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Col.
Bruce Hampton by V.Kamenitzer
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The
Rockin' Chair: Helping Out Our Daddy
By Tom Speed
It
would be difficult to overestimate the impact Col.
Bruce Hampton (ret.) has had on the jam band movement.
He has been a major influence on most, if not all, of its
major players since its unofficial inception and has in turn
influenced a new generation of musicians as a result.
Though
the first flowerings had been bubbling up for years in places
like Athens, Georgia, Burlington, Vermont, and New York, the
flashpoint of the jam scene, its unofficial inception, was
1992's H.O.R.D.E. festival. It pitted together three burgeoning
bands on the scene — Widespread
Panic, Blues
Traveler, and Phish
— in a pivotal tour that would vault each of them into larger
arenas by combining forces.
As the lore goes, Blues Traveler wanted to bring along their
compatriots, Spin
Doctors. Widespread Panic responded by essentially saying,
"If you're bringing them, we're bringing our friend." That
"friend" was Colonel Bruce Hampton, and his band (at the time,
for there have been many, and will be many more) was the Aquarium
Rescue Unit. The rest is this story.

Col.
Bruce Hampton by Thomas Smith
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Night
after night, the lore continues, Hampton would hold court backstage,
imparting his mystic wisdom to these young players, teaching
them to rid themselves of ego and play only with intent. Night
after night, the heralded players of Phish and Widespread Panic
would stand in awe of the manic antics of the Aquarium Rescue
Unit, sitting on the sidelines and learning from the least-known
band on the bill.
Those
who followed his guidance most closely had the most long-term
success. Those who didn't burned brightly but briefly, eventually
fizzling.
Shaman,
mystic, mentor, and parlor trickster — Bruce Hampton often
blurs the line between fact and fiction so much that he inhabits
a world that is actually both, a place where neither is more
important or real than the other.
Hampton began our 1999 interview for Honest Tune magazine
with a treatise on the 5,000-year-old origins of baseball
in Egypt. "Baseball was the perfect game," he said, "a mystic
game based on numerology." Three strikes, three outs. Nine
players, nine innings. "Nine was the number of completion,"
he said, as it was a perfect balance of three threes. It wasn't
until years later that I looked back at the issue number to
realize that the cover story on Bruce Hampton was Volume 3
Number 3, and the interview was done in '99. And Hampton can
pontificate for hours like this on almost any subject.
In that same interview, he recounts the tale of Sun
Ra delivering something called the Book of Knowledge to
Jon Fishman at a hotel room in the middle of the night. Who
cares if it's true or not? It's true to him, and that makes
it so.
He
made the most profound impact on Widespread Panic and Leftover
Salmon. ARU and WSP toured together often in their most formative
years, often turning the stage over to the next act with a
full-band segue, the band members from one group slowly replacing
the band members from the other, never stopping the music
— a trick that has become common practice in jam band circles.
He has been a frequent guest with Widespread Panic over the
years, earning him the nickname "Our Daddy" from Panic front
man John Bell. Leftover Salmon borrowed heavily from him in
their off-the-wall stage antics and free style of playing.

Col.
Bruce Hampton by Thomas Smith
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When
in Hampton's presence, he at times seems to be channeling mystic
energy from the cosmos, whether he's on stage or not (though
some would argue that he's always on stage). He is a well-known
shade-tree magician and mind-reader. He'll guess your birthday
on first meeting. He'll play guitar without touching it. Parlor
tricks or mental magic, it doesn't matter. It's real either
way.
Here's a parlor trick for you: notice when reading this website
or Honest Tune magazine or any other publication that
covers jam bands with any regularity, how many times Colonel
Bruce Hampton's name is mentioned in interviews with other
musicians. Be careful. The interconnectedness of it all may
seem like you are uncovering some vast underground transit
system. And you are.
On
the H.O.R.D.E. tour, The Aquarium Rescue Unit was the vortex
from which The Colonel wielded his weirdness. Many argue that
it was his finest band in a long line of fine bands. The ARU
put out just two albums — the live self-titled Capricorn release
of 1991 and the studio masterpiece that followed, Mirrors
of Embarrassment. Of course the world of recorded
music was not really their forte. This band was all about
the moment.

Col.
Bruce Hampton by Michael Weintrob
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In
1994, Hampton left the ARU, citing health concerns. The road
was too much for him at his increasing age. The band continued
on with new vocalist Paul Henson, put out another album, and
toured a few more years while members came and went. It wasn't
the same without its spiritual core, but that doesn't mean the
players quit. Guitarist Jimmy
Herring went on to stints with The Allman Brothers, Jazz
is Dead, Phil Lesh & Friends (the best-yet version that
toured for years and earned the moniker The Phil Lesh Quintet),
the reformed "Dead," and Project Z. Bassist Oteil
Burbridge now holds down the bottom-end for The Allman Brothers
Band in addition to fronting his own band. And drummer Jeff
"Apt. Q-258" Sipe spearheaded the improvisational Zambiland
Orchestra for years in addition to serving on the skins for
Leftover Salmon and Susan Tedeschi.

Aquarium
Rescue Unit by Michael Weintrob
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Of
course, you can't keep a good man down. Bruce was back with
a new band, The Fiji Mariners, almost immediately. It
wasn't a surprise. That's been his modus operandi for decades
— take a band to their creative peak and jump out off the precipice.
It started back in the late 1960s and early 1970s with the
Hampton Grease Band, a band whose claim to infamy was
that they recorded the second-worst selling double album in
the history of Columbia Records, second only to a yoga instruction
record. The world was not ready for Bruce Hampton, even in
those crazy times. The different permutations of his particular
lunacy followed in a flurry: bands like The Late Bronze
Age and The New Ice Age harnessed a madness that
was equal parts absurdity and adeptness. Over the years he
served as a conduit for avant-garde interpretations of jazz
and bluegrass and blues, the pure forms of American music
thrown into a blender and poured into a steaming chalice of
strangeness. Many of the recordings of that era were released
by Landslide Records in the compilation Strange Voices.
All of the albums were re-released in their entirety (for
the first time on CD) by Terminus Records, with bonus material
to boot.

Col.
Bruce Hampton
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For
the past few years, the Colonel's conduit has been The
Codetalkers. Admittedly, Hampton's role in this group
has been more to champion the cause of chief songwriter Bobby
Lee Rodgers, but over the years, the group has incorporated
more and more of the unmistakable magic of the Colonel.
At
the All
Good Festival, he reunited with the Aquarium Rescue Unit,
and he performed a stunning set at Bonnaroo
with the Codetalkers.

Bruce
Hampton with ARU AllGood 2006 by Robert Massie
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As
a musician, it's all about intent.
Brato
Ganibe. Brato Ganibe. Brato Ganibe.
Tom
Speed is Publisher and Editor of Honest
Tune magazine. His astrological sign is Leo.
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