MD
caught up with legendary drummer/producer Stix Hooper as he was
in
session producing and playing with The Gerald Wilson Orchestra. As a
founding member of '60s/'70s soul-jazz
kings The Crusaders, Hooper was
responsible for such deep-groove hits as "Keep That Same Old Feeling"
and "Street
Life."
The Crusaders changed personnel during the '80s, but the original lineup (sans trombonist Wayne
Henderson) returns with Rural Renewal (not to be confused with Tower Of Power's classic Urban Renewal).
Hooper, who now runs Mac Avenue Records, says the album is a return to The Crusaders' roots.
"Joe [Sample,
Crusader's keyboardist and leader] pulled the band back
together and wrote the songs," Hooper explains. "We started out
playing
some grooves that were challenging, but eventually we realized that
this record is about roots. That's why we
ended up calling it Rural Renewal.
To use today's vernacular, that aspect of music has been dissed. So
we
threw some curves into the music and we improvised, but we also took it
back to the woods."
Hooper's
drumming on Rural Renewal is
as feisty as ever, equal parts sprightly jazz attitude and simmering,
no-nonsense
groove. His dance-like pulse is all about the feeling. "The
blues music we heard coming up had so much emotion and feeling,"
he
says. "You focused on that more than if you could execute flams and
paradiddles. If it didn't feel good, you
weren't going to work."