school.[10] The priests told him to either stop playing in clubs or leave the school. Rebennack was expelled from the high school in 1954[11] and from then on focused entirely on music.


In late 1950s New Orleans, Rebennack led his own band, Mac Rebennack and the Skyliners, (Paul Staehle/Dennis "Bootsie" Cuquet, drums; Earl Stanley, bass; Charlie Miller, trumpet; Charlie Maduell, sax; Roland "Stone" LeBlanc, vocals), while playing gigs with others, including Frankie Ford and the Thunderbirds, and Jerry Byrne and the Loafers. His first (co-written) rock and roll song "Lights Out" (1957), sung by Jerry Byrne, was a regional hit.[10] He had a regional hit with a Bo Diddley-influenced instrumental called "Storm Warning" on Rex Records in 1959. At A&R he and Charlie Miller recorded monophonic singles on 45s for Johnny Vincent and Joe Corona for local labels Ace, Ron, and Ric. He oversaw the rhythm section while Miller wrote the horn arrangements and headed up the horns. This continued until Miller moved to New York to study music formally.[12]


Rebennack's career as a guitarist was stunted around 1960,[13] when the ring finger on his left (guitar fretting) hand was injured by a gunshot during an incident at a Jacksonville, Florida gig.[14][15] After the injury, Rebennack concentrated on bass guitar before making piano his main instrument, developing a style influenced by Professor Longhair.[16]


Rebennack became involved in illegal activities in New Orleans, using and selling narcotics and running a brothel. He was arrested on drug charges and sentenced to two years in the Federal Correctional Institution, Fort Worth. His sentence ended in 1965 and he left for Los Angeles.[17]


Once settled in Los Angeles[8] he became a "first call" session musician in the Los Angeles studio scene in the 1960s and 1970s and was part of the so-called "Wrecking Crew" stable of studio musicians.[16] He provided backing for Sonny & Cher (and some of the incidental music for Cher's first film, Chastity), for Canned Heat on their albums Living the Blues (1968) and Future Blues (1970), and for Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention on Freak Out! (1966).[16]

Voodoo influence[edit]

As a young man, Rebennack was interested in New Orleans voodoo, and in Los Angeles he developed the idea of the Dr. John persona for his old friend Ronnie Barron, based on the life of Dr. John, a Senegalese prince, conjure man, herb doctor, and spiritual healer who came to New Orleans from Haiti. This free man of color lived on Bayou Road and claimed to have 15 wives and over 50 children. He kept an assortment of snakes and lizards, along with embalmed scorpions and animal and human skulls, and sold gris-gris, voodoo amulets which supposedly protect the wearer from harm.[18][19]


Rebennack decided to produce a record and a stage show based on this concept, with Dr. John serving as an emblem of New Orleans heritage. Although initially, the plan was for Barron to front the act assuming the identity of "Dr. John", while Rebennack worked behind the scenes as Dr. John's writer, musician, and producer, this did not come to pass. Barron dropped out of the project, and Rebennack took over the role (and identity) of Dr. John.[20] Gris-Gris became the name of Dr. John's debut album, released in January 1968, representing his own form of "voodoo medicine".[21]

1972–1974: Gumbo, In the Right Place, and Desitively Bonnaroo[edit]

Along with Gris-Gris, Dr. John is perhaps best known for his recordings in the period 1972–74. 1972's Dr. John's Gumbo, an album covering several New Orleans R&B standards with only one original, is considered a cornerstone of New Orleans music. In his 1994 autobiography, Under a Hoodoo Moon, Dr. John writes, "In 1972, I recorded Gumbo, an album that was both a tribute to and my interpretation of the music I had grown up with in New Orleans in the late 1940s and 1950s. I tried to keep a lot of little changes that were characteristic of New Orleans, while working my own funknology on piano and guitar." The lead single from the album, "Iko Iko", broke into the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, eventually reaching No. 71. In 2003, Dr. John's Gumbo was ranked number 404 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.


With Gumbo, Dr. John expanded his career beyond the psychedelic voodoo music and theatrics which had driven his career since he took on the Dr. John persona, although it always remained an integral part of his music and identity. It was not until 1998's Anutha Zone that he again concentrated on this aspect of his music wholly for a full album. "After we cut the new record", he wrote, "I decided I'd had enough of the mighty-coo-de-fiyo hoodoo show, so I dumped the Gris-Gris routine we had been touring with since 1967 and worked up a new act—a Mardi Gras revue featuring the New Orleans standards we had covered in Gumbo."


In early 1973 Thomas Jefferson Kaye produced an album featuring a collaboration with Dr. John, Mike Bloomfield and John Paul Hammond. This album, Triumvirate, was recorded in Columbia Studios, San Francisco, and Village Recorders, Los Angeles.


In 1973, with Allen Toussaint producing and The Meters backing, Dr. John released the seminal New Orleans funk album In the Right Place. In the same way that Gris-Gris introduced the world to the voodoo-influenced side of his music, and in the manner that Dr. John's Gumbo began his career-long reputation as an esteemed interpreter of New Orleans standards, In the Right Place established Dr. John as one of the main ambassadors of New Orleans funk. In describing the album, Dr. John stated, "The album had more of a straight-ahead dance feel than ones I had done in the past, although it was still anchored solid in R&B." It rose to No. 24 on the Billboard album chart. In July 1973, the single "Right Place, Wrong Time" peaked at No. 9 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, as well as peaking at No. 19 on the Hot Soul Singles chart.[24] A second single, "Such a Night", peaked at No. 42. Still in heavy rotation on most classic rock stations, "Right Place Wrong Time" remains his most recognized song. Artists such as Bob Dylan, Bette Midler, and Doug Sahm contributed single lines to the lyrics, which lists several instances of ironic bad luck and failure.


Dr. John attempted to capitalize on In the Right Place's successful formula, again collaborating with Allen Toussaint and The Meters, for his next album, Desitively Bonnaroo – from part of which a Tennessee festival took as its name – released in 1974. Although similar in feel to In the Right Place, it failed to catch hold in the mainstream as its predecessor had done. It did produce the single "(Everybody Wanna Get Rich) Rite Away", which peaked at No. 92 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, and to date is the last time he hit the Hot 100. It was his last pure funk album until 1994's Television,[25] although like his voodoo and traditional New Orleans R&B influences, funk continued to heavily influence most of his work to the end, especially his live concerts.


In the mid-1970s Dr. John began an almost 20-year collaboration with the R&R Hall of Fame/Songwriters Hall of Fame writer Doc Pomus, to create songs for Dr. John's releases City Lights and Tango Palace, and for B.B. King's Stuart Levine-produced There Must Be a Better World Somewhere, which won a Grammy for Best Ethnic or Traditional Recording in 1982. Dr. John also recorded "I'm On a Roll" – the last song written with Pomus prior to his death in 1991 – for the now out-of-print Rhino/Forward Records 1995 tribute to Pomus titled Til the Night Is Gone: A Tribute to Doc Pomus. The tribute included covers of Pomus-penned songs by Bob Dylan, John Hiatt, Shawn Colvin, Brian Wilson, The Band, Los Lobos, Dion, Rosanne Cash, Solomon Burke, and Lou Reed. According to Pomus' daughter, Dr. John and her father were very close friends as well as writing partners. Dr. John delivered one of a number of eulogies and performed with singer Jimmy Scott at Pomus' funeral on March 17, 1991, in New York City.


On Thanksgiving Day 1976 he performed "Such a Night" at the farewell concert for The Band, which was filmed by Martin Scorsese and released as The Last Waltz. In 1979, he collaborated with the legendary Professor Longhair on Fess's (another nickname for Henry Byrd) last recording, Crawfish Fiesta, as a guitarist. The album was awarded the first W.C. Handy Blues Album of the Year in 1980 and was released shortly after Longhair's death in January 1980.

Personal life and death[edit]

Dr. John was married three times and told The New York Times that he had "a lot" of children.[49]


His first wife was Lydia Crow, with whom he had two children, Craig and Karla. His second wife was Lorraine Sherman, with whom he had three children: Tara, Jessica, and Jennifer. His third wife was Cat Yellen. His children Craig and Jessica predeceased him. He also had a granddaughter, Stephanie, and a grandson named Allen O'Quin who predeceased him.[50]


He had a heroin addiction; however, in December 1989, he completed his final rehabilitation stint with the help of Narcotics Anonymous, and remained clean for the rest of his life.[51]


On June 6, 2019, Dr. John died of a heart attack.[14] His family announced through his longtime publicist Karen Dalton Beninato that he died at the break of day, and "he created a unique blend of music which carried his home town, New Orleans, at its heart, as it was always in his heart."[16][52][53]

Awards and honors[edit]

The winner of six Grammy Awards, Rebennack was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame by singer John Legend in March 2011.[54]


In May 2013 Rebennack received an honorary doctorate of fine arts from Tulane University.[55] His posthumous album Things Happen That Way was nominated for a Grammy for Best Americana Album in November 2022.[42]

(1974), as himself (TV Special featuring Professor Longhair, Earl King, The Meters & Dr. John)[56]

Soundstage - New Orleans Swamp

(1978), as himself (performs "Such A Night")

The Last Waltz

, episode 80, (1981), as himself (appears in sketch "Polynesian Town"; performs "Iko Iko" and "Such a Night")

SCTV

(April 27, 1982), as himself (accompanying Sippie Wallace and Bonnie Raitt on "Women Be Wise")[57]

Late Night with David Letterman

(March 17, 1983), as himself (performs "Such A Night")[57]

Late Night with David Letterman

(September 7, 1987), as himself (performs "Accentuate The Positive")[57]

Late Night with David Letterman

(December 15, 1989), as himself (performs "Silent Night")[57]

Late Night with David Letterman

(December 28, 1990), as himself (performs duet of "Merry Christmas, Baby" with Charles Brown)[57]

Late Night with David Letterman

(1991), as himself and Yakety Yak (voice) (live action/animated music video)

Yakety Yak, Take it Back

(September 19, 1992), as himself (performs "Goodnight, Irene")[57]

Late Night with David Letterman

(1996), as himself (2 episodes)

Touched by an Angel

(1996), as himself (performance recorded at Roseland Ballroom, NYC; "Right Place, Wrong Time"; "St. James Infirmary"; "How Long Blues"; "Roberta"; and "Layla")[58]

VH1 Duets - Eric Clapton and Dr. John

(December 22, 1997), as himself (performs "Stepping Stone" with G.Love and Special Sauce)[57]

Late Show with David Letterman

(1998), as himself

Blues Brothers 2000

(December 1, 1999), as himself (performs "Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby" with B.B. King)[57]

Late Show with David Letterman

(November 28, 2000), as himself (performs duet of "Merry Christmas, Baby" with Christina Aguilera)[57]

Late Show with David Letterman

(June 17, 2008), as himself (performs "Time For Change" with The Lower 911)[57]

Late Show with David Letterman

(HBO Series - 2010–2013), as himself[59]

Treme

(2013), as himself (guest judge)

Top Chef

(2015), as himself (1 episode)

NCIS: New Orleans

(2018), as himself

One Note at a Time

Discography[edit]

As leader[edit]

Sources:[60][61][62]

Recognition[edit]

Grammy Awards[edit]

Source:[76]

List of 1970s one-hit wonders in the United States

Bookstein, Ezra (2015). . New York: Chronicle Books, Princeton Architectural Press. p. 239. ISBN 978-1-61689-485-6.

The Smith Tapes: Lost Interviews with Rock Stars & Icons 1969-1972

Broven, John (June 8, 2019). . Pelican Publishing Company, Inc. p. 181. ISBN 978-1-4556-1952-8 – via Google Books.

Rhythm and Blues in New Orleans

Finch, Christopher (October 12, 1993). (Print). New York, New York: Random House. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-679-41203-8.

Jim Henson: The Works : the Art, the Magic, the Imagination

Horton, Andrew (February 3, 2000). . Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 97. ISBN 978-0-520-22015-7.

Laughing Out Loud: Writing the Comedy-Centered Screenplay

Kemp, Mark (June 8, 2019) [2004]. . New York: University of Georgia Press, Free Press. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-7432-3794-9. Retrieved June 8, 2019 – via Google Books.

Dixie Lullaby: A Story of Music, Race, and New Beginnings in a New South

Lichtenstein, Grace; Dankner, Laura (1993). . Later Printing (1st ed.). New York: W. W. Norton. p. 143. ISBN 978-0-393-03468-4.

Musical Gumbo: The Music of New Orleans

Lipsitz, George (March 11, 2011). . Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Temple University Press. p. 221. ISBN 978-1-4399-0257-8. Retrieved June 8, 2019 – via Google Books.

How Racism Takes Place

Martinie, Louis (2010). Dr. John Montanee: A Grimoire: The Path of a New Orleans Loa, Resurrection in Remembrance. Black Moon Publishing.  978-1-890399-47-4.

ISBN

Robertson, James (October 20, 2017). Michael Marra: Arrest this Moment (First ed.). Drumderfit, North Kessnock: Big Sky Press. p. 148.  978-0-9569578-6-3.

ISBN

Stromberg, Gary; Merrill, Jane (2005). . Center City, Minnesota: Hazelden. p. 83. ISBN 978-1-59285-156-0.

The Harder they Fall : Celebrities Tell their Real-Life Stories of Addiction and Recovery

Dr. John (Mac Rebennack) and Jack Rummel (1994). . New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-10567-9.

Under a Hoodoo Moon: The Life of the Night Tripper

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