| Elmore: What are you listening to right now?
Paul Oscher: Gospel music; Clara Ward.
Rod Piazza: Gene Ammons, hes a sax player. And of course Little Walter, still, and the Harptones.
EM: What was the first record you ever bought?
PO: My father worked in the Fox Building in Brooklyn, where they had all the rock n roll shows, and there was a record store on the first level, and the guy used to give my father records, 50s rock n roll.
RP: I had two older brothers, 10 and 12 years older, and they brought home all these records, so I was exposed to Jimmy Reed, Earl Bostic, Big Joe Turner. I think the first record I ever bought was The Best of Little Walter.
EM: Where do you buy your music?
PO: On the internet.
RP: I dont really buy any music any more, I just have friends who kinda give me stuff. My roadie buys a lot of CDs online.
EM: Whats your favorite album of all time?
PO: Thats a hard question. The Best of Muddy Waters.
RP: Little Walters Hate To See You Go.
EM: What was the first instrument you played?
PO: The accordion
RP: Guitar. I played it for about five years.
EM: What brought you to the instrument you now play?
PO: I broke the accordion. I was working in a grocery store, and my uncle had given me a Marine Band harmonica, and I was trying to play Shell be Comin Round the Mountain from the pamphlet that came with the harp, and a black guy working in the grocery store said, Let me see that whistle you got, boy. He made like he couldnt play it, then all of a sudden he hit it, Whammmm, wha wha wha
and it just took me out. The sound, the tone, it was like you could touch it. I was about 12.
RP: My brother took me to see Jimmy Reed when I was 11. We got backstage and I told him I was trying to play guitar, and Jimmy said, Well, it looks like this boy needs something to go with his guitar, and he gave me one of his old harmonicas. I started playing right then, and when I got in my first group, in 65, I just concentrated on the harp and vocals.
EM: What musician influenced you most?
PO: Muddy Waters. I played in his band, lived in his house. And Otis Spann. I shared a basement with Otis Spann. People used to come by all the time: Johnny Young, Little Brother Montgomery, Willie Dixon would stop by, Floyd Jones, Little Walter.
RP: Little Walter.
EM: Who would you like to write with that you havent?
PO: I dont write with anybody.
RP: Usually its me and Honey working on stuff together.
EM: What was the song or event that made you realize you wanted to be in music?
PO: I was walking in Brooklyn past this black club called the Nightcap Lounge. It was a really cool place. All the guys looked like Ike Turner and the women looked like the Supremes. There was a guy standing in the doorway, his name was Smiling Pretty Eddie, and I was playing the harmonica, and he said, Where you workin, kid? and I said, Im not working, and he said, Cmon in here, you want to play? He got me up on the bandstand, I played, sat in with the band, and when I finished, he said, Ladies and gentlemen, put your hands together for a little blue-eyed soul brother. It was so exciting; I knew thats what I wanted to do. I got to shake hands with the stripper who worked there. I was 15.
RP: Just from hearing that music as a little boy, 7-8 years old. My brothers brought home those records. It just really did something to me. I dont think I had any other way to go but that.
EM: Who would you like in your rock n roll heaven band?
PO: There are some people Id like to see again, like Lightnin Hopkins, Muddy Waters, Little Walter, both Sonny Boys, One and Two. Id also like to see Noah Lewis - people that I knew when I was young. I dont necessarily have to be playing with them. I dont know about putting together a band. I quit my band, now I work alone, I have no problems. I dont have to rely on nobody, no drunks, no nothing. Im just kidding around!
RP: Fred Below on drums, Dave Meyers on bass, Louis Myers on guitar, Honey on piano. Second choice on piano after Honey: Otis Spann.
EM: Whats your desert island CD?
PO: There is a set of records of Muddy Waters on Charly, a nine-CD set. I think they stopped making it. It was all the outtakes and stuff that was never reissued, and all Muddys work up to 1967.
RP: Gene Ammons Young Jug.
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