Legendary
In The Media

Following
the blues muse
Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise takes passengers on a weeklong
party, where the ports become an afterthought
Story
by ROBERT CROSS , CHICAGO TRIBUNE
THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER
ABOARD
THE MS VEENDAM Holland America Line ordinarily strives for a sort
of Old Dutch decorum, so it may have surprised port watchers in
Tampa Bay when they saw our vessel flying the skull and crossbones
and a banner that declared: "This Ship Kicks A–!"
Blues
Cruise was the generic title, and the Web site, BluesCruise.com,
appeared on other banners around the ship. But the official title
is Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise, a superior example of
truth in advertising.
That week, we wouldn’t hear much traditional Mississippi
Delta-style blues – that slow-moving, plaintive poetry of
rural juke joints, cotton fields, rib shacks and chain gangs.
No,
the Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise is more like the fare
served up at a red-hot roadhouse – plenty of speed, lots
of noise, sweaty dancers, teeth-grinding energy.
There
are seven such almost-annual cruises, organized by two different
Kansas City entrepreneurs.
So
we had a ship full of affinity – people with like interests.
A lot of cruise lines are willing to indulge groups with identical
passions: chocolate lovers, "Star Trek" fans, stock
investors, Mac nerds, gays, wine aficionados, nudists, gourmets
and cooking-school students. Organizers from time to time might
offer language classes, wellness clinics, tai chi, yoga, golf
lessons and all-kosher cuisine.
This
one would highlight wild concerts and late-night jam sessions.
"There’s probably at least 200 guitars that amateurs
brought on board," noted Pat O’Neill, a Kansas City
publicist on his second Blues Cruise.
As
the Veendam strutted down Tampa Bay toward the Gulf of Mexico,
nasty weather hit. Surveying the rain and wind, Boss Man Roger
Naber ordered the big stage on the rear deck temporarily closed.
Instead, Tommy Castro’s 5 p.m. Sail-Away Concert would be
held in the Rubens Lounge.
Naber,
then owner of the Grand Emporium rhythm and blues hall in Kansas
City (he sold it recently) and former postal worker, was in his
third year of operating the Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise.
He
explained the revised itinerary from the stage. Most of us had
signed up for a cruise that included Roatan, Honduras; Belize
City, Belize; Santo Tomas de Castilla, Guatemala; and Key West.
Key West and Guatemala had been scratched off the schedule.
"We
had to skip Guatemala and change to Cozumel because we heard there
was some trouble there at the port, and that would not be very
entertaining," Naber said. "We also bagged Key West
because we had to board at 7:30, leaving only five hours on land,
and with immigration checks to go through, that would probably
be more like four hours."
That
brought a few groans, but soon Tommy Castro appeared, bearing
his guitar, wearing a tight black T-shirt and tighter jeans, his
hair slicked back, and looking tough.
"I
don’t know all of you," he said, "but I’m
pretty damn sure you’re workin’ too hard."
That
drew lusty cheers.
"You’re
workin’ too hard, and life comes up and bites you on the
butt from time to time. It gives you a whuppin’ from time
to time. That’s what it does, man. That’s why they
invented the blues."
Actually,
nobody in the place looked too downtrodden or overworked. Naber
told me the capacity crowd of 1,200 cruisers mostly belonged to
the middle class – teachers, truck drivers, professionals,
skilled blue-collar workers.

"We
tend to get a lot of California people," Naber said. "They
seem to take life easier than in other parts of the country."
The
overwhelming favorite everyday wear would be shorts and T-shirts,
preferably shirts bearing old R&B bands’ concert schedules
or the logos of blues joints from coast to coast.
During
one frenetic concert by Taj Mahal, out on the pool deck stage,
I saw shirts emblazoned with such logos as Conrad’s City
of Blues; the Sandbar, Longboat Key; Fair Wind, Kona, Hawaii;
Slippery Noodle Inn; Kingston Mines, Chicago; B.B. King’s
Blues Club, Memphis.
Everywhere
the cruisers turned, they’d run into a wall of sound and
a well-stocked bar with Holland America’s Indonesian bartenders
clapping their hands and shimmying to the beat.
What
a lineup: The Taj Mahal Trio. "He’s our spiritual leader,"
Naber said. Curtis Salgado, harmonica player, bandleader, singer
and reputedly the inspiration for John Belushi’s character
in the Blues Brothers. Roomful of Blues, eight masters of several
blues styles. Rosie Ledet, accordion player and zydeco queen.
Tommy Castro, guitarist extraordinare. Derek Trucks Band, the
blues prodigy who sat in with Buddy Guy when Derek was 12. Ronnie
Baker Brooks, who can get so carried away that he’ll sometimes
play guitar with his teeth. Anthony Gomes, a high-volume rocker
with endless energy. Charlie Musselwhite, the harmonica Pied Piper
of the "White Blues Movement." Little Milton, electric
practitioner of soul, blues and R&B. Walter "Wolfman"
Washington, who came up the river from New Orleans with a unique
brand of soul, funk and blues.
The
list wouldn’t end there. From time to time, special surprise
guests appeared, including Johnnie Johnson and the Rev. Billy
C. Wirtz.
Wirtz,
a tall, bearded, long-haired performer, is a sort of blues Victor
Borge, a seriously talented pianist (R&B/boogie division)
who plays it all for laughs.

One
afternoon in the Rubens Lounge, he took the stage and told the
cruisers that there are three kinds of blues.
"You
have happy blues, and they go like this," he said, playing
a few bars of "Kansas City." "Happy blues are about
going to places like Kansas City, drinkin’ whiskey, drivin’
Cadillacs and chasin’ beautiful women."
After
that, Wirtz played a few mournful notes. "Then you have sad
blues. Any blues that goes like this is about bein’ in jail
in Kansas City cuz you got drunk and wrecked the rented Cadillac
and you found out that the crazy little woman there was actually
a crazy little guy."
The
third kind defied definition – maybe call it theatrical
blues. Wirtz demonstrated by thrashing out chords and twisting
his face into contortions expressing either profound ecstasy or
agony, or both.
Usually,
Wirtz could be found holding forth in Mitch Woods’ Club
88, a late-night piano lounge commandeered by performers who wanted
to tickle the ivories and/or sing rowdy lyrics. The boogie-woogie
there (Woods is a master) drowned out the clanking of slot machines
in the casino next door.
Johnnie
Johnson, in his 70s and still going strong, played piano all over
the ship – from the Rotterdam Dining Room to the pool stage
to the Rubens Lounge. He was a revered figure, the man who appeared
with Chuck Berry for 20 years and had a hand in such hits as "Johnny
B. Goode," "Sweet Little Sixteen," "Rock ‘N’
Roll Music" and "No Particular Place to Go."
Johnson
has worked with a variety of musicians, including Buddy Guy, Eric
Clapton and Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones. "Keith
was one of the greatest artists I’ve ever worked with,"
Johnson declared during a seminar on blues piano. "It’s
kind of hard to understand what he’s sayin’. I nicknamed
him ‘Mumbles.’
"When
he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, I don’t
know what he was sayin’, but he was mumblin’ somethin’.
I didn’t do much better when I got up there."

Besides
the big stars, amateurs were pounding keyboards, banging drums
and strumming guitars wherever they could set up. Their sessions
might go on well into the next morning, and the jamming in various
lounges and the big outdoor stage did go on and on at the professional
level – sometimes till daylight, too.
Late
one evening in the empty Rotterdam Dining Room, a group of waiters
and busboys gathered around the grand piano with their instruments
and joined Walter "Wolfman" Washington for a blues session
of their own.
The Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise differed from the standard
cruise in a lot of other ways.
There
weren’t any formal nights, and the dress code was pretty
much Anything Goes. One man managed to stay barefoot for his entire
time on board.
The
ship library and adjoining game room became retail stores holding
inventories of clothing and souvenirs stamped with the Blues Cruise
logo – a ship-shaped guitar going full steam ahead. In the
same area, performers also could market their CDs.
Instead
of holding all purchased duty-free booze until debarkation, which
is a common practice, the ship sold bottles for in-cabin consumption,
adding a 20 percent surcharge.
Passengers
festooned the corridors with tinsel, paper lanterns, posters and
Mardi Gras beads. Dozens of cabin doors wore similar decorations,
plus pictures of musicians, strings of confetti, musical notes
made from plastic, artificial flowers, Hawaiian leis, trinkets,
rubber chickens or strings of flashing red lights resembling chili
peppers. Some doors were covered with so much stuff they looked
like voodoo altars.
Ports
became an afterthought, almost to the point where people either
stayed onboard or simply made desultory stabs at sunbathing or
water sports. In Roatan, Honduras, my wife, Juju, and I and a
friend, Julie O’Neill, browsed in scattered shops along
the beach.
The
highlight of a rainy, windy day in Belize City came even before
we got there, when a terribly hip-looking cruiser climbed into
a waiting tender and promptly saw his cap fly overboard. He sat
down, pulled out a harmonica, blew a few riffs and sang, "I
lost my hat, lost my hat. I got the blues cuz I lost my hat."
In
oh-so-touristy Cozumel, Juju and I went to the beach – a
commercialized stretch of sand called Playa Sol, complete with
water toys for rent, a cafe, food booths, and overly loud disco
and mariachi music. A hyper emcee tried to whip up enthusiasm
for limbo contests, tugs of war, margarita chugging and conga
lines.
The water was fine, the sun was hot, and for a moment, back onboard,
the Blues Cruise nearly seemed sedate by comparison. Mexican beaches
can rock with nearly equal velocity.
Our
post-Cozumel ennui didn’t last long, of course. If anything,
the shore experiences underlined the idea that this basically
was a floating R&B concert, where, as Taj Mahal puts it, "Everyone
has a backstage pass."
"Your room, your cabin, is always in close proximity,"
Roger Naber pointed out. "You don’t even have to walk
across the street. There’s no rough urban environment to
mess with."
At
breakfast one morning, we overheard a couple chatting as they
consumed omelets and coffee. "I could get used to this,"
the man mused. "I think this is what I was born for."
The
woman nodded vigorously and said, "Plenty to eat, no chores
and listenin’ to the blues."
At
dinner one night, Juju and I joined Bostonian Heather Dilbert,
a travel agent, and her cabin mate, Nancy McClinton, a machinist
from Gloucester, Mass.

"I
just love the blues," Dilbert told us. In fact, she loves
the genre so much that she stages a blues fest in her own back
yard every summer and calls it Heatherfest. Dilbert also works
at the Boston Blues Festival and serves on the board of the Boston
Blues Society.
McClinton
said she just came onboard for the good times and a break from
work. "Here, you can relax and enjoy yourself," she
said. "There’s nothing else to do."
I
asked if they brought instruments and joined in any jam sessions.
"No, but I play a CD like you wouldn’t believe,"
Nancy offered. Said Heather, "I’m a good foot tapper."
On
the penultimate night, the pool stage rocked with a Mardi Gras
parade. A lot of passengers obviously had packed more than T-shirts
and guitars.
While
Roomful of Blues and other players howled out "When the Saints
Come Marchin’ In," paraders crossed the stage dressed,
variously, as Santa Claus, a dinosaur, ladies of the evening,
pirates, Blues Brothers, babies in bonnets, firefighters and cops.
A few women wore tight dresses, feathers and the requisite purple
and gold Mardi Gras beads.
That
event would be followed by one more "Poolside Jam Under the
Stars" and the after-midnight buffet ("it’s like
a cannibal picnic," a cruiser complained), all this on the
Lido Deck, which had long since been dubbed "Libido Deck."
On
the last afternoon, Naber and his wife, Julia, awarded prizes
for the best dancer, hardiest drinker, most determined womanizer
and the group that had traveled the farthest (from Austria). An
"indulgence" award went to the woman who brought a Breathalyzer
onboard "to make sure people could walk back to their cabins."
Naber
also bestowed a prize to the couple who hosted the most parties.
"Actually, they only had one party," he said, "but
it lasted for 168 hours."
And
the same could be said about the cruise itself: weeklong revels,
wall-to-wall rhythm and blues, and everybody with a backstage
pass.