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Lonnie Mack

Lonnie McIntosh (July 18, 1941 – April 21, 2016), known as Lonnie Mack, was an American singer-songwriter and guitarist. He was influential in the development of blues rock music and rock guitar soloing.

Lonnie Mack

Lonnie McIntosh

(1941-07-18)July 18, 1941
West Harrison, Indiana, U.S.

April 21, 2016(2016-04-21) (aged 74)
Smithville, Tennessee, U.S.

  • Musician
  • songwriter

  • Guitar
  • vocals

1954–2004; 2007–2011

Mack emerged in 1963 with his breakthrough LP, The Wham of that Memphis Man. It earned him lasting renown as both a blue-eyed soul singer[1] and a lead guitar innovator. The album's instrumental tracks included two hit singles, "Memphis" and "Wham". In them, Mack, using "top-quality technique" and "pristine" phrasing,[2] added "edgy, aggressive, loud, and fast" melodies and runs to the predominant chords-and-riffs pattern of early rock guitar.[3] These tracks raised the bar for rock guitar proficiency[4] and helped launch the electric guitar to the top of soloing instruments in rock.[3] They served as prototypes[5] for the lead guitar styles of blues rock[6] and Southern rock.[7]


Shortly after the album's release, however, the British Invasion hit American shores, and Mack's recording career "withered on the vine".[8] He regularly toured small venues until 1968, when Rolling Stone magazine rediscovered him, and Elektra Records signed him to a three-album contract. He was soon performing in major venues, but his multi-genre Elektra albums downplayed his lead guitar and blues rock appeal and record sales were modest. During this period, he became increasingly unhappy with the music business. He left Elektra in 1971, and for the next fourteen years he functioned as a low-profile multi-genre recording artist, roadhouse performer, sideman, and music-venue proprietor.


In 1985, Mack resurfaced[9] with a successful blues rock LP, Strike Like Lightning, a promotional tour featuring celebrity guitarist sit-ins,[10] and a Carnegie Hall concert with Roy Buchanan and Albert Collins.[10] In 1986, he went on the Great American Guitar Assault Tour with Buchanan and Dickey Betts.[11] In 1990, he released another well-received blues rock album, Lonnie Mack Live! Attack of the Killer V,[12] then retired from recording. He continued to perform, mostly in small venues, until 2004.[13]

Early life and musical influences[edit]

Shortly before Mack's birth, his family moved from Appalachian (eastern) Kentucky to Dearborn County, Indiana, on the banks of the Ohio River.[14] One of five children, he was born to parents Robert and Sarah Sizemore McIntosh on July 18, 1941, in West Harrison, Indiana,[15] near Cincinnati, Ohio. He was raised on a series of nearby sharecropping farms.


Using a floor-model radio powered by a truck battery, his family routinely listened to the Grand Ole Opry country music show. Continuing to listen after the rest of the family had retired for the night, Mack became a fan of rhythm and blues and traditional black gospel music.[16]


He began playing guitar at the age of seven, after trading his bicycle for a Lone Ranger model acoustic guitar.[17] His mother taught him basic chords,[10] and he was soon playing bluegrass guitar in the family band.[18] Mack recalled that when he was "seven or eight years old" an uncle from Texas introduced him to blues guitar[19] and that when he was about ten years of age, an "old black man" named Wayne Clark introduced him to "Robert Johnson style guitar". He soon taught himself to merge finger-picking country guitar with acoustic blues-picking, to produce a hybrid style which, Mack said, "sounded like rockabilly, but before rockabilly".[20]


His musical influences remained diverse as he refined his playing and singing styles. In his pre-teen years, Mack was mentored by blind singer-guitarist Ralph Trotto, a country-gospel performer.[21] Mack would skip school to play music with Trotto at the latter's house.[22] Mack credited country picker Merle Travis, blues guitarist T-Bone Walker, R&B guitarist Robert Ward, and pop/jazz guitarist Les Paul as significant influences on his developing guitar style and technique.[23] Significant vocal influences included R&B singers Jimmy Reed, Ray Charles, Bobby "Blue" Bland, and Hank Ballard, country singer George Jones, traditional black gospel singer Archie Brownlee, and soul music singer Wilson Pickett.[24] Mack recorded tunes associated with most of these artists.

1968: Guitar: "...in a class by himself."...Vocals: "...sincerity and intensity that's hard to find anywhere." – Alec Dubro, Rolling Stone, calling for re-issuance of Mack's discontinued 1963 debut album.

[35]

1987: "With so many trying to copy this same style, this album sounds surprisingly modern. Not many have done it this well, though." – Gregory Himes, The Washington Post

[36]

1992: "The first of the guitar-hero records is also one of the best, and for perhaps the last time, the singing on such a disc is worthy of the guitar histrionics." – Jimmy Guterman, ranking the album No. 16 in The 100 Best Rock 'n' Roll Records of All Time

[37]

2007: "...a spectacular feast of down-home blues, gospel, R&B, and country chicken-pickin'...a unique vision of American roots music [that was] five years ahead of the British blues-rockers." – Dave Rubin, Inside the Blues, 1942–1982

[38]

2016: "Of all the Mack material available this is the one [album] I'd regard as absolutely essential." – Dave Stephens, Toppermost

[1]

Mack's career-long pattern of switching and mixing within the entire range of white and black Southern roots music genres[25] made him "as difficult to market as he was to describe."[26] He enjoyed periods of significant commercial success as a rock artist in the 1960s and 1980s, but was mostly absent from the rock spotlight for two long stretches of his career (1971–1984 and 1991–2004),[27] during which he continued to perform, mostly in small venues, as a roots-rock "cult figure".[28] In the end, his "influence and standing among musicians far exceeded his (commercial) success."[29]


In 1954, at age 13, Mack dropped out of school after a fight with a teacher. Large and mature-looking for his age, he obtained a counterfeit ID and began performing professionally in bars around Cincinnati with a band led by drummer Hoot Smith.[30] As a 14-year-old professional electric guitarist in 1955, he "was earning $300. per week—more than most workers in the area's casket and whiskey factories."[31] At 15, he was performing on local TV with his band, the Twilighters.[32] He played guitar on several low-circulation recordings in the late 1950s.[33]


In the early 1960s he became a session guitarist with Fraternity Records, a small Cincinnati label. In 1963, he recorded two hit singles for Fraternity, the proto-blues-rock guitar instrumentals "Memphis" and "Wham!". He soon recorded additional tunes to flesh out his debut album, The Wham of that Memphis Man (1963). Mack made some notable recordings later, particularly in the 1980s,[34] but his 1963 debut album is widely considered the centerpiece of his career. It became a perennial critics' favorite:


He recorded many additional sides for Fraternity between 1963 and 1967, but few, if any, were broadly released or strongly promoted, and none charted.[39] Three decades later, Ace Records (UK) packaged the entirety of Mack's Fraternity output (previously released, unreleased, alternate takes, and demos) in a series of compilations.[40] In the mid-1960s, however, Mack's commercial prospects were stymied by Fraternity's thin financial resources[41] and, even more, by the arrival of the overwhelmingly popular British Invasion only two months after release of The Wham of that Memphis Man. "It looked like the guitar wizard was ready to bust out when the music world was turned on its ear. [In] February 1964, The Beatles appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show, and Mack's [recording] career withered on the vine."[42]


Although his recording career had stalled out, Mack stayed busy as a performer, criss-crossing the country with one-night stands. "The '60s, man, we was full of piss and vinegar, nothing bothered us. We had bennies, like the truckers had [and] we just stayed on the road all the time."[19] During that time, "[we] performed with just about everybody, [from] Jimi Hendrix [to] The Everly Brothers, Chuck Berry, and Dick and Dee Dee."[43] He also took on session work with James Brown, Freddie King, Joe Simon, Albert Washington, and other R&B/soul artists.[44]


In 1968, at the height of the blues-rock era, Elektra Records bought out Mack's dormant Fraternity recording contract and moved him to Los Angeles to record three albums.[45] In November 1968, the newly-founded Rolling Stone magazine published a rave review of Mack's discontinued 1963 debut album, persuading Elektra to re-issue it.[46] He was soon performing in major rock venues, including the Fillmore East, the Fillmore West, and the Cow Palace. He opened for the Doors[47] and Crosby, Stills & Nash and shared the stage with Johnny Winter, Elvin Bishop and other popular rock and blues artists of the time.[48]


It was the hippie era, however, and Mack's rustic, blue-collar persona made for a rough fit with commercial rock's target demographic. John Morthland wrote: "[All] the superior chops in the world couldn't hide the fact that chubby, country Mack probably had more in common with Kentucky truck drivers than he did with the new rock audience."[49] In addition, after two multi-genre Elektra albums (both recorded in 1969) that downplayed his blues-rock strengths, including his guitar, Mack himself was dissatisfied: "My music wasn't working that good then. I ain’t really happy with a lot of the stuff I did there."[50]


At that point in his career, Mack took a break from performing and recording. According to Robbie Krieger, lead guitarist of Elektra label-mate the Doors, Mack was seen during this period "selling Bibles out of the back of his car."[51] He also worked for Elektra's A&R department, helping to recruit new talent.[52] In 1971, with one album left to complete his contract with Elektra, Mack moved to Nashville. There, he recorded The Hills of Indiana, a multi-genre (but country-flavored) LP with a vocal emphasis.[1] It included only one track showcasing his guitar virtuosity, "Asphalt Outlaw Hero". The Hills of Indiana attracted little attention.


Mack had begun missing the fun of small-town performance venues early in his time with Elektra[53] and soon soured on the fantasy of rock celebrity status. "[It had] a lot to do with how much value you put on money as opposed to what makes you happy. I wasn't happy. So one of the best-feeling moments I ever had was when that L.A. sign was in my rear-view mirror and I was free again."[54] On another occasion, Mack said: "Seems like every time I get close to really making it, to climbing to the top of the mountain, that's when I pull out. I just pull up and run."[55] Upon Mack's death in 2016, music historian Dick Shurman observed that Mack's temperament "wasn't suited to stardom. I think he'd rather have been hunting and fishing. He didn't like cities or the (music) business."[56]


In 1971, with his Elektra contract completed, Mack went home to southern Indiana, where, for more than a decade, he was a roadhouse performer, sideman, and low-profile country/bluegrass recording artist.[57] During this period, he also owned and operated a nightclub in Covington, Kentucky, and an outdoor country music venue in Friendship, Indiana.[58] In 1977, Mack was shot during an altercation with an off-duty police officer. The experience inspired Mack's tune, "Cincinnati Jail", a rowdy, guitar-and-vocal rock number that he favored in live performances later in his career.


In 1983, Mack relocated to Austin, Texas, for a collaboration with his blues-rock disciple, guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan.[59] Vaughan persuaded Mack to return to the studio, with Vaughan in production and backup roles, but Mack's return was postponed by a lengthy illness that Mack attributed to "so much drinkin' and carryin' on".[60] In 1985, Mack staged a "full-fledged comeback"[61] with the blues-rock album, Strike Like Lightning (co-produced by Vaughan and Mack), a tour featuring guest appearances by Vaughan, Ry Cooder, Keith Richards, and Ronnie Wood, and a concert at Carnegie Hall with Albert Collins and Roy Buchanan.[62]


In 1986, Mack joined Buchanan and Dickey Betts for the Great American Guitar Assault Tour.[63] He released three more albums over the next four years, including his last, in 1990, a blues-rock LP entitled Lonnie Mack Live! – Attack of the Killer V!. Then, worn from the constant touring required to sell records,[64] he ended his recording career.[65] However, he continued to play the roadhouse and festival circuits at his own pace through 2004.

Guitar style and technique[edit]

Mack's rock guitar proficiency has been linked to his early mastery of fleet-fingered[82] bluegrass and country guitar styles.[83] By his late teens, Mack had expanded his six-string repertoire to include blues, rockabilly,[84] and the percussive chordal riffing of early rock's Chuck Berry.[85]


By 1963, the year of "Memphis" and "Wham!", Mack's ability to rapidly "exploit the entire range"[86] of the guitar with "top-quality technique" and "pristine" phrasing[87] was considerably above the rock music standard. In "Memphis", "Wham!", "Chicken Pickin", "Suzie-Q", and other early-1960s instrumentals, he augmented rock guitar's then-prevailing chords-and-riffs accompaniment style with unusually brisk leads consisting largely of melodies, runs, and "mature blues chops".[80] He routinely alternated between agile melodic leads and rhythmic chordal riffs, a pattern soon emulated by Jeff Beck[88] and later by Stevie Ray Vaughan,[89] among others. While Mack's key performance elements had sometimes appeared in early rock saxophone and keyboard solos, a seamless combination of all was essentially unheard in rock guitar before Mack.[90]


Mack enhanced his guitar sound with vibrato effects. In the 1960s, he used a 1950s-era Magnatone amplifier to produce a constant, electronically generated, watery-sounding vibrato,[91] in the style of R&B guitarist Robert Ward.[1] Throughout his career, he also used a manually-operated Bigsby vibrato arm to bend the pitch selectively. He typically cradled the arm in the fourth finger of his picking hand, toggling it while continuing to pick.[92] He often fanned it rapidly to the tempo of his simultaneous tremolo picking, to produce a machine-gunned, single-note, "shuddering" sound.[93] Neil Young considers Mack a vibrato arm pioneer: "Did I do that first? No. You've got to look at guys like Lonnie Mack. He showed everybody how to use a [vibrato arm]."[94] Reportedly, the device was given its common nickname, "whammy bar", in recognition of Mack's early demonstration of skill with it in "Wham!".[95]


Rock historian Dave Stephens rates Mack's overall guitar sound "highly distinctive, dare I say, unique; in the early rock era only Link Wray and Duane Eddy could match him for instant recognition."[1]

Mack's 1958 Gibson Flying V Guitar, "Number 7"[edit]

Mack was closely identified with the distinctive-looking Gibson Flying V guitar that first appeared in 1958. When he was seventeen, he bought the seventh Flying V off the first-year production line, naming it "Number 7". Mack, who was part Native American, had spent his youth with bow-and-arrow, and was viscerally attracted to the arrow-like shape of the guitar.[107] Mack played "Number 7" almost exclusively throughout his career.[108] The title of Mack's final album, Attack of the Killer V, was a reference to his guitar.


Early in his career, Mack added a Bigsby vibrato bar to the guitar. It required mounting a steel crossbeam approximately six inches below the apex of the "V", giving the guitar a unique appearance. Mack favored thick (heavy) strings, i.e., .010, .012, .018w, .028, .038, .052. He typically only bent the first (higher) two, and used a wound string only for the third. He said that the wound third string was important to his sound.[109]


In 1993, Gibson Guitar Corporation issued a limited-run "Lonnie Mack Signature Edition" of Number 7.[110] In 2010, it was featured in Star Guitars: 101 Guitars That Rocked The World.[111] In 2011, Walter Carter, author of The Guitar Collection, named Number 7 one of the world's "150 most elite guitars".[112] In 2012, Rolling Stone magazine named it one of "20 iconic guitars".[113]

1968: "It is truly the voice of Lonnie Mack that sets him apart...primarily a gospel singer...sincerity and intensity that's hard to find anywhere." – Alec Dubro, Rolling Stone

[116]

1983: "Ultimately—for consistency and depth of feeling—the best blue-eyed soul is defined by Lonnie Mack's ballads and virtually everything The Righteous Brothers recorded. Lonnie Mack wailed a soul ballad as gutsily as any black gospel singer. The anguished inflections which stamped his best songs had a directness which would have been wholly embarrassing in the hands of almost any other white vocalist." – Bill Millar, History of Rock

[117]

1992: "The first of the guitar-hero records is also one of the best. And for perhaps the last time, the singing on such a disc was worthy of the guitar." – Jimmy Guterman, The 100 Best Rock 'n' Roll Records Of All Time

[118]

2001: ""Why?", Mack wails, transforming it into a word of three syllables. "Why-y-y?" It's sweaty slow-dance stuff, with an organ intro, a stinging guitar solo, and, after the last emotional chorus, four simple notes on the guitar as a coda. There's no sadder, dustier, beerier song in all of Rock". – James Curtis, Fortune

[119]

2002: "For me, his vocal records became a metaphor for soul music; when I heard them, I finally understood what the term meant." – Randy McNutt, Guitar Towns

[120]

2009: "[Mack's "Why?" (1963) is] the greatest record ever made ... you can feel the ground shaking under [Mack's] feet ... a cry of anguish so extreme you have to close your eyes in shame over witnessing it ... Mack's scream at the end has never been matched. God help us if anyone ever tops it.[121] – Greil Marcus, Songs Left Out of Nan Goldin's Ballad of Sexual Dependency

deep soul

2016: "Up to April the 21st 2016, the day he died, Lonnie Mack was the best living white soul singer in the world, so good that he could even be mentioned in the same sentence as some of the all-time great black stars of what is essentially a black genre, and yes, I'm talking about the likes of Bobby Bland, Wilson Pickett and others." – Dave Stephens, Toppermost

[1]

2021: "A major branch of Soul straddled the line between R&B and Country. The blue-eyed soul singer who might best demonstrate this is Lonnie Mack, [whose] influence and standing among musicians far exceeded his [commercial] success." - James E. Perrone, Listen To Soul! Exploring a Musical Genre

[122]

Throughout his career, Mack's vocals blended white and black Southern roots influences. One commentator dubbed his singing style "country-esque blues".[114] His best-known vocals were gospel-inspired "blue-eyed soul" ballads. Most failed to chart,[115] but they have consistently drawn praise from critics and popular music historians:


Representative blue-eyed-soul vocals from his catalog include:

1964: !

The Wham of that Memphis Man

1969:

Glad I'm in the Band

1969:

Whatever's Right

1971:

The Hills of Indiana

1973: Dueling Banjos (with )

Rusty York

1977: Home at Last

1978: Lonnie Mack with Pismo

1985:

Strike Like Lightning

1986: Second Sight

1988: Roadhouses and Dance Halls

1999: South (rec. 1978)

Interviews and commentaries