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Young Raful,
with his new harmonica, loved the haunting, wailing harp work of
Little Walter, who played for Muddy Waters. Raful picked up songs
from the radio and wove into them the sounds of other instruments,
gradually mastering the art of playing solo harmonica. Out of his
early years as a soloist came his versatility and distinctive style.
At age 17,
Raful and Lazy Lester (then known as Lester Johnson) formed a band
and played a circuit of jumpin' country saloons like the inimitable
Hobo Junction; as the band got hotter, the crowds got bigger. When
Lazy Lester left for Chicago, Buddy Guy took his place. Guitarist
Buddy Guy "made the strings
cry, kicked the neck with his foot," Raful laughs. "He
played that guitar." The group traveled, at times, in Raful's
car, a '39 Pontiac bought the hard way: Under the blistering Louisiana
sun, the musician planted, harvested and sold bales of cotton
for the $350 car. In the late 1970s and early '80s, Raful toured
with his friend Buddy Guy and by 1987 had also become a Louisiana
legend--the title, in fact, of his first CD, released by Fantastic-King
Snake Records and reissued in 1989 by Alligator Records. In 1990,
having paid his dues, Raful got a break: He retired from his 21-year
day job and was able, at last, to hop onboard the blues train and
tour the world.
In 1995, he was inducted
into the Louisiana Blues Hall of Fame, and today, plays with his
band at festivals across the U.S. The Raful Neal Band frequently
tours Europe, Canada and South America. In Japan, Raful was the
headliner at the World Harmonica Festival.
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It was hot, hard work, but Raful,
as always, took it in stride and stayed cool. He had just met 14-year- old
Shirley, who would become his wife three years later. The year Raful
got married, the unimaginable happened: his favorite harmonica player,
Little Walter, performed in Baton Rouge, heard Raful play harmonica
and invited the band to move to Chicago and sit in for him at gigs
he couldn't do. Buddy Guy did move to Chicago the next year - and
met fame there - but Raful declined. Asked if he had any regrets,
Raful replied, shaking his head, "Naw. I've seen so many lonely
blues players with no families. I love my life. I wouldn't have
had it turn out any other way."
Back home, Raful became the undisputed father of the Baton Rouge
blues--a title earned by his discography, his influence on other
musicians, and by his having fathered 11 children, nine of whomplay
the blues professionally and are today scattered across Baton Rouge
and the world. The year after Raful turned down Little Walter's
invitation to Chicago, he waxed his first single, "Sunny Side
of Love," on the Houston-based Peacock label. Other singles
followed on small labels and on the Jewel subsidiary, Whit Records.
"In the later days," he observes, "I'm
getting more and more respect. So many people say they have been
waiting on me and that they're so glad to see me. They ask me to
take a picture with them, to sign my CDs and they say that I just
don't know how many fans I have out there."
These, too, are Raful's "old friends," and Kenny Neal
their nationality, they speak to each other in the language of the
blues.
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