Johnathan "The Kid" Martin: Vocals, guitars, cello
Tertius "Bean" du Plessis: Bass
Paul "Duke" van de Waal: Drums
And featuring:
Siya Makuzeni: vocals, trombone
Eddie Schutte: trombone
Jacob "Zakes" Wulana: vocals and also piano, organ and guitar on 'Rock Steady'
Samuel "Drumbo" Shoai: vocals and drums on 'Rock Steady'.
Recorded, mixed, mastered and produced by Lanie van der Walt at Wolmer Studios, May 2004.
Release information:
April 2005, Wolmer Records, F1000408 (distributed by Bowline)
Video:
Mozambique video shot on location at Mozambique, Oppikoppi Wired 2005 and Wolmer Studios. Directed and produced by Anthonie van der Walt.
The Pilgrim - A Synopsis
by Piet Botha
1. G8 ... a song that we have played for a year or two .. a kind of apocalyptic view of world politics .. middle east .. globalization ... the destruction of nature and the ozone etc .. Johnathan came with the intro and verse and we took it further to the chorus and the concept ... the strange thing is that the song became more relevant as time went by ... and today it is more relevant than ever ... .
2. The Pilgrim ... a completely different intro ... the chorus singers are Siya
Makuzeni, Jacob Wulana and Samuel Shoai. Jacob and Sam are members of the reggae band "Tidal Waves" with whom I have had the honour of sharing gigs with ... Siya is a very young "find" and was introduced to us by Lanie (v.d. Walt) she had been one of his students at the Pretoria Technikon .. the story is about a traveller who has to make certain decisions at a turning point on his journey ... and also reminisces about the road so far ..
The Zulu words at the end are the same as the English ... "We have travelled so far, with the sun behind us, but our journey has just begun ... "
3 Headlines .. also a song we have been playing live for at least a 2–3 year timeframe ... based on true circumstances .. a possible indictment of the sensational nature of newspapers ... Again Johnathan brought the intro, verse and basic idea .. we just took it a bit further and there we were ...
4 Morrison Hotel ... A blues song in the minor scale (E minor) ... the story is about a person looking for the ghost of Jim Morrison, driving away on freeways filled with memories and images of a forgotten time .. when rock and roll was filled with magic and uncertainty ... long guitar solos meant to be that way ... we deliberately tried to get the Doors organ sound (the riff in the intro that keeps returning) ..
It takes it title from The Doors album of the same name, but it is not a cover version, however, as The Doors never actually recorded a song with this title. -- Brian Currin, April 2006
5 Lady Amber ... The dangerous nature of addiction ... be it to love, whiskey or woman ... why all despair has a female persona ... "the femme fatale" in her worst manifestation ... the one you have to leave or else you will surely die ... bit of a pop chorus ... but the nature of the song does save it from commercial overtones ...
6 Rock Steady ... on this track we used Jacob and Sam to play Drums, Bass, Piano and Organ ... as well as singing ... Hammer played the guitar and sang the lead vocal ... a song about the music industry, about extreme capitalism, the solution to stay true to the nature of real music i.e. Rock Steady ... what will be will be ...
7 Russian and Chips ... originally titled "The Kid He Came From Nazareth" from the album "Astra" by S.A. band Freedoms Children (1970) .. the song evolved on the Wildebeest album "Bushrock 1" to the new title being a blend of traditional Russian "jig" violin and the hard rock ballad thrown together .. probably one of Jack Hammer's all time favourite live tunes ...
One of Ramsay MacKay's great songs, adapted way back in 1981 on the Wildebeest album "Bushrock 1" ... the late Dave Tarr put in the Russian piece on violin ... I just transposed it to guitar many years later ...
8 Bury me when ... a new song ... also very socially conscious in content ... i.e. "what did you do for your brother today ?" .. basic protest against extreme Capitalism .. and the added mystical element portraying burial traditions in ancient times ... Earth and Fire and Rain and
Sky ... man has lost touch with Nature, with the Earth Mother ...
9. Mozambique ... the garden of eden ... raped and plundered be the white man and catholic colonial devils for centuries .. land of wonder ... and great musicians .. the last chorus is a piece for Gito Baloyi ... "I often think about you Gito .. when I walk barefoot on the sand ... we must get back to the Garden ... "
10. Tribal Fence ... Another song from the Freedoms Children album "Astra" (1970). Basically a tribute to the poetry and songwriting of Ramsay Mackay and the great band that was Freedoms Children ..
The lovely "different" harmonies and textures were all put forward and implemented by our producer and brother Lanie v.d. Walt, .. and also the mix which I think is very unique ... and so we travel on ...
Comments:
'Morrison Hotel' and 'Mozambique' were re-recorded in early February 2006 at TuksFM featuring new guitarist Tonie van der Walt and released on the TuksFM Sessions CD in February 2006.
Reviews:
Rock Of Ages One of the finest rock albums to come out of this country in years is Jack Hammer's "The Pilgrim". A landmark album for the perennial blues rockers "The Pilgrim" is right on the money: production, songs and performance all come together to make one of my fave albums of the moment. Take a listen to "Headlines", "G8" and Piet Botha's stunning interpretation of the Freedom's Children gem "Tribal Fence" ... a must for any true blue rock fan! -- Benjy Mudie, Rock Of Ages, May 2005
The Independent On Saturday ... listen to 'The Pilgrim', the band's latest CD, and it'll blow you away. Real rock music, with influences of Dire Straits (when 'Morrison Hotel' started, I thought I was hearing Mark Knopfler), and the title track, 'The Pilgrim' - shades of 'Knocking on Heaven's Door'. -- Peta Lee, The Independent On Saturday, 30th April 2005
CD Wherehouse Celebrating Jack Hammer's 21st anniversary, veteran blues rock general Piet Botha guides his band of brothers beyond the valley of "boere" blues and into the realms of 70's power rock protest song ("G8") and progressive rock anthems ("The Pilgrim") that map the psychic migration away from decaying inner city ruminations ("Headline").
With Botha threading his basement blues rasp through road movie postcards ("Morrison Hotel"), hook-driven power ballads ("Lady Amber") and skanking reggae rock daydreams ("Rock Steady" with Tidal Waves), Jack Hammer's blistered jukebox blues highway chases ("Russian 'n Chips") reach their destination way beyond any operatic rock trek mentality ("Tribal Fence"). -- CD Wherehouse, April 2005
This CD begins on the outside, for sleeve design (and execution thereof) like this is something we seldom see on local releases. It costs plenty of money to print like this – in design biz they call it a digi-pack, which is basically just the cardboard CD cover and holder, instead of the plastic thing. Whatever, it looks stunning. All sepia-toned black and white imagery shot in Namibia, it resembles a string of postcards written from the desert, with the lyrics printed on the back.
It's a worthy jacket for a brilliant album, old stalwart Jack Hammer's first studio album since 1996.
'G8' kicks it into being, simultaneously a powerful musical and political statement:
"There's a leader on the run
He's got your soul to pay
And he just jumped on a plane
And he doesn't care about your pain
Oh no ... "
While the tempo is varied
throughout – with the chin-up reggae of 'Rock Steady' and slow numbers such as 'Morrison Hotel' – the intensity never wavers. Another thing that continues to astonish is Piet Botha's skill with lyrics. What initially seems sparse and conversational gradually reveals textured layers, much like the many thousands of kilometres of road this band tramples every year in pursuit of gigs.
This landscape – which starts explicitly on the cover, with a lonely road stretching towards the horizon – is cultivated throughout as the new Africa we know, the one we can reach in our 4x4s, Mozambique, Namibia, Zanzibar (on 'Bury Me When' the place where Botha wants to be buried, "and the tide can do the rest") – and where we can continuously escape to in our dreams.
Jack Hammer deserves credit for taking their style of music – unapologetic rock – and moulding it seamlessly, and to the benefit of both, with the continent they live in. It's a matter of the medium soaking up the messages in its
immediate vicinity, instead of a dreamscape-America, a faroff place that this kind of rock is often bothered with.
"We've travelled so far with the sun behind us/ but our journey has just begun", Piet sings on the title track, and you know he means it. During, before and after the recording of this album, the band also went through some trauma, which ended in long-time guitarist (and co-author of several classic 'Hammer numbers) Johnathan Martin leaving the band. Knowing this makes a certain resilience become evident in the music displayed here.
Jack Hammer has been with us since the 1980s and while they might fear to "come home in the headlines" ('Headlines'), one feels they might return even from that.
Oeg, if you're looking for a tough-love lovesong, look no further than 'Lady Amber' (I suppose by implication, the possibility exists that she might trap you):
"Your love is just like poison / ... /
It goes into my veins in my blood
In my heart in my
soul"
And it ends with a harsh backhand: "But that is all I recall and the rest is just best left unsaid." Taai, manne.
'Russian and Chips' is one of two Freedom's Children numbers on the album, featuring a blinding intro of guitars firing at full throttle. To be more precise, 'Russian and Chips' is an interpretation of Freedom's Children's tune 'The Kid He Came From Hazareth', with some random Russian folk tune thrown into the mix – first performed in this fashion by Botha's early 80s group, Wildebeest.
Lanie van der Walt's production is exemplary throughout, one even suspects he had a hand in the prog-like intro to 'The Pilgrim', where guitar, piano and Paul van de Waal's drums follow an unusual rhythm before the vocals, backing vocals included, suddenly crashes into being.
'Tribal Fence' is the other Freedom's Children (both are available on the FC album Astra, released in 1970, but now available on CD from Fresh Music) cover and brings this album to a rousing
close.
It again features interesting production work – you'll either love or hate the vocoder voice effects and that milling sound of looped/FXed organ (I think – either way, it annoyed my ear a bit) which builds and builds until the song spirals to a halt.
My favourite track is 'Mozambique', a beautiful praise-song to our neighbour, clearly a place which, like Namibia, Jack Hammer feels at home in: "Far from the black city/ where the dragon wants your soul". It's boosted by soulful backing vocals and the mention of "Gito", which one can only assume refers to legendary Mozambican bassist Gito Baloi, who was killed in Joburg last year.
This is big, open-book music for fans of finely distilled rock music which stands as Jack Hammer's best work to date, or damn near close to it. If they take another decade to make the next album and it's as good as this, then we should thank them for being such perfectionists.