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Ramble On Levon Helm
Profile of country music gem and local legend Levon Helm
by Peter Aaron and photographs by Fionn Reilly, January 25, 2008
Chronogram.com

It’s the smile. That’s what really gets you. Almost as much as the
incredible songs. Or the fluid, flawless musicianship. Or even the
coarse, honey-ladled grit of the voice. The smile is wide, full,
bright. It floods the big, log-walled room with pure, dazzling
luminescence, like a signal that the angels are about to appear from
on high. And the smile is contagious, finding itself mirrored across
the faces of everyone else in the space—the audience, the musicians,
even the scrambling, focused soundmen.
The smile belongs to Levon Helm, one of this country’s most precious
cultural treasures, who tonight at one of the Midnight Ramble
sessions that take place a few times a month at the erstwhile Band
member’s Woodstock home and studio is doing exactly what he was
put—and kept—on this Earth to do: make great American music. Some of
the greatest American music that ever was, in fact. And anyone who
knows about the difficult life valleys Helm, 68, has triumphed over
in the last few years, and about the glorious heights he’s now
experiencing through his career’s ongoing renaissance, can’t help
but be awed by the deep portent of the man’s seemingly
insurmountable grin. Which probably just makes them smile all the
more themselves, really.
“Well, sir, when you have everything taken away, you’re just so glad
to get it back. Which is what I’ve been so very fortunate enough to
do,” says the humble but hearty native Arkansan. “It just makes
playing so much more joyful. Every opportunity to play just means so
much more than the last one.”
Helm’s years with The Band are well chronicled elsewhere, perhaps no
better than in his 1993 autobiography This Wheel’s on Fire. In the
book he talks about the lean, vagabond times of the group’s early
period, when the members were “living the music.” But since those
days, his life has echoed the music in other, more catastrophic
ways, ways that recall the tragedy-laced folk ballads of his
Southern youth.
The first blow came in 1986, 10 years after The Band’s demise, when
Helm’s good friend and band mate, pianist Richard Manuel, took his
own life. Next, in 1991, a fire at the beloved “barn” studio Helm
had built in 1976 burned the structure almost to the ground. And
when Helm was diagnosed with throat cancer in 1996 it looked as
though, if the disease didn’t kill him, the voice of the man who
sang lead and played drums and mandolin on “The Weight,” “The Night
They Drove Old Dixie Down,” “Rag Mama Rag,” and other classics would
be silenced forever. But the heartbreak didn’t end there: In 1999,
Band bassist Rick Danko passed away at the age of 56. With limited
funds thanks largely to unfairly structured royalty deals and unable
to do the film and voiceover work that had helped to pay the bills,
Helm found himself in the precarious position of having to balance
the costs of rebuilding his home and workplace with those of the
medications and procedures needed to save his voice—and his life.
Understandably, he chose to put most of his available cash into the
latter. And, after surgery and 28 intensive radiation treatments at
Sloan-Kettering in Manhattan, not only has Helm beaten the cancer
but his voice has regained “about 70 percent” of its famed
knotty-pine majesty. “It still might take a notion to go south on me
some nights, but it’s getting better than it was,” he says. When
told that in some ways he sounds even better than he does on some of
his older records, that even Tom Waits might be happy to have the
same level of gruff character in his voice, the singer laughs.
“Yeah, well on some gigs I wish mine had a little less character,
thank you!”
But with Helm’s health back in the fold, there was still the
mortgage company to satisfy. While in recovery mode he needed to get
his voice back in shape and pay down his debts, but touring was out
of the question. So instead of taking the show to the fans, he took
a stroke of inspiration from the freewheeling rent parties of his
childhood and invited the fans to come hang out at his house. Since
2004, Helm has opened part of his home to the public for the now
famous and intimate “parlor sessions” known as his Midnight Rambles.
Facilitated by a large crew that calls itself Team Levon, the
medicine showlike events sell out weeks in advance and have featured
surprise guest appearances by Dr. John, Elvis Costello, Emmylou
Harris, Medeski, Martin, and Wood, Nick Lowe, Allen Toussaint, and
others.
Tonight, however, before Helm gets to do all of his pickin’, poundin’,
and grinnin’, before he and his band—singer-guitarists Larry
Campbell and Teresa Williams, bassist Michael Merritt, horn men
Steven Bernstein, Jay Collins, and Erik Lawrence, keyboardist Brian
Mitchell, and Helm’s daughter, Olabelle vocalist and
multi-instrumentalist Amy Helm, as well as a cast of guest
players—are ready to Ramble, there’s quite a bit of
behind-the-scenes lead-up action that goes on. Two hours earlier,
after following the long and winding driveway to the studio and
being checked in at the gate, one enters the downstairs reception
area, which is populated by staff members wearing sweatshirts
bearing the legend helmland security over crossed drumsticks. At the
merch booth, CDs, DVDs, T-shirts, and other items are laid out,
while nearby tables are stocked with free snacks and beverages,
which will be generously amended to by the many arriving
Ramble-goers who bring store-bought and homemade food to share. From
here, it’s a straight zip through a short hallway lined with framed
photos, posters, and newspaper and magazine articles and up the
stairs into the main studio.
Despite the rows of folding chairs and the preponderance of
instruments and sound gear set up in the stage area at the opposite
end, the space feels more like a massive living room than a
recording studio, thanks to its high ceiling and tall stone hearth.
It’s the perfect setting for the music of Helm’s band, a rich,
earthy blend of the best elements of rhythm and blues, country,
soul, jazz, gospel, and rock ’n’ roll. The heartbreaking harmonies
of Williams, Amy Helm, and frequent Bob Dylan side man Campbell are
moving enough, but watching the leader belt out the leads and drive
it all with such unbounded zeal is the real joy, bringing to mind
the words of Ronnie Hawkins, Helm’s pre-Band leader in rockabilly
legends Ronnie and the Hawks: “Levon played more drums with less
licks than any drummer in the world. And he could make it sound
right.” It sure sounds right tonight. Really, it’s safe to say that
music just doesn’t get any better. “Just being around Levon elicits
your truest self, musically and otherwise,” says Williams. “He’s so
utterly sincere, he just makes everybody feel like they’re the only
person in the room.”
And despite the magnitude of the operation, the big guest stars, and
the packed houses, Helm and company still manage to keep it all
down-home at the sessions. “No matter how big things get, we never
want the Ramble to turn into some big, impersonal machine,” says
Helm’s manager, Barbara O’Brien, who oversees the events and works
for the Ulster County Sheriff’s Office by day. “The Ramble is an
extension of Levon [himself], and we try to never lose sight of
that.”
From out of the Ramble sessions has come the shockingly great Dirt
Farmer (Vanguard Records), Helm’s first solo studio album in 25
years. Produced by Campbell and Amy Helm, the record is dedicated to
Helm’s parents and marks a return to the old-time tunes they raised
him on. “Tough times can make you more reflective, and make you long
for better and simpler times,” says Helm. “So I guess that’s what
led me back to those songs, which were already old when I heard them
as a boy. I wanted to get back to the community feeling the music
used to have.”
But no matter what tangents Helm’s music has taken over the years,
it always boils down to the blues. So even though Dirt Farmer
revisits country-folk chestnuts like the traditionals “The Girl I
Left Behind,” “The Blind Child,” and the Carter Family’s “Single
Girl, Married Girl,” a steady, undeniable blues feeling runs
throughout. (And the down-and-dirty reading of J. B. Lenoir’s
“Feelin’ Good,” with its refrain of “All the money in the world
spent on feelin’ good,” must certainly hit home in light of the cost
of prescription meds and radiation treatments.) “To me, the blues
are the ABCs of music,” maintains Helm. “If you can play a Louis
Jordan tune right, you can go on and play pretty much anything else
from there.” Dirt Farmer has been nominated for a Grammy (for Best
Traditional Folk Album), and, in a curious coincidence, The Band is
being presented with a Grammy for Lifetime Achievement this month in
Los Angeles.
Helm is also about to be a grandfather—for the second time in the
space of just a few months. Not only is Amy due in March, but Muddy
and Lucy, Helm’s beloved hounds, gave birth to a litter of eight
pups in December. “We’d already had Muddy for about three years when
I was down in Louisiana to shoot some scenes for The Electric Mist,
a movie that Tommy Lee Jones is directing,” Helm recalls. “Lucy was
a stray that the makeup girl found in the road, and when we brought
her back to the set Muddy and her just really took a liking to each
other.” In addition to the forthcoming The Electric Mist, Helm has
acted in Jones’s The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada (2005) and
in Coal Miner’s Daughter (1980), The Right Stuff (1983), Fire Down
Below (1997), Feeling Minnesota (1996), and a full resume’s worth of
other notable films.
Renewed health, a great new album, a new movie, newborn puppies, a
grandchild and possible multiple Grammys on the way—it’s not hard to
see why Helm is smiling as he’s being interviewed. But when he’s on
stage, making that great, great music, the smile just seems to
twinkle a little bit more. “It’s been said that music is the
language of heaven,” Helm says. “And I believe that’s right.”
And tonight, under the bright, full moon and the warm, wooden eaves
of Helm’s studio, one gets the strong feeling that someone in heaven
is indeed listening. And smiling.
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