Just
after 7 p.m., Bob Seeley sits down at the piano, casually opens the
lid, stretches both hands over the keyboard and announces himself with
a huge rumble of notes. The
after-work crowd at Charley’s Crab looks up from cocktail conversations
for a moment at the well-dressed man sitting straight up at the piano
bench, hammering the keys. The
crescendo builds into a wave of sound before crashing into the
rambunctious groove of Albert Cass’ famous “Boogie-Woogie Stomp.”
Seeley’s left hand beats the lower keys in a heavily rhythmic, upbeat
shuffling blues pattern while his right hand flies over the higher
keys, chiming out a ribbon of intertwined melodies. | ADVERTISEMENT |
|
Just
like that, the ambience changes. The most disaffected businessmen,
consumed with bitching about daily office woes, unconsciously react,
nodding in time or tapping their cigars into the ashtrays along with
the beat. The lucky few with seats at the bar seem mesmerized by
Seeley’s arched hands. Bob
Seeley has been playing a steady gig here five nights a week — Tuesday
through Saturday — since Charley’s Crab opened more than 30 years ago. His
style of playing solo piano — mostly classic boogie-woogie, Harlem
stride and ragtime — has made him something of a living history book of
American music and has earned him fans across the United States and in
Europe. He
has played thousands of gigs in cities around the world, been a soloist
on the stage of New York City’s Carnegie Hall and entertained everyone
from cocktail-hour businessmen to Turkish ambassadors and record moguls. And
Seeley’s unique experience as a young patron of Detroit’s
once-ubiquitous boogie clubs has given him firsthand knowledge of the
music that later generations will never have. Built-in fixture Since
the Nixon administration, Bob Seeley’s regular gig has been behind a
piano built into the bar at Charley’s Crab, a decidedly plush,
five-star seafood restaurant near the crossroads of I-75 and Crooks in
Troy. It’s
plain that he’s at home amid the chatter and cigar smoke, playing the
piano with the lid propped up with a highball glass. He occasionally
looks up to smile at waitresses and patrons. After
a nonstop set parading through boogie-woogie standards, Seeley sits
down and exhibits his skills as a storyteller. A casual conversation
with Seeley touches on a who’s who of boogie, jazz and stride-style
piano giants — names such as Albert Ammons (1904-1967), Pete Johnson
(1904-1967) and Eubie Blake (1883-1983). These
names don’t mean much to most people. But to those interested in the
roots of American jazz and blues, they are names of great significance,
of dominant musical forces. To Seeley, many of them were friends and influences that inspired him to a life as a musician. His
yarns of piano luminaries seem bottomless, but Seeley’s richest stories
are of the great Meade “Lux” Lewis (1905-1964). Lewis, a distinguished
and widely reputed boogie pianist, was most active in the early 1930s,
when he was key in revolutionizing the boogie-woogie style. He was
largely responsible for igniting the boogie craze that captivated young
people like Seeley all over America during World War II. Over the years, Seeley and Lewis developed a close friendship. “He wasn’t classically trained or anything, he just had it in his soul,” Seeley says of Lewis. “I
first met him when I was in my last year of high school, probably
around 1948. He was playing a ‘Jazz at the Philharmonic’ concert down
in Detroit. Three of us guys went down to the concert and snuck around
to the stage door to get autographs. When we met him he asked us to go
to a house party on East Warren. We were pretty excited about it and
got there before he did. We told the guy at the door that Meade ‘Lux’
Lewis had invited us and he let us right in.” Seeley
was just a white kid who wasn’t old enough to get into most of the
black clubs where his musical heroes played. Though he had taken
classical lessons as a teenager, his boogie-woogie education started in
his early teens — he would stand at the backstage door of Baker’s and
peer in at the boogie performers. He practiced and played enough to win
some contests and notoriety, and hung out every weekend in flamboyantly
named clubs during Detroit’s booming 1940s. Seeley
cut his teeth by occasionally sitting in and playing a few numbers in
such places as the Flame Show Bar, the Alamo, Baker’s Bar (later
renamed Baker’s Keyboard Lounge) and the Frolic Show Bar. He
and his friends would take his mother’s car downtown to frequent blind
pigs, after-hours joints where jazz musicians would jam until the sun
came up and patrons drank illegally all night long. The
fateful night that Seeley crashed Meade “Lux” Lewis’ top-drawer
afterparty kindled a friendship with one of his musical icons. When
Seeley speaks of it two generations later, it seems as though it
happened yesterday. “Helen
Humes was there. She was the great singer with Count Basie,” recalls
Seeley. “So they had a piano and she asked me to play something, so I
played a tune called ‘Chicago Flyer,’ which was Meade ‘Lux’ Lewis’ big
tune at the time. I had learned it note-for-note off his record, and
I’m about three-quarters of the way through the tune and I see him
coming up to the door. He burst in and muttered some of the most famous
words in jazz: ‘Who’s that stealing my stuff?’ It was just little ol’
me, that’s all.” He flashes a disarming, gapped-tooth smile. After that, when Lewis would play concerts in Detroit, he often invited Seeley to perform through the intermissions. Much
later, when years of fast living began to claim the icons of little ol’
Seeley’s youth, he started to gain a global reputation as a top
practitioner of the boogie piano style. “True to the source” “The
way most people do it is through copying,” says Jim Badzik, a longtime
friend and boogie-woogie performer and promoter. “People learn to play
boogie by emulating greats like Jelly Roll Morton, Erroll Garner and
Fats Waller — you hear musicians playing at something to make it sound like someone else. “But
that is one thing that makes Bob so different. Bob made the music he
loved through studying those players, understanding what they were
doing and then putting his own life force in it. That’s the secret of
how Bob sounds so original playing this music in 2002. People think
he’s playing old music, but what he’s playing is true to the source and
true to himself at the same time.” Badzik,
a Detroit native, lives a double life in New York City as a real estate
associate by day and a boogie-woogie pianist by night. A highly
regarded musician in his own right, Badzik has traveled with Seeley
throughout the United States and across the Atlantic to play exclusive
piano, jazz and boogie festivals. He
claims that one day he will be Seeley’s biographer and says he boasts a
private collection of Seeley recordings that go back 30 years. Seeley
and his signature style of playing dramatically changed Badzik’s life,
as a mentor and father figure. “I
was a kid, 20 years old and living in Ann Arbor,” Badzik says via phone
from his New York office. “There was an annual concert at the First
Unitarian Church. … The concert was sold out, all the seats were filled
and they only let my friends and I in after we begged. “Since
there were no seats, I sat on the floor underneath the keyboard and
when Bob played it changed my life. I had never heard anything like he
was playing. I went bananas. I was crazy for it. I felt something
change in me chemically. It ruined me. I flunked out of college,
started learning how to play boogie-woogie piano and have been ever
since.” For
Badzik and others who grew up playing classical music a generation
after the boogie-woogie heyday of the ’40s, learning the style of the
boogie masters was like developing a whole new language on the keyboard. The
term boogie-woogie itself started as black slang; it had different
meanings in pockets all around the United States. If you spoke of
boogie-woogie in the late ’20s or early ’30s, the words could mean
anything from a racy style of dance to a raucous party or to a sexually
transmitted disease. Detroit’s
infamous strip of black clubs on Hastings Street had no small part in
shaping the word’s definition. Peter Silvester’s authoritative book, Left Hand Like God — the Story of Boogie Woogie, touches on a time in 1929 when “boogie-woogie is used to mean either dancing or music in the city of Detroit.” The
more contemporary concept of boogie-woogie is most often traced to a
form of playing piano that was born in the barrelhouses of Southern
states. Barrelhouses were typically little more than rough-cut bars
with a piano player who could go all night, a small dance floor and all
the crude regional liquor one could stomach. The
music that Seeley plays five nights a week in the swank confines of
Charley’s Crab is derived from those barrelhouse entertainers, players
who were rarely captured on recordings. Today,
the definition of boogie-woogie generally relates to solo piano music.
It’s characterized by repetitive, swinging blues bass lines that run
continuously under the highly improvised melodies. “My
motto is, ‘It don’t mean a thing if it ain’t got that swing,’” Seeley
says, joking that the classic Duke Ellington mantra is really his own.
“I learned about swinging in all-black bars on Hastings Street and all
the bars we called ‘black and tans.’ They would feature rhythm and
blues and jazz. “Back
in those days, live music was everywhere because you didn’t have
television and you didn’t have all this piped-in music. If you had a
restaurant and you wanted music, you had to hire guys to play. And
downtown Detroit was booming, jumping with tons of guys who could
really swing.” “Incapable of not swinging” Bob Seeley keeps the spirit of Detroit’s swinging years alive and kicking at Charley’s Crab. When
he returns to the piano for the second of three sets and blasts through
the Gershwin standard “I Got Rhythm,” it seems as though he is
channeling the spirit of those swinging days. He sits almost rigidly upright with his mouth closed, breathing deeply through his nose, his hands racing over the keys. He
has performed this particular song countless times, but it sounds newly
discovered. The feel of the music and his improvisations on the melody
are textbook examples of hard-swinging boogie-woogie. The
beautiful atmosphere at Charley’s and its proximity to the Hilton Hotel
has attracted generations of high-profile stars who have become Seeley
fans. He rattles off a list that includes Bob Hope, Tony Bennett, Dinah
Shore, the Chicago Symphony, the rock group Chicago, the Smothers
Brothers and the Everly Brothers. He is thanked on the liner notes of
the latest Kid Rock record and smugly brags about getting a kiss on the
cheek from Pamela Anderson. In
a stack of photographs next to his piano is a picture of Seeley with
his arm around Mick Jagger. Current Rolling Stones keyboardist Chuck
Leavell has published articles praising Seeley as an influence. “One
of the reasons he is so widely loved is because he is so incredibly
devoted to his craft,” says Mark Braun, a boogie pianist from Ann Arbor
known professionally as Mr. B. “That is what enables someone to be what
Bob Seeley is. All of us have limited gifts in one way or another, but
Bob is limitless with his passion and joy for this form of music. “He
has played some of those songs hundreds and hundreds of times,”
explains Braun, who has also traveled widely with Seeley. “You couldn’t
do it if you didn’t have the fervor that he has. That is what people
feel when they listen to Bob — if they’ve heard the song played a
million times and Bob has played it a million times, they feel his
passion for the craft.” Badzik
declares, “The man is genetically incapable of not swinging. He’s
genetically incapable of losing the beat. He plays it for the swing and
he wants to convey that feeling. “Music
is based on the law of diminishing returns. It’s the same way with
food. When you taste your favorite food the first bite is always the
best. The second bite is good too, but not quite as enjoyable as the
first. Soon it doesn’t taste the same at all. It isn’t like that when
Bob plays. He tries to play a piece with the same spirit and excitement
as he had about it the first time he heard it. You can tell that his
heart is in it and he has the energy that he has always had.” Though
Seeley’s age is a closely guarded secret, his youthful energy is
infectious. When he plays, everyone within earshot is unable to resist
moving along to his heavy beat. “The
music has kept Bob young,” Badzik says. “I know people half his age who
act twice as old. Bob is still an adolescent at heart. He is a living,
walking archive of American music and he not only is important as
someone who can play the music but relate to life as it was then, when
the music was very popular. He can take that music and make it his own,
and that has kept him young.” At
a recent boogie-woogie festival at the Redford Theatre, Seeley brought
down the house by donning a pair of shades and a cap with a faux
ponytail and proceeding to jitterbug and soft-shoe and shuffle across
the stage with verve and agility that rival his digital dexterity. He can be nearly as much a ham as he is a virtuoso. “It’s
the boogie-woogie that keeps you young,” Seeley explains. “It’s not
your chronological age, it’s your physical condition and state of mind.
Lots of people are dead at my age. “I
took a stress test during a physical exam and the doctor said that the
only guy who has beat me was 19 years old. It might be if you’re lucky
or not, if you have the genes or something. Playing the piano is a lot
of exercise. I play until I leave and when I do I’m pretty whipped. But
it’s that boogie-woogie that’ll keep you young.”

Nate Cavalieri is a freelance writer. E-mail him at letters@metrotimes.com. |