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Archive for October 14th, 2007

Levon Helm Trust

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As you all know, there have been financial issues in Levon’s life, caused mainly by him being diagnosed with throat cancer in 1998. From that time until very recently, Levon was unable to use his voice to speak, let alone sing. Also during that time, he was unable to secure gigs which paid well enough to cover his financial load. Over time, the mortgage fell behind, taxes were left unpaid, medical bills started building up and he was faced with the very real nightmare that his house/studio were going to be auctioned by the County.

In late 2003, early 2004 The Midnight Ramble Sessions were born – building on a lifelong dream of Levon’s to host live music in his home. The idea came from his childhood – with the traveling minstrel shows. It was at that time, too, that his “Team” was beginning to form. One by one, we all decided that we would help him rebuild his career, organize the Rambles, help with work around the house, communicate his renewed success through newly created web site, help produce product and, mainly, save his house and studio from foreclosure. With the help, support and loyalty of his fans, we’ve been very successful, but we need to get Levon to the point where he’s debt-free. We’ve set a target date of December 24, 2007 to achieve our goal and I know we’re going to do it! The $500 gift to The Levon Helm Trust can be made by an individual or by a group of people. All we’d need to know is what name should be entered into the property grid, to be forever memorialized at the studio. Smaller, more affordable gifts may also be made to The Levon Helm Trust and those names will be placed on a separate list and hold the same appreciation as all others. These gifts to The Levon Helm Trust are not tax deductible to the “donor” and are non-taxable to the Trust.

The Levon Helm Trust has been created as a separate legal entity to receive these donations and all gifts will go to pay down the debt, until the debt is paid in full. The debt includes, but is not limited to: the new mortgage, a new second mortgage, paying back investors, medical bills, paying back loans, etc. After the debt is retired, remaining funds in the Levon Helm Trust will be used for upgrading the sound system, upgrading the electrical system, completing the roof and on and on and on. As part of the Trust, sponsors cannot receive anything in return for their gift Your name will be entered on the property grid and will forever be memorialized at Levon Helm Studios as a sponsor. We’re calling this project “Sponsor a Square”. For a gift of $500 (payable to The Levon Helm Trust), we will all have the satisfaction of knowing that we’ve helped preserve one of America’s treasures. Levon will be able to continue making that music that ONLY he can make. He will once again be in a financial position to do all the benevolent things he so wants to do (ie: host drum camps for kids, raise money for music-related needs, host kid’s rambles, etc.). Let us – his fans – be the ones to turn his life around! When the music industry turned its back on him – we didn’t.

Please help us today.  Pass the word to other fans.  We can make this work!!!!   Help us help Levon and let’s give back  to him for all he’s done for us, for his community, for children, for the families of the military, for the sick, for the needy and most of all, for what he’s done for American music!


For more information, please email sponsorasquare@levonhelm.com

Levon Helm

posted by admin in Uncategorized

[Levon Helm, 2005. Photo by Paul La Raia.] Mark Lavon Helm, born May 26, 1940.
Lead singer. Instrument: Drums, mandolin

Biography


by Dawn LoBue Copyright © 2006 Levon Helm Studios, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Published with permission from Levon Helm Studios.


Levon Helm was in the right place at the right time. He saw the birth of rock and roll and though he’s too much of a gentleman to say it, his role in helping to keep that rebellious child healthy, is more than just instrumental.

On May 26, 1940, Mark Lavon Helm was the second of four children born to Nell and Diamond Helm in Elaine, Arkansas. Diamond was a cotton farmer who entertained occasionally as a musician. The Helm’s loved music and often sang together. They listened to The Grand Ole Opry and Sonny Boy Williamson and His King Biscuit Entertainers regularly on the radio. A favorite family pastime was attending traveling music shows in the area. According to his 1993 autobiography, This Wheel’s On Fire, Levon recalls seeing his first live show, Bill Monroe and His Blue Grass Boys, at six years old. His description: “This really tatooed my brain. I’ve never forgotten it.” Hearing performers like Monroe and Williams on the radio was one thing, seeing them live made a huge impression.

At age nine, Levon’s father bought him his first guitar. At ten and eleven the boy could be found at KFFA’s broadcasting studio in Helena, Arkansas, watching Sonny Boy Williamson do his radio show, King Biscuit Time, whenever he wasn’t in school or at work on the farm.

Helm made his younger sister Linda a string bass out of a washtub when he was twelve years old. She would play the bass while her brother slapped his thighs and played harmonica and guitar. They would sing songs learned at home and popular hits of the day, and billed themselves as “Lavon and Linda.” Because of their fresh faced good looks, obvious musical talent and Levon’s natural ability to win an audience with sheer personality and infectious rhythms, the pair consistently won talent contests along the Arkansas 4-H Club circuit.

In 1954, Levon was fourteen years old when he saw Johnny Cash and Carl Perkins do a show at Helena. Also performing was a young Elvis Presley with Scotty Moore on guitar, and Bill Black on stand-up bass. They did not have a drummer. The music was early jazz-fueled rockabilly, and the audience went wild. In ‘55 he saw Elvis once more, before Presley’s star exploded. This time Presley had D.J. Fontana with him on drums and Bill Black was playing electric bass. Helm couldn’t get over the difference and thought it was the best band he’d seen. The added instruments gave the music solidity and depth. People jumped out of their seats to dance with the thunderous, heart- pumping, rhythms. The melting pot that was the Mississippi Delta had boiled over and evolved. It’s magnificently rich blues was uniting with all the powerful, new, spicy- hot sounds and textures that became rock and roll.

Natural progression led Levon to form his own rock band as a high school junior, called “The Jungle Bush Beaters.” While Little Richard and Jerry Lee Lewis were making teens everywhere crazed, Levon would practice, play, watch and learn. After seeing Jerry Lee’s drummer Jimmy Van Eaton, he seriously began thinking of playing the drums himself. Around this same time, the seventeen year old musician was invited by Conway Twitty to share the stage with Twitty and his Rock Housers. He had met Twitty when “Lavon and Linda” opened for him at a previous show. Helm was a personable, polite teen who took his music seriously so Twitty allowed him to sit in whenever the opportunity arose.

Ronnie Hawkins came into Levon Helm’s life in 1957. A charismatic entertainer and front-man, Hawkins was gathering musicians to tour Canada where the shows and money were steady. Ronnie had a sharp eye for talent. He needed a drummer and Levon fit the bill. Fulfilling a promise to Nell and Diamond to finish high school, Levon joined Ronnie and his “Hawks” on the road. The young Arkansas farm boy, once a tractor driving champion, found himself driving Hawkins Cadillac to gigs, happily aware that all the unknown adventures of rock and roll would be his destiny.

In ‘59 Ronnie got “The Hawks” signed to Roulette Records. They had two hits, “Forty Days” and “Mary Lou,” sold 750,000 copies and appeared on Dick Clark’s American Bandstand.

Hawkins and Helm recruited four more talented Canadian musicians in the early sixties, Richard Manuel, Rick Danko, Robbie Robertson and Garth Hudson. Under Ronnie’s tutelage they would often perform until midnight and rehearse until four in the morning. Other bands began emulating their style, now they were the ones to watch and learn from.

Eventually, the students surpassed their teacher. Weary of Ronnie’s strict regulations, and eager to expand their own musical interests, the five decided to break from Hawkins. They called themselves “Levon and the Hawks.”

About 1965, Bob Dylan decided to change his sound. He was ready to “go electric” and wanted “The Hawks” to help him fire it up. The boys signed on to tour with Dylan but unfortunately Dylan’s die-hard folk fans resisted. Night after night of constant booing left Levon without the pleasure of seeing his audience enjoy themselves. He calls his drummer’s stool “the best seat in the house,” because he can see his fellow musicians and his audience simultaneously. What pleases him most, then and now, is that his audience is having a good time. He left the group temporarily and headed to Arkansas. Dylan and the rest of the band took up residence in Woodstock, N.Y. They rented a large, pink house where they wrote and rehearsed new material. Danko called for Helm to join them because Capitol Records gave them a recording contract.

Woodstock residents called them “the band,” so they kept the moniker. The name “The Band” fit. The sound was no frills rock and roll but far from simplistic. They fused every musical influence they were exposed to over the years as individuals and as a unit. The result was brilliant. Their development as musicians was perfected by years of playing. Living together at “Big Pink” allowed complete collaboration of their artistic expression. Americana and folklore themes, heart-wrenching ballads filled with naked emotion, majestic harmonies, hard driving rhythms, and exquisite instrumentation made critics, peers and fans realize that this music was unlike any heard before. Their first album, Music from Big Pink, released July of 1968, made them household names and as a result they were invited to appear on the Ed Sullivan Show in autumn of ‘69. Following Big Pink’s success the next album, called simply The Band, is considered by some as their masterpiece. They made seven albums total including one live recording Rock of Ages, in 1972. Many of their hits such as “The Weight,” “W.S. Walcott Medicine Show,” and “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down,” were spawned from stories of Levon’s beloved south.

Helm was working in Los Angeles in ‘74, at a Sunset Blvd. hotel when he spotted a beautiful young brunette taking a dip in the pool. Her name was Sandra Dodd and when she looked up at him smiling, she didn’t recognize him at first. The charming musician offered to take the lovely lady for sushi and never looked back. They were married on September 7, 1981 in Woodstock and today remain at each other’s side.

The barn and studio Helm built in Woodstock, which became his permanent home, was just about complete in 1975. He invited Muddy Waters to his new studio and they recorded Muddy Waters in Woodstock. To the delight of everyone involved, it won a grammy.

The Band held a farewell concert at Winterland in San Francisco on Thanksgiving 1976. It was a bittersweet time for many who felt the group’s demise was too soon. They called it The Last Waltz which included Ronnie Hawkins, Dr. John, Muddy Waters, Ringo Starr, Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton and an all-star guest list of peers and friends that read like the “Who’s Who” of rock and roll. The event eventually sold as a triple album and was also filmed, becoming a historical “rockumentary.”

Group members went on to individual pursuits. Levon cut his debut album The RCO All-Stars, in 1977. His next effort was the self-titled Levon Helm, followed by American Son, released in 1980. That same year was pivotal as Helm turned his attention to acting. He played Loretta Lynn’s father in the Coal Miner’s Daughter, winning great reviews for his first film appearance. He did another self-titled album and Hollywood again came knocking in ‘83 giving Helm a role in The Right Stuff. The authenticity he brings to his characters has brought him numerous movie roles from 1980 to date. Recently, Helm gave a sensitive, convincing portrayal of a destitute blind man in the Tommy Lee Jones’ vehicle, The Three Buriels of Melquides Estrada.

Rick Danko and Levon reunited to play music after Danko had been living in California. Rick moved back to Woodstock and the friends did an acoustic tour in early ‘83. In San Jose the following year, they received excellent reviews when Hudson and Manuel joined them for their first U.S. appearance as The Band since 1976. They continued playing together until the tragic death of their dear friend and comrade, the forty-two year old Manuel.

During the 90’s three more Band albums were recorded. Jericho, High on the Hog, ending with Jubilation. In 1996, Levon was diagnosed with throat cancer and the famous voice with the rich southern nuances was silenced to a whisper. He still played the drums, mandolin and harmonica, often performing with his daughter, Amy Helm, also a vocalist and instrumentalist. A great emotional support to her father during this time, Amy continues to appear with him regularly at Levon Helm Studios. In 1999, Helm endured another tragic loss when Rick Danko passed away the day after his birthday at fifty-six years old. His death marked the end of an era.

Today, Levon’s voice has miraculously recovered. He is singing again, strong and clear. His imagination and vision conceived The Midnight Ramble Sessions, a series of live performances at Levon Helm Studios in Woodstock. Named for the traveling minstrel shows of his youth, the first Midnight Ramble was held in January, 2004. It featured one of the last performances of great blues pianist, Johnny Johnson. Friends old and new have joined Levon on his stage including: Emmylou Harris, Dr. John, John Sebastian, Allan Touissant, Elvis Costello, Larry Campbell, Jimmy Vivino, Hubert Sumlin, Little Sammy Davis, The Muddy Waters Band and Donald Fagen. The monthly Rambles have been so successful they are usually sold out in advance.

New releases produced by Levon Helm Studios are Volume I and Volume II of The Midnight Ramble Sessions, plus a live RCO All-Stars performance from New Year’s Eve 1977, at the Palladium which came from Helm’s personal “vault.” The vitality and magnetism of these recordings speak for themselves. Levon is currently at work in the studio with Amy Helm, Larry Campbell and Teresa Williams on a project close to his heart. The CD will contain music reminiscent of his past and songs handed down from his parents.

The intimacy of the shows performed at Levon’s hearth offer a hospitality and warmth found in no other venue, not to mention the excellence of the performances themselves, hosted by a man whose gifts are legendary. Though always an enthusiastic and passionate performer, today with sheer joy and gratitude, he effortlessly captivates his audience young and old, with a rhythmic power all his own. During a career that has spanned almost five decades, Levon Helm has nurtured a tradition of professionalism with a deep respect for his craft and remains refreshingly genuine in a world that often compromises integrity. He is a master storyteller who weaves his tales with the magic thread of universality that ties us all. He beckons us to come in, sit awhile and enjoy. We see ourselves in his stories and we are home.

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