Randall Bramblett (@ The Pour House): A Review

In a world in which Ariana Grande wins Grammy Awards, ABBA and Ritchie Valens are in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and we are bombarded by a constant stream of disposable, assembly-line fabricated “music”, Randall Bramblett is a refreshing breeze of artistic authenticity. His soulful-soaked performance at The Charleston Pour House Saturday night (July 11, 2015) was equal parts blues, gospel, jazz and country – in other words, pure rock ‘n roll. 

Randall Bramblett, The Pour House, Charleston.

Randall Bramblett, The Pour House, Charleston. 

Bramblett opened the night with a blistering version of “Used To Rule The World,”  from Now It’s Tomorrow (2008).  The song was made popular by Bonnie Raitt’s version which sounds rather tame after hearing Bramblett’s intense live version.  

bright spotsLeaning heavily on his most recent release The Bright Spots (2013) Bramblett, switching from keyboards to saxophone, effortlessly led his tight stellar band across the musical spectrum before an enthusiastically devoted crowd. As he stated at the beginning of the show, “I think we pretty much know everyone here,” Bramblett then proceeded to treat the evening as a gathering of friends in his living room.

“If you’re not gonna dance, you got to move closer,” he urged the crowd at one point. “We’ve got to have something coming back to us.” Bramblett also introduced several new songs, which will be featured on his September release, Devil Music. 

20150711_224522Bramblett is a 30 year veteran of American music. Coming out of Jesup, Ga. in the 1970s he became associated with various Capricorn Records artists, recording and touring with Elvis Bishop, Cowboy, the Gregg Allman Band, Govt. Mule and Widespread Panic.

In the 1980s he joined Chuck Leavell’s Allman Brothers offshoot project, Sea Level, and became a driving force in that legendary jazz-fusion / rock band, playing keyboards, saxophone and vocals. For eighteen years he was also a sideman for Steve Winwood’s touring band.

Since the turn of the 21st century, Bramblett has increasingly devoted his energies to a solo career, releasing six CDs in thirteen years, to increasing critical and popular support. Rolling Stone called Bramblett  “One of the South’s most lyrical and literate songwriters”  and he has also been referred to as “the William Faulkner of Southern music”

Nick Johnson

Nick Johnson

Whatever the accolades, the full power of Bramblett’s musical artistry was in perfect display last night at The Pour House. One of the highlights was guitarist Nick Johnson. The 27-year-old Massachusetts native turned in an eye-opening performance, using his guitar to flesh out the sound of the four-piece band. It’s such an pleasure to watch a guitar player use his instrument in service to the song. Johnson credits Derek Trucks to inspiring him to pursue guitar playing as a serious endeavor.   Johnson has stated: “Derek’s focus and his purity was just inspiring … hearing Derek, that tone, just stopped me in my tracks. He has a deep well.” 

Last night, the Randall Bramblett Band served up a two-hour helping of Southern soul and all who attended this Sunday morning are awakened renourished and revived. 

Randall Bramblett Band:

Randall Bramblett, vocal, keys, sax
Nick Johnson, guitar
Michael Steele, bass, backing vocals
Seth Hendershot, drums, backing vocals

Today in Charleston History: July 12

1822-Denmark Vesey Rebellion.

Gullah Jack Prichard and John Horry were executed. Gullah Jack was accused of not only planning to massacre white Charlestonians, but also to have “endeavored to enlist on your behalf all the powers of darkness.”

During the trial Gullah Jack played the fool so much that some of the judges could not believe he was part of the rebellion.  However, as the trial progressed and six witnesses testified against him, Jack’s demeanor changed. He scowled and gave his accusers hard looks. He made motions and designs with his fingers until the judges admonished him for trying to bewitch the witnesses. From the Negro Plot, Gullah Jack was admonished.

In the prosecution of your wicked designed, you were not satisfied with resorting to natural and ordinary means, but endeavored to enlist on your behalf, all the powers of darkness, and employed for that purpose the most disgusting mummery and superstition. You represented yourself as invulnerable; that you could neither be taken nor destroyed, and all who fought under your banners would be invincible. Your boasted charms have not protected yourself, and of course could not protect others … You will shortly be consigned to the cold and silent grave, and all the powers of darkness cannot rescue you from your approaching fate.

Jack had to be “dragged forth to the scaffold … and gave his spirit up without firmness or composure.” Despite this second round of executions, the authorities saw no end in sight. Each new arrest led to more evidence “that the Conspiracy had spread wider and wider.”

1833

On his way for a tour of the Northeast, James Petigru met with Pres. Jackson at the White House and commented that “the old gentleman looked better than I expected.”

1923 – Jenkins Orphanage
Rev. Daniel Jenkins

Rev. Daniel Jenkins

By this time, the Jenkins Orphanage Bands were spread out across the eastern United States every year, bringing in more than $10,000 annual income for the Orphan Aid Society. Each band traveled with a male chaperone, often a minister, a cook and a valet to care for the uniforms and instruments. Because they were blacks traveling across the country during the Jim Crow Era of America, the chaperone also carried a letter of introduction from the mayor of Charleston to be given to the mayor or police chief of each town at which they stopped, as proof of their honorable character and intentions. In 1923, the letter read:    

City of Charleston Executive Department, July 12, 1923 

To the Mayor, Board of Alderman and the Officials of any City in the United States

This is to certify that Rev. D. J. Jenkins, President and Founder of the Jenkins Orphanage of this city, has been conducting an orphanage for over thirty-two years, having since connected with it a reform school and industrial farm and a rescue home for girls only. Reports show that he had handled and trained over three thousand little Negro boys and girls. They have been sent here from all portions of the country to be reformed. This he had done practically entirely on voluntary contributions.

There are four brass bands connected with the work, known as the Jenkins Orphanage Bands. We would appreciate anything you may do for him in letting his boys give entertainments and play upon the public streets of your city. It is raising money for a purely charitable work on a small basis, and I will assure you that he has ever managed to keep the order and conduct of his bands so that they have not become a nuisance, but rather a pleasure for the citizens to hear them play.

Rev. Jenkins has a Board of leading white citizens to keep up with the accounts and advise whenever necessary.

Very respectfully,

JOHN P. GRACE

Mayor

The above Jenkins letterhead, 1923, reflected the Jim Crow attitude of the time. The implied racist message of the letterhead is: The Jenkins Orphanage was run by a black man, but there were responsible white citizens monitoring the Orphan Aid Society, assuring donations were used properly. Even after thirty years of success, Rev. Jenkins was still not fully trusted by the white citizens of Charleston.

Today In Charleston History: July 11

1744-Births
Pierce Butler

Pierce Butler

Pierce Butler was born in County Carlow, Ireland. His father was Sir Richard Butler, member of Parliament and a baronet. Like so many younger sons of the British aristocracy who could not inherit their fathers’ estates because of primogeniture, Butler pursued a military career. He became a major in His Majesty’s 29th Regiment and during the colonial unrest was posted to Boston in 1768 to quell disturbances there. In 1771 he married Mary Middleton, daughter of a wealthy South Carolinian, and resigned his commission to take up a planter’s life in the Charleston area

1783

A Patriot mob led by Commodore Alexander Gillon started a riot against Tories sill living in Charleston, tarring and feathering several Loyalists.

1804- Duel

Vice-President Aaron Burr met former Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton outside Weehawken, New Jersey, in a duel, at the same spot where Hamilton’s son had died in 1801. A letter Hamilton wrote the night before the duel stated:

I have resolved, if our interview [duel] is conducted in the usual manner, and it pleases God to give me the opportunity, to reserve and throw away my first fire, and I have thoughts even of reserving my second fire.

At dawn, the duel began. Hamilton’s shot broke a tree branch directly above Burr’s head. Burr’s shot hit Hamilton in the lower abdomen above the right hip. He died the next day.

Burr was charged with murder and fled to South Carolina where his daughter Theodosia lived with her family. 

Hamilton-Burr duel

Hamilton-Burr duel

1865

St. John’s Lutheran – the first church hit by Federal fire – became the first Lutheran church to resume services after the War. 

Unitarian Church (left) and St. John’s Lutheran (right), circa 1865

Today In Charleston History: July 10

1667

Captain Robert Sandford entered what is now Charleston harbor and sailed up river, which he named Ashley, for Lord Proprietor Anthony Ashley Cooper.

1804

One day before his duel with Alexander Hamilton in New Jersey, Vice President Aaron Burr wrote a long letter to his daughter, Theodosia, in Charleston:

Theodosia Burr Alston by John Vanderlyn - New York Historical Society

Theodosia Burr Alston by John Vanderlyn – New York Historical Society

Having lately written my will, and given my private letters and papers in charge of you, I have no other direction to give you on the subject but to request you burn all such as, if by accident made public, would injure any person. This is more particularly applicable to the letters of my female correspondents.

I am indebted to you, my dearest Theodosia, for a very great portion of the happiness which I have enjoyed in this life. You have completely satisfied all that my heart and affections had hoped or even wished.

Burr then wrote a letter to his son-in-law, Joseph Alston, explaining the reason for his instructions about his property:

Joseph Alston

Joseph Alston:

I have called out General Hamilton, and we meet to-morrow morning. Vanness will give you the particulars. The preceding has been written in contemplation of this event. If it should be my lot to fall … I shall live in you and your son. I commit to you all that is most dear to me – my reputation and my daughter.

Today In Charleston History: July 9

1786

Martha Laurens Ramsay

Martha Laurens Ramsay

Dr. David Ramsay returned to Charlestown from New York (serving a term in Congress) and took over the treatment of the ailing Henry Laurens. It was during this time he first met Martha Laurens whom he soon married. 

1781-American Revolution.  

The Charlestown patriots exiled in St. Augustine received word of the prisoner exchange negotiated between Cornwallis and Gen. Greene.

1793

The murder of Stephen Saint Johns by his slave, Titus, sent shockwaves through the white community. Titus was executed in Charleston for that murder.

1900

The Evening Post reported:

A HORSELESS CARRIAGE
First of the Vehicles In Charleston Appeared Today

“Yonder she comes,” “Gee whiz,” “Gol darn” and similar expressions of surprise and admiration on King Street this morning arrested the attention of pedestrians who turned to see a vast crowd of small boys chasing excitedly after a vehicle, the like of which had never been seen in Charleston before this day, July 9, 1900, A.D.

locomobile

1900 Locomobile

It was a horseless carriage and the rubber tires of its four wheels did not amount to one-tenth of that displayed in the necks of Charlestonians who craned themselves to catch a sight of the vehicle. It was evidently a red letter occasion for Charleston – the horseless carriage and a big convention all on one day. Surely this was a great glory.

The horseless carriage in Charleston is not an automobile, but a Locomobile, the difference being that the former uses electricity for motive power while the latter is propelled by gasoline.

The Locomobile at present in the city is the property of Colgate & Co. of New York, used to advertise Octagon soap. And it surely fulfilled its mission in Charleston today. Everyone has seen it, the men exclaiming “Oh,” and the ladies “Ah” as they viewed it with great delight. It is a neatly constructed vehicle, after the style of a one-seated trap… The “loco” will probably be in the city for two or three weeks.

1919

Lt. James Reese Europe

Lt. James Reese Europe

After the murder of their director, James Reese Europe, the Hellfighter’s Band was reorganized under the leadership of Gene Mikell. Mikell, a native of Charleston and former director of the Jenkins Orphanage Band, had served as the assistant director of the Hellfighters Band during World War I across Europe. James Europe had been murdered in a backstage argument in Boston by Hellfighter’s drummer, Herbert Wright, also a former member of the Jenkins Orphanage Band.

As “a tribute to the late leader of this band” the Hellfighters played a successful concert at the Manhattan Casino and served as the headliner at one last Carnegie Hall concert.

Listen to the music of the Hellfighters Band:

Today In Charleston History: July 8

1779-American Revolution. Slavery

The legislature rejected “with horror” a Congressional recommendation that South Carolina “raise three thousand black soldiers.” Christopher Gadsden wrote that this “dangerous and impolitic Step … much disgusted us.” 

1781-British Occupation

Issac Hayne

Issac Hayne

Col. Issac Hayne was arrested by the British who came to rescue General Williamson. Lord Rawdon, living at Miles Brewton’s house on King Street, decided to make an example out of Hayne – to send the message to other men who swore allegiance to the British, but continued to fight for the Patriots. Without an official court martial, Rawdon ordered Hayne’s execution.

Hayne was held prisoner in the Provost dungeon of the Exchange building.

1864-Bombardment of Charleston   

Gus Smythe wrote to his mother:

The shells that are coming to us are the large ones, & they do make a pretty noise when they burst. Not every close to the Steeple however. The nearest have been in Chalmers St. This [St. Michael’s Church] is quite a lion now of the city, & every young lady who comes to town, must go up the Steeple. The view up here is beautiful, besides the interest one naturally takes in looking at the various batteries.

1903

 The Board of Park Commissioners approved the name of the new park on the site of the Exposition. It was to be named in honor of Wade Hampton, former Civil War general and South Carolina governor.

Today In Charleston History: July 7

JULY 7

1771

Henry Laurens left Charlestown with his three sons for Philadelphia, on his way to England to establish his children in school.

1776-Deaths

Sabina Ellis Ramsay died, age nineteen, leaving Dr. David Ramsay widowed for the first time.

1781

The pardoned Charlestown prisoners arrived in Philadelphia from St. Augustine, where they had been held by British authorities. Charles Pinckney took a room at Mrs. McFunn’s boardinghouse on Second Street with Arthur Middleton.

1849-Religion. Slavery

A riot broke out at the Work House – the Negro Jail – just around the corner, and thirty prisoners escaped.  They were quickly recaptured, tried, and imprisoned.  One of them, Nicholas was hanged.  

1884

During his national speaking tour, Oscar Wilde appeared at the Academy of Music.

Oscar_Wilde_Sarony

Oscar Wilde, 1882

Academy of Music, Market and King Street (present site of the Riveria Theater.

Academy of Music, Market and King Street (present site of the Riveria Theater.

 

1911

The last hanging in South Carolina took place at Charleston’s Old City Jail on Magazine Street of Daniel Duncan, a Black man who was accused of killing Max Lubelsky on King Street.

Lubelsky had been killed a year before, in the summer of 1910, and a few weeks later his widow was attacked. A mob grabbed a nearby Black man named Daniel Duncan and Duncan was accused of both acts. Many thought that Duncan was innocent, but since African Americans were not allowed on juries in those days and he was pronounced guilty within less than an hour, and was sentenced to hang.

The day of his execution, Duncan gave a note to his pastor, Rev. L. Ruffin Nichols of Mother Emanuel AME Church. It said in part, “Tell them that I am at rest, because I am innocent and the Lord knows that I am today.”

Read the entire story in my book SOUTH CAROLINA KILLERS.

Today In Charleston History: July 6

1769-Slavery

Peter Timothy, editor of the South Carolina Gazette wrote:

From the first of January last to the first of July no less than 4,233 [Negroes] had been imported and many more were expected before the close of the year. This scarcely needs comment; every man’s own mind must suggest the consequences of such enormous importation, especially at this time.

1774-American Revolution – Foundations

Exchange Building, 1823

Exchange Building, 1823

One hundred and four delegates arrived at the Exchange Building for a general meeting. Charlestonians Henry Middleton, John Rutledge, Edward Rutledge, Thomas Lynch, and Christopher Gadsden were named delegates to the First Continental Congress.

Dr. David Ramsay attended the meeting and wrote:

This Convention of the people, and these resolutions, laid the foundation of all subsequent proceedings which ultimately terminated in a revolution … The people, by virtue of their inherent right to resist illegal oppression by their rulers, delegated full powers to five men of their own choice to take care of their political interest … the germ of representative government then planted, has grown up to the tree of liberty and happiness …

Edward Rutledge wrote to Ralph Izard boasting that he was elected by a “great majority – 397.”

1775-American Revolution – Continental Congress

 Continental Congress issues a “Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of taking up Arms.” It stated that the Americans are “resolved to die free men rather than live as slaves.”

1777

John Laurens, 1780 (by Charles Willson Peale)

John Laurens, 1780 (by Charles Willson Peale)

John Laurens secured a place on George Washington’s staff, with Alexander Hamilton and Marquis de Lafayette. Hamilton wrote that John had “stolen into my affections without my consent.”

Today In Charleston History: July 5

1735

The vestry of St. Philip’s Church signed a tax-list for £1000, authorized to use for the relief and maintenance of the poor.

1752

Charles Pinckney, was admitted the South Carolina bar.

1770-American Revolution – Foundations. Charleston Firsts 

The statue of William Pitt was dedicated at Meeting and Broad Streets – the first commemorating a public figure in America – and placed upon a pedestal. A flag with “Pitt and Liberty” was raised. Members of the Club Forty-five led the crowd in three “hurrahs!” That evening Club Forty-five hosted a party at Mr. Dillon’s Tavern where forty-five toasts were drunk.

pitt statue

TOP: Map of Charles Town illustrating location of Pitt statue, Broad and Meeting Streets BOTTOM: Pitt statue in Washington Park. RIGHT: Pitt statue today, in the lobby of Charleston County courthouse

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1781-British Occupation

Col. Issac Hayne led 100 horsemen of his militia unit and captured General Andrew Williamson, known at the “Benedict Arnold of the South.” Williamson was an American who had joined the British after the capture of Charles Town. In fear that Williamson would be hanged, Lt. Col. Balfour sent out men to attempt a rescue.

1838

Frémont_1856John C. Fremont, who was suspended from the College of Charleston three months short of graduation on a morals charge, was appointed second lieutenant in the Corps of Topographical Engineers

1849

Susan Petigru King and her sister Caroline Carson traveled to Sharon Springs, New York to spend the summer at a health resort, looking for a cure of Caroline’s tumor. In Charleston, the women’s long absence away from their husbands and children provoked gossip. They were:    

Susan Petigru King Bowen, in later life

Susan Petigru King Bowen, in later life.

two young women without their husbands, & far from all those upon whom they have any claim … their situation is dreadful … calculated to excite the suspicion of all discreet people.

Today In Charleston History: July 4

1670

Captain Joseph West complained that several of the settlers were “so addicted to Rum, that they will do little but whilst the bottle is at their nose” and “grand abuses that prophanely violate the Sabbath.”   

1776-American Revolution

The Continental Congress approved the final wording of the Declaration of Independence. The ideals of individual liberty, first espoused by John Locke (partially in his Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina and Two Treatises of Government) were now clearly expressed by Thomas Jefferson.

John Hancock signed the document that day, and it was sent to John Dunlop’s printing shop where 200 copies were printed. Copies were sent across the country to all major cities in America.

South Carolina signers of the Declaration of Independence

South Carolina signers of the Declaration of Independence

All four South Carolina delegates voted for independence.

  • Arthur Middleton, thirty-four years old
  • Thomas Heyward, Jr., twenty-nine years old
  • Thomas Lynch, Jr., twenty-seven years old
  • Edward Rutledge was the youngest signer of the Declaration, twenty-six years old

declaration with SC delegate signature

1778-American Revolution

Dr. David Ramsay gave a public address in celebration of American independence. He stated that “our present form of government is everyway preferable to the royal one we have lately renounced.”

1830

Members of the Union Party “marched sedately to Scots Presbyterian Church” for an Independence Day celebration. The Nullifiers met at the Circular Church and reassembled for an outdoor rally:

Under a splendid Pavilion … from which mere boys of 8 to 12 years old were carried on the backs of servants, completely insensible from drink, while dead drunk seniors staggers and swore up and down the public streets … a complete exemplification of that depravity which the foul doctrine of Anarchy and Nullification is calculated to end in.