- Satan and Adam
Satan and Adam, a
blues duo consisting of Sterling "Mister Satan" Magee (b.May 20 ,1936 ;Mt. Olive, MS ) andAdam Gussow (b.April 3 ,1958 ;New York, NY ), were a fixture on Harlem's sidewalks in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Magee sings in a style that fuses blues with elements ofsoul and rap, playselectric guitar with withering intensity, and uses both feet to stomp outpolyrhythm s on a homemadepercussion setup that includeshi-hat cymbals topped withtambourines andmaracas . Gussow plays amplifiedharmonica in an equally fluent and original way. Together, Satan and Adam have, asjournalist Richard Skelley noted, "redefined and shaped the sound of modern blues so much that 'I Want You' from theirHarlem Blues debut was included on aRhino Records release, "Modern Blues of the 1990s "."History
Born in
Mississippi , Magee was raised in St. Petersburg,Florida , where he came of age dabbling as apiano player in local churches and suffering his parents' ire when he drifted into the blues. As a young man he worked local blues clubs under the monicker "Five Fingers Magee " and was billed as "the fastest guitar player in the world." After a stint inGermany as aU.S. Army paratrooper in the 1950s, Magee was demobilized inNew York and ended up settling in Harlem. A sometime-songwriter for legendJesse Stone , Magee recorded several near-hits on Ray Charles's Tangerine label in the early 1960s, including "Get in My Arms Little Girl." His proficiency on guitar earned him gigs with a number of rhythm-and-blues performers, includingJames Brown ,King Curtis ,Big Maybelle ,Joey Dee and the Starlighters , and atransvestite duo known asThe Illusions That Create Confusion . In the mid 1970s he played sessions withPaul Winley and theHarlem Underground , a loose-knit unit that includedGeorge Benson . In the late 1970s, after the death of his wife, Magee gave up guitar, roamed widely through Mississippi,Florida , andPuerto Rico , and returned to Harlem reborn, refusing to be identified by his birth-name and demanding that his associates call him Satan. His longtime friend and business manager, Harlem producer and record-store ownerBobby Robinson (of the Fire and FuryR&B labels), rented him an apartment and put a guitar in his hands. Soon Magee was strolling the streets, playing for what he later referred to as his "wino buddies." By 1983 he had added a hi-hat cymbal to his mix and begun to perform as a one-man band on125th Street in front of theNew York Telephone Company office, sometimes accompanied by drummerPancho Morales and other musicians. It was around this time that Gussow, a Princeton graduate and English M.A. student atColumbia University , first saw Magee and his trio performing on the corner of 114th Street and Broadway. (Gussow relates the story in his 1998 bluesmemoir , "Mister Satan's Apprentice ".) Gussow, a guitarist and harmonica player whose performing experience had previously been limited to a handful of high school and college bands, was galvanized by the encounter. After dropping out of grad school, Gussow spent several years as a part-time street performer in New York andEurope . Gussow's transformation from an academic to a blues player was facilitated by lessons he took from his mentor, New York harmonica virtuosoNat Riddles , who had performed and recorded withLarry Johnson ,Odetta , and others, and by his acculturation into thejam session life atDan Lynch , a storied East Villagejuke joint .In October 1986, Gussow encountered Magee again, purely by chance, this time at Magee's regular stretch of sidewalk near the
Apollo Theater . Gussow, a semi-seasoned street performer by this point, sat in. The two musicians--one older,African American , and southern-born; the other younger,white , Ivy-educated, a New Yorksuburbanite --hit it off.What began as a streetside encounter ended up blossoming into a twelve-year success story. The duo's initial notoriety accrued in the summer of 1987, when the members of
U2 wandered by Magee and Gussow with a video crew in tow, capturing the Harlem duo at work. Thirty-nine seconds of Magee's original composition, "Freedom for My People" were ultimately included in the "Rattle and Hum " documentary.Gussow left New York several times over the next year to play harmonica with a touring production of "Big River," but always returned to Harlem. As Magee refined and developed his one-man band sound with the addition of a second hi-hat cymbal and wooden sounding board, Gussow was forced to evolve an equally innovative sound, one in which traditional amplified
Chicago harp was cross-fertilized withfunk -guitar licks andjazz sax phrasings. Magee and Gussow made the streets their only venue until 1990, when they recorded a demo at Giant Sound in New York, opened forBuddy Guy at aSummerstage concert inCentral Park , and began to play club gigs at a restaurant calledChelsea Commons (24th St. and 10th Ave.) That summer they traveled to Halifax,Nova Scotia and participated in theInternational Busker Fest . After three and a half years of relative anonymity, they finally had a calling card, and a name: Magee and Gussow were now "Satan and Adam."1991 marked a major turning point in the duo's fortunes. After being discovered during a steady gig at a lesbian bar in
Greenwich Village , they signed with major management, went on a tour of theUK withBo Diddley , and released their firstalbum , "Harlem Blues ". The album, which captured the raw, explosive vitality of their streetside sound, caused a minor sensation.Quint Davis , the founder of theNew Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival , told their manager, "I don't know where you found them, but I'm going to make them stars."Between 1991 and 1998, Satan and Adam toured widely, including
Italy ,Switzerland ,Finland , andAustralia and countless club gigs in the eastern half of the U.S. They recorded two more albums: "Mother Mojo " (1993) and "Living on the River " (1996). They performed at blues, jazz, andfolk festival s inPhiladelphia , Chicago,Newport ,Saratoga Springs , Kansas City,Los Angeles , and many other locations.In 1996 they were the cover story in "
Living Blues " magazine--the first time in that magazine's history that aninterracial act had ever been featured on the cover. After a charmed rise, the duo's fortunes took a disastrous downward turn in 1998 when Magee, who had recently relocated from Harlem to Brookneal,Virginia , had anervous breakdown and, after briefly resurfacing, dropped completely out of sight. Satan and Adam effectively dissolved as a partnership.After a long silence, Magee has recently come back into view. He is currently living at the
Boca Ciega adult care facility in Gulfport,Florida , a small community next to St. Petersburg. His guitar skills, which vanished with his breakdown, have partially reconstituted themselves with the help of harpistT. C. Carr and other Tampa-area blues performers who have dedicated themselves to furthering his comeback. In late 2005 and early 2006, Satan and Adam played several comeback gigs in Gulfport and Oxford,Mississippi , where Gussow is currently an associateprofessor of English and Southern Studies at theUniversity of Mississippi .Beginning in the summer of 2007, the duo has begun to play occasional road dates and has added a drummer, Tampa resident David Laycock (a.k.a., "Dave on Drums"). A feature-length documentary on the duo entitled " [http://www.satanandadam.com Satan and Adam] ", directed by award-winning filmmaker
V. Scott Balcerek , is currently inpost-production . A new book by Gussow entitled "Journeyman's Road ", collecting magazine columns and other of his writings, was published by theUniversity of Tennessee Press in 2007 and further detailed the Satan and Adam story. In 2008, Gussow released a double CD of early work by the duo entitled "Word on the Street: Harlem Recordings, 1989", for download on his Modern Blues Harmonica website (see below). The duo remains one of the most powerful and unique blues acts to emerge during the 1990s. Magee in particular has advocates, including Gussow, who claim him to be the greatest one-man band the blues world has ever had--a remarkably energetic American original, one who puts better-known one-man blues bands such as Jesse "Lone Cat" Fuller and Dr.Isaiah Ross to shame.References
*"Mister Satan’s Apprentice: A Blues Memoir" Adam Gussow (New York: Pantheon, 1998)
* [http://www.modernbluesharmonica.com/ Official Website]
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