Sunday, November 16, 2003

Charles Calmese

A note: Charles is no longer with us...he was killed in a head-on collision returning from a gig he had played...with a band we had started as a side project, while we were still putting together this group. His death occurred almost ten years after the period of time I am describing here. I played the gig with him the night he was killed, and his death affected me and many of his other friends profoundly. His death was a tragedy and a great loss. He was one of the most gifted musicians I have ever worked with, as well as a great friend, and I do all I can to remember him, and honor his memory.

The first musician I had in mind for the new band was a black bass player I had met while I was in Chicago. Charles Calmese was a great musician, and he had a natural understanding of, and a gift for playing bass. He had received two Platinum albums for his work with The Steve Miller Band, and had also played with Johnny Winter, James Cotton, and many other acts from Chicago, and around the country. We were good friends, and every time he came to Conn. with a band he was working with at the club, we would spend a lot of his off-stage time together. Charles was searching for a project of his own...since he usually worked as a sideman or a "hired gun". As my new project started to take shape, Charles became more and more interested in it, because he could see this was being approached on a level that his own experience had taught him was necessary...and our friendship, and the music I was writing for the group, was also very appealing to him. We had the same view on what would "sell", and also...on how bands worked best when they are composed of close friends. By late 1977, Charles could see the momentum I was mustering for this project. He saw all the concert gear, he heard the songs, and he realized that this was what he had been looking for. But he was playing with a band from Chicago, The James Cotton Blues Band that he was very close to, and in fact I was good friends with, and so he needed time to leave that group without damaging it, by giving James Cotton time to replace him, and making sure his friendships there wouldn't suffer as a result of his leaving. It was around March of 1978 when Charles came to Conn. with that band, and informed me that he would be staying in Conn. after the gig, and that he had made the decision to live there and make this band his next project. I was totally elated. I had my first band member signed on, and the level of his ability just reinforced in my mind that this band was going to be the one...    

5 comments:

RODERICK E. GOUIN said...

CHARLES WAS A GOOD FRIEND OF MINE. VERY THOUGHTFUL, KIND, GENEROUS. WE BUILT A VERY COOL SOUND SYSTEM FOR A NEW CLUB IN WILLIMANTIC, CT. CHARLES SUGGESTED AN EQUALIZER TO TOP OFF THE SYSTEM, AND I THOUGHT OH YEAH, I HAD FORGOTTEN TO ORDER ONE! I SAT IN A CLUB WITH MY LIL HONEY IN NORWALK, CT. ONE NIGHT. CHARLES BE-BOPPED ON STAGE ALONE AND CRANKED UP THE 300 WATT BLUNDER-BUST BASS AMP... EVERYONE JUMPED WHEN IT SOUNDED LIKE A THUNDEROUS RIFF FROM SEINFELD! ILL NEVER FORGET MY FRIEND. I ATTENDED HIS WAKE VERY SAD TO SEE HIM FOR THE LAST TIME. REST IN PEACE MY FRIEND. FROM: RODERICK E. GOUIN, PERCUSSIONIST, BONNEAU BEACH, SC.

Anonymous said...

I miss you so much uncle chuckie.

Unknown said...

Charles is my grandfather. My dad, his son, Randall Calmese. It'll be nice for us reach out more fam!

Unknown said...

Chuckie was my baby brother at the time of his death. We had one brother younger then him, who passed before him at age 6. I miss him very much. He was a great musician. Music was in his blood from a very early age. LOVE AND MISS YOU CHUCKIE.

Unknown said...

had the pleasure of meeting Charles when he was initial bass player for a local blues band , Blue in the Face. never forget a night at Tuxedo junction in Danbury where he sat with me and my friends and held court telling us stories of Muddy and James...he was an awesome player and a great person...