Ry Cooder

Ry Cooder

Cooder performing in 2009
Background information
Birth name Ryland Peter Cooder
Born (1947-03-15) March 15, 1947
Los Angeles, California, United States
Origin Santa Monica, California, United States
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • songwriter
  • film score composer
  • record producer
Instruments
Years active 1967–present
Labels
Associated acts
Website Ry Cooder

Ryland Peter "Ry" Cooder (born March 15, 1947)[1] is an American musician, songwriter, film score composer, and record producer. He is a multi-instrumentalist but is best known for his slide guitar work, his interest in roots music from the United States, and his collaborations with traditional musicians from many countries.

Cooder's solo work has been eclectic, encompassing many genres. He has collaborated with many musicians, notably including Captain Beefheart, Ali Farka Touré, Eric Clapton, The Rolling Stones, Van Morrison, Neil Young, Randy Newman, David Lindley, The Chieftains, and The Doobie Brothers, Carla Olson & the Textones (both on record and in film). He briefly formed a band named Little Village. He produced the Buena Vista Social Club album (1997), which became a worldwide hit. Wim Wenders directed the documentary film of the same name (1999), which was nominated for an Academy Award in 2000.

Cooder was ranked eighth on Rolling Stone magazine's 2003 list of "The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time"[2] (David Fricke's Picks). A 2010 ranking by Gibson placed him at number 32.[3]

Early life

Cooder was born in Los Angeles, California, to father Bill Cooder and Italian-American mother Emma Casaroli.[4] He grew up in Santa Monica, California, and graduated from Santa Monica High School in 1964. During the 1960s, he briefly attended Reed College in Portland, Oregon.[5] He began playing the guitar when he was three years old.[6] He has had a glass eye since he was four, when he accidentally stuck a knife in his left eye.[6]

Career

1960s

As a young man Cooder performed as part of a pickup trio with Bill Monroe and Doc Watson, in which he played banjo. The trio was not a success, ('“Well, son, you’re just not ready,” he remembered Monroe telling him after the first and only set he played with them.") but Cooder applied banjo tunings and the three-finger-roll to guitar instead.[7]

Cooder first attracted attention playing with Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band, notably on the 1967 album Safe As Milk, after previously having worked with Taj Mahal and Ed Cassidy in the Rising Sons. It is said that he quit the Magic Band after Beefheart fell offstage at a music festival, later claiming to have seen a girl in the audience transform into a goldfish. He also played with Randy Newman at this time, including on 12 Songs.[8] Van Dyke Parks worked with Newman and Cooder during the 1960s. Parks arranged Cooder's "One Meatball" according to Parks' 1984 interview by Bob Claster.

Cooder was a session musician on various recording sessions with The Rolling Stones in 1968 and 1969, and his contributions appear on the albums Let It Bleed (Yank Rachell-style mandolin on "Love in Vain"), and Sticky Fingers, on which he contributed the slide guitar on "Sister Morphine". During this period, Cooder joined with Mick Jagger, Charlie Watts, Bill Wyman, and longtime Rolling Stones sideman Nicky Hopkins to record Jamming with Edward!. Cooder also played slide guitar for the 1970 film soundtrack Performance, which contained Jagger's first solo single, "Memo from Turner". The 1975 compilation album Metamorphosis features an uncredited Cooder contribution on Bill Wyman's "Downtown Suzie".

Ry Cooder also collaborated with Lowell George of Little Feat, playing slide guitar on the original version of "Willin'".[9]

1970s

Throughout the 1970s, Cooder released a series of Warner Bros. Records albums that showcased his guitar work, initially on the Reprise Records label, before being reassigned to the main Warners label along with many of Reprise's artists when the company retired the imprint. Cooder explored bygone musical genres and found old-time recordings which he then personalized and updated. Thus, on his breakthrough album, Into the Purple Valley, he chose unusual instrumentations and arrangements of blues, gospel, calypso, and country songs (giving a tempo change to the cowboy ballad "Billy the Kid"). The album opened with the song "How Can You Keep on Moving (Unless You Migrate Too)" by Agnes "Sis" Cunningham about the Okies who were not welcomed when they migrated west to escape the Dust Bowl in the 1930s – to which Cooder gave a rousing-yet-satirical march accompaniment. In 1970 he collaborated with Ron Nagle and performed on his "Bad Rice" album released on Warner Brothers. His later 1970s albums (with the exception of Jazz, which explored ragtime/vaudeville) do not fall under a single genre description, but his self-titled first album could be described as blues; Into the Purple Valley, Boomer's Story, and Paradise and Lunch as folk and blues; Chicken Skin Music and Showtime as a mix of Tex-Mex and Hawaiian; Bop Till You Drop as 1950s' R&B; and Borderline and Get Rhythm as rock-based. His 1979 album Bop Till You Drop was the first popular music album released that was recorded digitally. It yielded his biggest hit, an R&B cover version of Elvis Presley's 1960s recording "Little Sister".

Cooder is credited on Van Morrison's 1979 album, Into the Music, for slide guitar on the song "Full Force Gale". He also played guitar on Judy Collins' 1970 concert tour, and is featured on Living, the 1971 live album recorded during that tour. He also learned from and performed with Gabby Pahinui and "Atta" Isaacs in Hawaii during the Hawaiian Renaissance of the early 1970s. He is also credited for guitars on several 1971 recordings by Nancy Sinatra that were produced by Andy Wickman and Lenny Waronker – "Is Anybody Goin' To San Antone," "Hook & Ladder," and "Glory Road." Cooder is credited as a mandolin player on Gordon Lightfoot's Don Quixote album in 1972.

1980s

Cooder has worked as a studio musician and has also scored many film soundtracks including Wim Wenders film Paris, Texas (1984). Cooder based this soundtrack and title song "Paris, Texas" on Blind Willie Johnson's "Dark Was the Night (Cold Was the Ground)", which he described as "The most soulful, transcendent piece in all American music."[10] Musician Dave Grohl has declared Cooder's score for Paris, Texas one of his favorite albums.[11]

"Dark Was the Night (Cold Was the Ground)" was also the basis for Cooder's song "Powis Square" for the movie Performance. His other film work includes Walter Hill's The Long Riders (1980), Southern Comfort (1981), Streets of Fire (1984), Brewster's Millions (1985), Johnny Handsome,[12] Last Man Standing (1996), Hill's Trespass (1992) and Mike Nichols' Primary Colors (1998). Cooder along with Arlen Roth dubbed all slide and regular Blues guitar parts in the 1986 film Crossroads, a take on blues legend Robert Johnson. In 1988, Cooder produced the album by his longtime backing vocalists Bobby King and Terry Evans on Rounder Records titled Live and Let Live. He contributed his slide guitar work to every track. He also plays extensively on their 1990 self-produced Rounder release Rhythm, Blues, Soul & Grooves. Cooder's music also appeared on two episodes of the television program "Tales From the Crypt" – "The Man Who Was Death" and "The Thing From the Grave."[13]

In 1984, Cooder played on two songs on the debut album by Carla Olson & the Textones Midnight Mission – "Carla's Number One is to Survive" and the previously unreleased Bob Dylan song "Clean Cut Kid". Shortly thereafter he was writing and recording the music for the film Blue City and asked the band to appear in the film performing. (He took them in the studio and produced "You Can Run" which he also played on.)

In 1985, Cooder was a guest artist on the song "Rough Edges" from Kim Carnes' album Barking at Airplanes. Kim named her son Ry as a tribute to Ry Cooder. He played electric slide guitar on The Beach Boys' 1988 hit Kokomo.

Also in 1988, Cooder produced and featured in the Les Blank directed concert documentary film Ry Cooder & The Moula Banda Rhythm Aces: Let's Have a Ball where he plays in collaboration with a selection of musicians famous in their various musical fields.[14] The following year, he played a janitor in the Jim Henson series The Ghost of Faffner Hall, in the episode "Music Is More Than Technique".[15]

1990s

In the early 1990s Cooder collaborated on two world music "crossover" albums, which blended the traditional American musical genres that Cooder has championed throughout his career with the contemporary improvised music of India and Africa. For A Meeting by the River (1993), which also featured his son Joachim Cooder on percussion, he teamed with Hindustani classical musician V.M. Bhatt, a virtuoso of the Mohan Veena (a modified 20-string archtop guitar of Bhatt's own invention) and Sukhvinder Singh Namdhari also known as Pinky Tabla Player. In 1995 he teamed with African multi-instrumentalist Ali Farka Toure on the album Talking Timbuktu, which he also produced; the album also featured longtime Cooder collaborator Jim Keltner on drums, veteran blues guitarist Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, jazz bassist John Patitucci and African percussionists and musicians including Hamma Sankare and Oumar Toure. Both albums won the Grammy Award for 'Best World Music Album' in 1994 and 1995 respectively. Cooder also worked with Tuvan throat singers for the score to the 1993 film Geronimo: An American Legend.

In 1995 he performed in The Wizard of Oz in Concert: Dreams Come True, a musical performance of the popular story at the Lincoln Center in New York to benefit the Children's Defense Fund. The performance was originally broadcast on both TBS and TNT. It was issued on CD and video in 1996.

In the late 1990s Cooder played a significant role in the increased appreciation of traditional Cuban music, due to his collaboration as producer of the Buena Vista Social Club (1997) recording, which became a worldwide hit and revived the careers of some of the greatest surviving exponents of 20th century Cuban music. Wim Wenders, who had previously directed 1984's Paris, Texas, directed a documentary film of the musicians involved, Buena Vista Social Club (1999), which was nominated for an Academy Award in 2000.[16] The enterprise cost him a $25,000 dollar fine for violating the United States embargo against Cuba.[17][18]

2000s

Cooder's 2005 album Chávez Ravine was touted by his record label as being "a post-World War II-era American narrative of 'cool cats', radios, UFO sightings, J. Edgar Hoover, red scares, and baseball".[19] The record is a tribute to the long-gone Los Angeles Latino enclave known as Chávez Ravine. Using real and imagined historical characters, Cooder and friends created an album that recollects various aspects of the poor but vibrant hillside Chicano community which no longer exists. Cooder says, "Here is some music for a place you don’t know, up a road you don’t go. Chávez Ravine, where the sidewalk ends."[19] Drawing from the various musical strains of Los Angeles, including conjunto, R&B, Latin pop, and jazz, Cooder and friends conjure the ghosts of Chávez Ravine and Los Angeles at mid-century. On this fifteen-track album, sung in Spanish and English, Cooder is joined by East L.A. legends like Chicano music patriarch Lalo Guerrero, Pachuco boogie king Don Tosti, Thee Midniters front man Little Willie G, and Ersi Arvizu, of The Sisters and El Chicano.

Cooder's next record was released in 2007. Entitled My Name Is Buddy, it tells the story of Buddy Red Cat, who travels and sees the world in the company of his like-minded friends, Lefty Mouse and Rev. Tom Toad. The entire recording is a parable of the working class progressivism[20] of the first half of the American twentieth century, and even has a song featuring executed unionist Joe Hill. My Name Is Buddy was accompanied by a booklet featuring a story and illustration (by Vincent Valdez) for each track, providing additional context to Buddy's adventures.

Cooder produced and performed on an album for Mavis Staples entitled We'll Never Turn Back, which was released on April 24, 2007. The concept album focused on Gospel songs of the civil rights movement and also included two new original songs by Cooder.[21]

Ry Cooder's album I, Flathead was released on June 24, 2008. It is the completion of his California trilogy. Based on the drag racing culture of the early 1960s, the album is set on the desert salt flats in southern California. The disc was also released as a deluxe edition with stories written by Cooder to accompany the music.

In late 2009, Cooder toured Japan, New Zealand and Australia with Nick Lowe, performing some of Lowe's songs and a selection of Cooder's own material, mainly from the 1970s. Joaquim Cooder (Ry's son) provided percussion, and Juliette Commagere and Alex Lilly contributed backing vocals.

The song "Diaraby", which Cooder recorded with Ali Farka Touré, is used as the theme to The World's Geo Quiz. The World is a radio show distributed by Public Radio International.

In 2009, Cooder performed in The People Speak, a documentary feature film that uses dramatic and musical performances of the letters, diaries, and speeches of everyday Americans, based on historian Howard Zinn's A People's History of the United States. Cooder performed with Bob Dylan and Van Dyke Parks on the documentary broadcast on December 13, 2009 on the History Channel. They played "Do Re Mi" and reportedly a couple of other Guthrie songs that were excluded from the final edit. He also traveled with the band Los Tigres del Norte and recorded the 2010 album San Patricio with the Chieftains, Lila Downs, Liam Neeson, Linda Ronstadt, Van Dyke Parks, Los Cenzontles, and Los Tigres.[22][23]

2010s

In June 2010, responding to the passage of Arizona SB 1070, he released the single "Quicksand", which tells the story of Mexicans attempting to emigrate to Arizona through the desert.[24][25] Cooder's critically acclaimed[26][27] new album Pull Up Some Dust and Sit Down, released on August 30, 2011, contains politically charged songs such as "No Banker Left Behind"[28] which was inspired by a Robert Scheer column.[29]

In 2011, he published a collection of short stories called Los Angeles Stories, written about people living in Los Angeles in the 1940s and 1950s. The book's characters are mostly talented or skilled, clever or hardworking people living in humble circumstances. With story titles such as "La vida es un sueño" and "Kill me, por favor", the collection's stories often have a Hispanic theme, and the book deals partially with Latinos living in Los Angeles during this time.

Ry Cooder performing with Ricky Skaggs and Sharon White, McGlohon Theater, Charlotte, NC, August 19, 2015

An American Songwriter article in 2012 suggested that Cooder's recent string of solo albums have often taken on an allegorical, sociopolitical bent. Music journalist Evan Schlansky said that "Cooder’s latest effort, Election Special (released August 21, 2012, on Nonesuch/Perro Verde) doesn’t mince words. It’s designed to send a message to the “'deacons in the High Church of the Next Dollar'.”[30] The album (Election Special) was composed as his part in support of the Democratic Party and President Barack Obama in the 2012 American Presidential Election.

On September 10, 2013, Cooder released Live in San Francisco, featuring the Corridos Famosos band, including Joachim Cooder on drums; Robert Francis on bass; vocalists Terry Evans, Arnold McCuller, and Juliette Commagere; Flaco Jiménez on accordion; and the Mexican brass band La Banda Juvenil. The album was recorded during a two-night run at Great American Music Hall in San Francisco, August 31 and September 1, 2011. It is Cooder's first official live recording since Show Time in 1977 (which had also been recorded at Great American Music Hall).[31]

In 2015, Cooder toured with Ricky Skaggs, Sharon White and other members of The Whites with their “Music for The Good People” show.[32] The tour continued through into 2016.

Awards

Discography

Singles

Solo albums

Compilations

Collaborations

Soundtracks

Performs on:

Films

Written works

References

  1. Gillett, Charlie (primary contributor). "Ry Cooder". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved August 30, 2011.
  2. "The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time". Rolling Stone. September 18, 2003. Retrieved August 28, 2011.
  3. "Gibson.com Reveals Top 50 Guitarists, Plus Readers Poll Results". Gibson Guitar Corporation. May 28, 2010. Retrieved June 3, 2010.
  4. "Interview – From the Dust". The Guardian. 3 March 2007. Retrieved 2016-02-18.
  5. Wilkinson, Alec (June 1, 1999). "Who Put The Honky Tonk in 'Honky Tonk Women'?". Esquire. Retrieved June 2, 2009.
  6. 1 2 Entry for "Ry Cooder", in The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll, Touchstone (revised, updated edition); November 8, 2001; ISBN 978-0743201209
  7. Deming, Mark. "12 Songs – Randy Newman". AllMusic. Retrieved September 5, 2011.
  8. "Willin'". University of Vienna. Retrieved September 5, 2011.
  9. Corcoran, Michael. " "The Soul of Blind Willie Johnson:Retracing the life of the Texas music icon". austin360.com. Retrieved September 5, 2011.
  10. Greenwald, Andy (August 2005). "The Chosen Foo". Spin: 57.
  11. Johnny Handsome:Original Motion PictureSoundtrack, Warner Bros. Records Inc. CD liner notes, 1989
  12. Review of Tales From the Crypt by Steven McDonald, AllMusic.com
  13. RondoHatton (August 31, 1991). "Ry Cooder & The Moula Banda Rhythm Aces: Let's Have a Ball (1988)". IMDb. Retrieved January 7, 2015.
  14. "The Jim Henson Company YouTube Channel". Youtube.com. 2012-01-12. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
  15. "NY Times: Buena Vista Social Club". New York Times. Retrieved November 22, 2008.
  16. "Interview – From the Dust". The Guardian. 3 March 2007. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  17. "With Help From Up High, Cooder's Back in Cuba". Los Angeles Times. February 6, 2001. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  18. 1 2 "Chávez Ravine: About this album". Nonesuch Records. Retrieved September 5, 2011.
  19. "Cooder's 'Buddy' Revives Tales of a Bygone America". NPR Music. March 6, 2007. Retrieved August 30, 2011.
  20. Cohen, Jonathan and Martens, Todd (December 19, 2006). "Mavis Staples Gets Personal On Anti-Debut". Billboard. Retrieved August 28, 2011.
  21. Wilkinson, Alec (May 24, 2010). "Onward and Upward with the Arts, "Immigration Blues"". The New Yorker. Retrieved June 3, 2010.
  22. Wood, Mikael (March 5, 2010). "The Chieftains featuring Ry Cooder,"San Patricio"". Billboard. Retrieved June 3, 2010.
  23. "Ry Cooder's "Quicksand," Response to Arizona Immigration Law, Now Available on iTunes; Proceeds Donated to MALDEF". Nonesuch Journal, Nonesuch Records. June 29, 2010. Retrieved April 2, 2011.
  24. Gundersen, Edna (June 28, 2010). "The playlist: Sia's 'Fight,' Marah's 'Problem,' Cooder's 'Quicksand'". USA Today. Retrieved April 2, 2011.
  25. Gill, Andy (September 2, 2011). "Album: Ry Cooder, Pull Up Some Dust And Sit Down (Nonesuch)". The Independent. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  26. Spencer, Neil (September 4, 2011). "Ry Cooder: Pull Up Some Dust and Sit Down – review". The Guardian. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  27. Stanbridge, Nicola (Today programme) (September 24, 2011). "Ry Cooder takes on the bankers". BBC Online. Retrieved September 25, 2011.
  28. "Ry Cooder on the protest songs of today". Marketplace (American Public Media). August 29, 2011. Retrieved August 31, 2011.
  29. "Ry Cooder Breaks Down The Songs On Election Special". American Songwriter. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
  30. "Nonesuch / Perro Verde Records Release Ry Cooder and Corridos Famosos’ "Live in San Francisco" September 10". Nonesuch Records. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  31. "Cozy Up To Warm Sounds for Fall with ‘Cooder White Skaggs’ Tour". Ricky Skaggs website. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  32. "Grammy.com Past Winners Search". Grammy.com. Retrieved August 20, 2013.
  33. "Los Angeles Stories (Ry Cooder)". Citylights.com. Retrieved January 7, 2015.

External links

Awards
Preceded by
Kenny Vaughan
AMA Lifetime Achievement Award for Instrumentalist
2007
Succeeded by
Larry Campbell
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