I Put a Spell on You: The Bizarre Life of Screamin' Jay Hawkins
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I Put A Spell On You brings together hundreds of interviews with Screamin’ Jay, his family, and bandmates to weave a new tale of the life of this seminal rock and roll pioneer.
Steve Bergsman
Steve Bergsman is a longtime journalist who has written over a dozen books. His most recent books are a biography of Screamin’ Jay Hawkins and, as coauthor, Chapel of Love: The Story of New Orleans Girl Group the Dixie Cups, published by University Press of Mississippi.
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I Put a Spell on You - Steve Bergsman
INTRODUCTION
SpeLLboUNd It rankles. In the murk of America’s wholly dishonest relationship with the confusion and our obsession with the confusion attending race relations, faking it until you make it has been deemed necessary by both greater and lesser personages. Martin Luther King Jr., I imagine, could have found half a dozen better ways to spend his weekends without getting his head kicked in, but compelled by higher ideals and a lot more than animal needs for cash and succor he took one for the team. Where it gets hazier is when we lose sight of what both taking one
and the team
are.
He stood off to the side of a stage in Portland, Maine. The usual receiving line for performers at the conclusion of a performance. I had, in a departure from my usual time on stage with OXBOW, performed with local greats Conifer in a special one-off encore. One song appended to a show that had seen me sing acoustic OXBOW songs. Lack of volume and electrification slowed none of the burn, and by show end the stage had been slathered with slobber, sweat and bile.
But there he stood. I had grabbed my suit in a sweaty bolus of clothing that would never come clean, before he spoke.
I just watched your show.
He was a light-skinned Black cat. Possibly biracial. Definitely shaking. Shaking badly enough that I noticed and I noticed enough to put my sweat-stinking clothing to the side. If I had to fight it always pays to be ready to fight.
OK.
Yeah. And I think it’s going to take me some time to figure out why I’m so angry with you…. It… it felt like…. when I looked out at the audience…. and then you on stage…I don’t know. Like I was at some kind of SLAVE AUCTION.
In Portland, Maine the audience for an OXBOW show is mostly White. Not just Portland, Maine. Portland, Oregon, Berlin, Madrid, Helsinki, Rome or wherever else we’ve played in the 30 years we’ve been playing, excepting Japan. Me? I’m mostly Black, as I have consistently been since 1962.
So then from me to the twisted rictus of a face truly trying to figure it
out, I laughed and then added right afterward, As light-skinned as you are that maybe made you feel right at home?
We stared at each other. Glared at each other. He shook his head. He walked away.
But you know Paul Robeson, Bill Bojangles
Robinson and dozens up and down a long timeline of Black artists understood both the calculus of going along to get along and the need to rock your muse. Doesn’t mean they liked it. Also, doesn’t mean that they didn’t like it. Sort of like how most of us manage life where we don’t call the shots.
So when genius and payola-encrusted DJ Alan Freed decided to have Screamin’ Jay Hawkins—a name Hawkins hated that he had been glossed with by his record label—climb out of a coffin in the mid-1950s, right after Hawkins broke big with the song that would end up defining his career, and to a certain degree his character, I Put a Spell On You
Hawkins declined.
No black dude gets in a coffin alive…
Hawkins reportedly said. Three hundred dollars later Hawkins climbed out of the coffin, sporting some variation of what would be a lifelong outfit of gold and leopard print, sharkskin suits festooned with voodoo accoutrements, up to and including a smoking skull on a stick that he called Henry.
Like the Kafka scribble about the children that had been given the choice of being kings or couriers of kings, it became pretty clear early on that Hawkins would have preferred to have given up his miserable game, but after stints in the military and an expanding base of both inside and outside children, well, a man’s got to eat.
What Hawkins lacked as a father he more than made up for as a force on stage. As long as he was on the stage, which was nonstop from the 1956 release of his signature song to his death at 70 from an aneurysm on February 12, 2000.
And what he was on stage, the physically imposing former boxer, was a man who wholly occupied what he had created and, embodied by both his role as a creator and the creation itself: a player of a game that he was, beyond a shadow of a doubt, winning. This is the curse of the clown and the cure of the clown. Because while the bones through the nose and the drunken ooga-booga act were dangerously close to the kind of pop culture niggerisms that fundamentally drove comedian Dave Chappelle off of his feed when he walked away from his show and the $60 million paycheck for said show, Hawkins owned that shit. Every bit of it.
So while being vocal about how much he hated the prison it had afforded him creatively, he still managed to be creative within that prison. Well beyond competitors (a steady list of everyone covered by The Cramps over their wonderful career) and whole branches of rock that he could be credited with creating. From The Cramps to The Damned to maybe even the whole damn goth rock deal, the most significant lesson they had gathered even if not directly influenced was Hawkins’ refusal to let there be any daylight between Jalacy Hawkins, his birth name, and Screamin’ Jay Hawkins.
In other words, he didn’t feel a need to laugh with you if you were laughing at him. He didn’t feel any need to validate that this was just
an act. He didn’t exhibit any need to embrace serious
arts to take what he had done and who he was as the person who had done it, seriously.
He was as he was. Like other great American icons and here Popeye comes most quickly to mind with his I yam what I yam.
And beyond that with his hair conked to the high heavens and the gun-brandishing, drinking, philandering, tall tale telling, personal reinvention, TV, movies, later songs of note like Constipation Blues,
Feast of the Mau Mau
and Frenzy,
Hawkins rode life hard and clearly put it away wet. Regardless of how out of step he might have been in the ’50s, ’60s and, well, pretty much any time.
Yeah, it was that kind of edge-riding that made Hawkins as a ride so well worth taking. He made everyone uncomfortable and uncomfortable for as many ways and reasons as there were. Black folks for his jive-y primitivism, White folks for his unmistakable sexuality, men for the threats to their physical safety represented by a Negro with cash and a gun, and women lest they fall under the spell that got him 33 kids.
There was no corollary that did it as long and as well. Ol’ Dirty Bastard recalls him but Ol’ Dirty Bastard is dead while Screamin’ Jay lives on. In about 43 recorded pieces of history, eight films and several hundred cover versions of a song he had written but was so drunk when he recorded it that he had to re-learn it later when it became a hit.
Not just a hit but name a song covered by Nick Cave, Nina Simone, Bryan Ferry, Marilyn Manson, a disco version by Sonique, Grammy noms, Billboard charts, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll, and a Rolling Stone magazine nod for being one of the 500 greatest songs of all time.
And standing on stage in England on an OXBOW tour, well lubricated, wearing nothing but shoes and underwear, bottles exploding around my head on the wall behind me because I had just choked an audience member into unconsciousness for having totally misunderstood what’s going through the mind of a well-lubricated, near-naked man on stage, I bust loose with a little doggerel before trailing off with because you’re mine.
Screamin’ Jay Hawkins is dead. But digging deep, deep, DEEP into the writhing guts of all of that libidinal heat that marked his magnificent place in the not always hospitable space of modern music and culture, he lives on and on and on. Now, most significantly, in this giant of a book you’re about to read. It marks, with great certainty, that voodoo, hoodoo and magic happen all the time for those whose grasp of it is unapologetically long, hard and hot.
And for Hawkins—broke, flush, stoned or stone cold sober—it always was. As it most definitely should be, and sometimes even is.
—Eugene S. Robinson, author of Fight: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Ass Kicking But Were Afraid You’d Get Your Ass Kicked for Asking (Harper Collins), A Long Slow Screw (Robotic Boot), and The Inimitable Sounds of Love: A Threesome in Four Acts (Southern), also sings for OXBOW when not whiling away his time as editor-at-large for OZY.com.
PREFACE
kARma
I wish I could be who I was, before I was me.
—Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, in an interview with Gerri Hirshey in Nowhere to Run: The Story of Soul Music
We went to Chicago to do a gig; actually it was just outside the city. The venue was a bar/club, and the owner was this old Irish guy by the name of Flaherty,
remembers recording artist and record producer Robert Cutarella, who early in his career played in Screamin’ Jay Hawkins’ backup band.
"I called him old man Flaherty because he looked like he was in his seventies. He looked old but you could tell he had been a real force when he was young; a tough guy from Ireland who had made his way in America. Now, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, when we traveled, always carried a gun. So, we arrived at the club, and Flaherty had Jay’s name spelled wrong on the marquee. He spelled it Harkins instead of Hawkins. We looked at the sign and turned toward Jay. You could see steam coming out of his ears. We said, ‘Oh shit, this is not going to be good.’
"Meanwhile, the old man was just happy to meet Jay. He comes out of the club saying, ‘Hi, Mr. Harkins, how are you?’ Jay scowls.
"‘The name is Hawkins,’ he says menacingly, and he pulls his gun and points it at the man’s face. ‘You better fix my name right now.’
The old man was stunned and more than a little shaken. He exclaimed, ‘No problem, we’ll fix it right away.’ And the next thing you saw was Flaherty with his crew out there. They’re on the ladder fixing the name. We all felt terrible.
Robert continues, The interesting part was that night they had a stage with a curtain that closed. Jay decided to start the set with ‘I Put a Spell on You.’ Jay jumps in the coffin, which was lifted, and set in the middle of the stage. As the curtain opens, the smoke machine went off with colored smoke blowing everywhere. The band starts playing. This was the signal for Jay to pop out of the coffin. Nothing was happening. Then, we see the coffin starting to shake, and we hear from inside all these expletives. None of us wanted to open the coffin, because we felt it was karma for the old man who had been trying to be nice and do the right thing. Jay had been in there two minutes and finally he pops out, whiter than me. He’s so distraught, he forgets the words to the song. Ginny goes on stage and gives him some pills. Karma is a bitch.
Over a lifetime, Jay generated good karma, but that was nothing compared to all the bad karma that piled up around him.
A personable guy who made friends quickly, Jay could charm a snake out of its rattles, or a friend out of his last $10 bill. Women loved him, and he loved them back in his own eerie way. He slipped engagement rings on many a dainty finger, only to end up marrying someone else with a daintier hand. Those who did marry him had to be all things, from nursemaid to stagehand, and sometimes even procurer. He abandoned one wife, married one without divorcing a prior, and is said to have beat another wife. His musical talents were immense, but once he found a groove, he could not let go of it. He became stuck in time, expecting the large audiences that once propelled him to success, and the payout that came with such performances. As his star faded, Jay refused to adapt, or to work for rates that were in line with his new reality. After decades of similar vocal stunts and shows, he was trapped in his own tonal coffin, suffering unnecessarily due to his own larger-than-life obstinacy. When he wasn’t charming—which was often—he was dangerous, argumentative and unscrupulous. He burned a path through agents, venues, promoters and even friends. However, through the wreckage, he always took care of his musicians.
CHAPTER 1
in Nicholas Triandafyllidis’ wonderfully entertaining documentary Screamin’ Jay Hawkins: I Put a Spell on Me, we first see Jay sitting in the back of a limousine where he is being interviewed. The year is 1999, and Jay was 70 years old, but he looks like a man 20 years younger. The camera finds him in a semiclose-up, from about mid-chest upward. He wears glasses, which oddly reflect the outdoors. He sports a thin strip of a mustache, a quarter-inch wide over the top lip. A large brownish hat covers his hair; otherwise he is dressed in a well-coordinated black jacket shirt with white adornments, and a bolo tie with a black core.
Hawkins is relaxed in front of the documentary camera. He has spent most his life on stage, and this is just another extension of reaching an audience, which he does here, not through singing but storytelling. Hawkins is an off-kilter songwriter, but with the spoken word, when it comes to recounting stories of his life dating back more than 50 years, he is either a fabulist extraordinaire or a performance artist, forever trapped in a role that he created for himself, like an insect in amber.
The story Jay tells Nicholas and the cameraman is about his World War II years. It’s a yarn that he has told forever—to girlfriends, bandmates, Hollywood folk and now to this documentarian. Jay has been telling this story for more than a half-decade. To him, it wasn’t a story, but a pronounced truth, something that he had viscerally experienced, even if it only existed inside his head. The story shows his character, his bravery, his perseverance and his ability to survive. The story also shows his penchant for lying, and creating grandiose fabrications.
The version of this story that he tells the camera is longer, more elaborate and with a few life-affirming axioms—he’s 70 years old, and lessons have been learned over the years. The camera rolls and so does Jay. Like a good storyteller, he eases into it, riffing evenly, and without hesitation.
"In the Second World War, my outfit got run over by a battalion of Japanese, and I was isolated for eight months in one of these Japanese internment camps. I was a sergeant. I did a lot of killing. I didn’t have no [sense of] danger. I figured they were going to kill me, so I killed as many as I can. And it was beautiful to me to take a life, knowing that I didn’t have to go to jail; but he’s the enemy and if I don’t kill him, he’ll kill me.
"They overran our camp; we were asleep. So this guy says he’s a sergeant. He saw my stripes. He says, ‘We want to know the strength, how many people, how many mechanized.’ I said, ‘Let me tell you something, you can ask me—I was raised in America, I went to Yale, and you know asking me questions … will get no answers because I am black in America, and they don’t even tell me what time the chickens wake up. They put me over here and told me to fight, or they would kill me. So, you got me, do what you want. You want to torture me. Kill me, because I don’t know nothing because all I want to do is scream you to death. I’m going to make enough noise to drive you crazy. But you might as well kill me. I’m over here killing you, so you might as well kill me.’
"They turned around and beat me for about three months. Every morning they stuck knives in my butt, in my thighs. I got knife marks here and here [he points to spots above his eyebrows and neck]. The doctors said I have more scars than a crossword puzzle. I became a joke. They said, ‘don’t bother him, he don’t know nothing.’ When they caught the American white boys, they were mad because I wasn’t tortured. I said, ‘I was tortured before you got here, but I don’t expect you to believe it.’ They said, ‘Why don’t they ask you questions? We don’t know nothing.’ I said, ‘You’re white you gotta be right; I’m black so I gotta get back.’ They didn’t like me making jokes, but it’s the only way—to laugh when you are facing death. You got to find something to live and be happy about or you are dead anyhow.
When they did save us, the 82nd Airborne came through there and they liberated us from that camp; so I told them, ‘Give me a gun and in one hand a grenade and leave me alone for about one hour.’ They said, ‘What are you going to do?’ I said, ‘I want the [unintelligible].’ I busted in and shot three of his guards before I got to him. And then, I tied him up, and put him in a chair. He said, ‘What’s your problem? We stopped bugging you.’ I said, ‘But what you done to me, I gotta get even.’ I forced the hand grenade into his mouth, and taped it around his head. I looked at the door, yanked the pin, and ran and leaped out the door. On the ground, I watched his whole head disappear. Then I gave the guy back his gun, and I said, ‘OK, we can go now.’
Jay told so many versions of this story that it ended up being a part of his mythology. Liner notes to an anthology of his songs wrote it this way: At the age of 14, Jay joined the army. He saw plenty of fighting in the Pacific: ‘13 combat missions,’ he says.
The story becomes more confusing when the liner notes change direction later on. He helped to clean up Okinawa, where the Japanese were still fighting even when the war was over. He also saw duty in Germany and Korea.
Military records show that Jay was honorably discharged in June 1952; but he sometimes claimed to have been invalided out of the Armed Forces earlier, having sustained an injury from a hand grenade in a Korean foxhole. That version almost jibes with the tale he relayed in the early 1980s to writer Gerri Hirshey, who was informed that Jay sustained vast war injuries incurred when a grenade blew him clean out of his South Pacific foxhole.
Mike Armando, who played in Jay’s backup band during the 1970s, said Jay told him he was in the service in Korea and it felt so good when he was in the service because he could kill legally.
It didn’t make any difference how close you were to Jay, or what kind of break you might have given him, you got the same bullshit as everyone else.
In Nicholas Triandafyllidis’ documentary there is a lengthy interview with movie director Jim Jarmusch, who cast Jay in his 1989 film Mystery Train. Jim, who clearly had a warm relationship with Jay, retells the tale: When he was captured by the Japanese, he was tortured.
As a result, Jay had a big problem interacting with Asians; but in the film he had to work with two young Japanese actors. Jim had to help Jay through a reacclimation process.
Having to overcome his apprehensions about interacting with Asians because of the horrors suffered during his war years is an interesting embellishment, especially because Jay had been married to a Filipino American woman for nearly two decades.
Writer Nick Tosches spent time with Jay in 1973, writing about their time together in his book Unsung Heroes of Rock ’n’ Roll. Tosches gets very close to the truth. He [Jay] quit high school in 1945 and went to work in the Special Services division of the U.S. Army-Air Force, performing at service clubs throughout America, Germany, Japan and Korea.
Nick could have been referring to the United Service Organization’s (USO) camp shows program, which was initiated by President Franklin Roosevelt during World War II. It recruited, and fielded, live professional entertainment for military shows. As all units of U.S. Armed Services boast military bands that perform a variety of events, it is likely that someone with Jay’s musical talents would have been welcomed into this select group of musicians.
Performing in the Special Services Division was not quite like being on the front lines dodging hand grenades, or being tortured in a prison camp, yet Jay always returned to the grimmer but much more interesting tales of derring-do. Eighteen years after his interviews with Nick Tosches, Jay sat for an interview with Karen Schoemer of the New York Times. Jay told her that he went to fight in World War II in 1944: "I got caught on the island of Saipan when I found out that our drop zone was right in the middle of the enemy compound.