James Gurley died of a heart attack today 20 December 2009 in a hospital in Palm Springs, California.
I wrote about him just this last week that at The Maritime Hall in San Francisco, sixteen years ago, he played such great solos at our benefit for Chet Helms. He was on fire that night, and we have that on video tape so there will be no doubt about it. When conditions were right, the man could really play.
James was the most unusual person I ever met, a pioneer, a real original, a very funny man and truly alive with an energy that not many people have. When James was around, life seemed to be magnified. Everything was more interesting, had more meaning, was more vital. He kept that energy right up to now, really. He and I did a set of interviews together in San Diego at the beginning of last summer and he was as wry and spry as ever.
When Big Brother lived at our Lagunitas house a few miles from where I am sitting, we all had our first Christmas together, was it 1967? We both had birthdays right around this time and James handed me a small present and growled, “Let’s put the X back in X-mas.” It was a bah, humbug moment that I know he would truly appreciate now. James has gone to the great X two days shy of his birthday, and two days after mine.
For me and for many people, James was the real 1960s, the real exemplar of that counterculture, the forerunner. Peter Albin, Chet Helms and I founded Big Brother and the Holding Company, but James was the spirit and the essence of the band in its early days. He showed us the way as a Zen master would show the way, without sermons, without lectures, with as little talk but with as much humor as possible.
When I met James in 1965, he was going to die in two weeks. Of pleurisy. It was always something. James was such a hypochondriac that I was sure he was going to outlive all of us. Now he is gone.
Goodbye, old friend. Ave atque Vale.
Sam Andrew
Big Brother and the Holding Company
It is with heavy heart that the original remaining members of Big Brother & the Holding Company announce the passing of James Gurley. He died at home of a heart attack on Sunday, December 20th. Our hearts go out to his dear wife, Margaret Nelson Gurley, his sons, Hongo Ishi Gurley, Django Gurley, and his sisters. There will be a memorial for James in San Francisco sometime in January. We will dearly miss this gentle person who was one of the most unique guitarists of our time.
Peter Albin
Big Brother and the Holding Company
My first memory of James was after I had met Peter Albin but before I had joined the band as the drummer. I had gone to see Big Brother play at the Fillmore, ‘The Peace Rock’ show, February 10th 1966. The first song they did was “Oh My Soul”. Peter came out front first, singing and playing bass like a madman, but when James’ guitar solo started the whole audience was drawn toward the stage. I’d never seen anyone play guitar like that, heard a sound like that. It was this frenzy of notes that took one to the kind of place that people like Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane were trying to reach, not something you expected to hear from a rock band. The energy was incredible. The last song was “Hall of the Mountain King’ and at the end of this song, again this crazed guitar player blew everyone’s mind by embracing and shaking his amplifier and banging it against the stage to produce the sound of thunder and a storm Maybe it was the storm of what was coming in the next two years
After I joined the band James and his wife Nancy became my closest friends. We spent many a nights together in their apartment on Oak Street getting high and rolling on the floor laughing for hours at a time. Those were sweet times in the early days of Big Brother and the Holding Co.
James was the star of Big Brother and then Janis came along.
Much has been written of the following two years but the first chapter of BBHC ended late in 1968. We had, as a band scored the number one album in the world, Janis was leaving the band and James’ life was in disarray. As Sam went off to play with Janis in the Kozmic Blues Band and Peter and I went off to tour Europe with Country Joe and the Fish, James’ life really hit the skids, maybe bottoming out with the death of Nancy from an OD and James being charged with second degree murder for injecting her (he was aquitted)
Now here’s something incredible: After this James re-invented himself and so did Big Brother and the Holding Co as a band, James cut his hair short, started playing the bass, moved out of the City and into my house in Marin for about a month, (during the period of his trial) then eventually bought a house in Marin. He also fathered another son during this period. This was also a very creative and beautiful time for Big Brother and we produced music that I’m still proud of today. James was the bass player, Peter moved over to guitar. James’ bass playing was creative, and unique and it allowed me, inspired me to be just as creative with what I played on the drums. This period again lasted about two years but eventually was brought to ruin by drugs, egos and the weight of our own history.
In the early 80s I lived in LA and James and Robin (his girlfriend and musical partner) would come to LA from Palm Desert and stay at my house. We had some good moments together and I still felt that we were close, were family.
When Robin left James he was really hurting bad and almost suicidal. He came up to LA and I remember driving him back to Palm Desert one afternoon, trying to give him some hope, being there for him in his darkest despair and his despair was as dark and heavy and any I’ve ever known. I took him to an AA meeting. I remember that time as maybe the last time we truly connected.
Big Brother re-united in 1987 and has been performing since that time. James left the Band in 1997. I have decided that at this time I will not write about what happened between James and me or between James and other members of Big Brother. It wasn’t pretty; it wasn’t a happy ‘parting-of-the-ways. Yet despite that, and despite all the things that happened and whatever negative things he’s said about me or about anyone else in Big Brother over the last 12 years the bottom line is that I still had and have a lot of love in my heart for James and I cried a little yesterday.
James was a large personality. He had real charisma. He was as unique an individual as they come. For a moment in time he was ‘the man’. His guitar playing was original and there is no question that his approach to life and music had a profound effect on me, on Janis, on Sam and on Peter, as well as on everyone in the San Francisco music scene of the 60s. I will forever remember him and be grateful that I knew him and that he was a part of my life.
Dave Getz
December 21, 2009
Evolving out of the San Francisco rock scene of the 1960s, Big Brother was in the forefront of the psychedelic music movement.
The band was formed by Peter Albin, Sam Andrew, James Gurley and Chuck Jones in San Francisco, in a Victorian mansion/boarding house owned by Peter's uncle at 1090 Page Street in the Haight-Ashbury. That house became the site of Wednesday night jam sessions which were organized by Chet Helms who was the real "Big Brother," naming the band, bringing James Gurley into the fold and later seeing that his old friend Janis Joplin came to sing with them.The first official Big Brother gig was at the Open Theater in Berkeley, January 1966. Within a short time they became the house band for Chet at the Avalon Ballroom and began to develop a loyal following, largely due to the charismatic, pioneering guitarwork of James Gurley. The band had what Sam Andrew callled a "progressive-regressive hurricane blues style," playing such tunes as Hall of the Mountain King, Coo Coo, That's How Strong My Love Is, and Down On Me.
During the winter of 1966, Chuck Jones left the band and was replaced by Dave Getz who played his first gig with the band on 12 March at the Matrix on Fillmore Street. Peter Albin was the main vocalist at this time, and although Sam Andrew helped out with the singing, both men knew that the band needed a singer who could match the group's instrumental energies. Chet Helms remembered a friend from his University of Texas days, Janis Joplin, and proposed that he bring her back to San Francisco, where she had tried to launch a singing career in 1963-1964. Janis came to town, sang a couple of tunes with the band at their Henry Street studio, and was enthusiastically welcomed into the group, playing her first Big Brother engagement at the Avalon Ball room on 10 June 1966. Big Brother had been a loose, ramshackle,experimenting ensemble and now, with Janis, the music became more sturctured, and the band became a family. They moved out of San Francisco, north to Lagunitas in Marin County, found a beautiful house where they could all live and rehearse and settled down to some serious music making.
In August 1966, Big Brother went to Chicago, their first real on the road experience, and they played a month at Mother Blues, a club in Old Town, and recorded their first album at Mainstream Records. It was to be a year before this effort was released and the band went through the winter of 1966 and the spring of 1967 becoming a more professional unit and building an audience. June of 1967 brought the Monterey Pop Festival, a big shift for Big Brother. Janis had learned how to sing in front of an electric band, she became larger than life and her "screamingly mournful vocals and potently sexual stage act," had, as a reviewer noted, propelled Big Brother into the national spotlight. Peter, Sam, Dave and James, strong personalities in their own right, were wise enough to give Janis the freedom truly to be herself, and people responded to the power of the band and to Janis' truly unique voice.
Big Brother acquired a new manager at Monterey, Albert Grossman, who brought them to Columbia Records.where they made their second album Cheap Thrills which was number one on the charts for eight weeks. The music on the album was energetic and driving, the perfect match for Joplin's voice. Guitar Player magazine called James Gurley the "Father of the Psychedelic Guitar," and Rick Clark in the All Music Book wrote "Anyone who thinks Guns N'Roses mastered hard electric blues-grunge hasn't heard Big Brother's James Gurley and Sam Houston Andrew duke it out on tracks like 'Ball and Chain,' 'Summertime,' and 'Combination of the Two.' "
Janis Joplin left Big Brother in December 1968 and Sam Andrew went with her, while Peter Albin and Dave Getz joined Country Joe and the Fish. In the fall of 1969, Peter, Sam, Dave and James resurrected Big Brother with the help of Dave Schallock (guitar), Nick Gravenites(vocals and great songwriting), and Kathi McDonald. one of the best singers ever. The band released two albums Be A Brother (1970) and How Hard It Is (1971), toured for a couple of years and then decided to rest for a while.
In October 1978, Big Brother and the Holding Company played for old friend Chet Helms at The Greek Theatre in Berkeley, but it was not to be until almost a decade later (1987) that they reunmited, adding Michel Bastian on vocals. Since that time, Big Brother have played all over the world and have become, in the process, better musicians than they ever were. This is partly because they have played with some wonderful players and vocalists over the years. On guitar, Tom Finch,Chad Quist, Joel Hoekstra and Kate Russo on violin have been superb, while on vocals, outstanding singers have been Lisa Battle, Lisa Mills and the redoubtable Sophia Ramos.
Recent Big Brother and the Holding Company CD releases have been Do What You Love, the Janis Joplin boxed set on Sony, Live At Winterland and now (2006) the band is preparing a new offering, a live recording of a concert in Burg Herzberg, Germany, with Sophia Ramos and Chad Quist, and containing such tunes as Hold Me, Piece of My Heart, Ball & Chain, Down On Me, Summertime and Turtle Blues. This CD will be the soundtrack for a Big Brother 40th Anniversary tour of the world.
Through a dear friend of the band, Catherine Cavalieri, Sam Andrew met Tim Murphy who has been a godsend. Tim has kept the band working and he goes far beyond the call of duty in handling the somewhat tempestuous and emotional aspects of the artists' lives. There is a renewed sense of excitement and hope with Big Brother today largely due to Tim's help and support.
Hey my Brothers. I said heaps of prayers for you and for Magaret. I wish the best for you in this time of sadness. Sincere condolences. ♥ Flower*
And I want to wish you a peaceful time over Christmas. [not only over Christmas -actually always] And I want you to know that there's a Flower that loves you more than anything in the world and wishes to do something good for you.
I Am So Sad To Hear of The Passing of JAMES!! I Am So Glad that The times We spent Together will be Treasured All My Life! There Was Something So Very Very COOL About Him and He Shared Some Great Knowlege with ME!!....I Will Miss YOU My Friend!....To BBHC..The Rest of YOU Please Be Strong and Take Care!
So Sorry to hear of this loss- he was a true rock icon, whose real contributions are immeasurable. I can only imagine the loss of such an old freind, and i send you each my sincere sympathies. what you did together will never be forgotten, all of rock n roll owes ya a huge tip o th hat..
"carry on, my wayward sons".. you all are and were so very special people
i am a musician partly because of the inspiration you created,namastae
James along with his Classic of SF Sound always seened to me to be a real good guy. He sure helped give me lot of people I know many great shows. Was sad to hear but he had & gave a good life with amazing times. Love to Hin & All
Dear Big Brother, I'm really sorry to hear about James. As a guitar player myself I used to wonder just what he was thinking when he played. His solo's were so wonderful and wild! I got to see you guys lots of times at Winterland and the Filmore and always considered myself lucky to have had that experience. Sincerely, Cash Johnson P.S. to Peter, you probably don't remember me but I worked at AMSI and jammed once with you and Rodney at Liela and Virginia's Christmas dinner.
Good man, great music.Thanks for sharing love and music with us. Have a good journey♥..and may prayers help his wife to get through this hard time of sadness.
WOW darlins' this is so very sad. I have never had so many losses in my entire life as I have had this year. May your friend James RIP and may he fly into the celestial heavens and play in the garden with some of my and your other friends. Blessings ABUNDANT to him and you~