 Don 'Sugar Cane' Harris
 Sugar Cane's Got The Blues
 Review by Julie Knispel
Frank Zappa, John Mayall, John Lee Hooker, Little Richard...these are just a few of the varied artists who helped bring Don "Sugar Cane" Harris's violin skills the attention they deserve. It seems a bit strange that the violin is not used as much in jazz and rock as it could be; when one considers the instrument's ability to mimic so many of the emotions the human voice can evoke, the instrument's lack of presence in rock music is even more evident.
Harris is one of a very vew violinists who made the jump into rock, jazz rock and progressive music, and for most prog rock fans, his tenure with Frank Zappa's Mothers of Invention is perhaps his most visible work. Following on from his work on Zappa's seminal Hot Rats release, Harris was invited by the Berlin Jazzstage to take part in a number of events, including their violin summit and a solo/band performance. That band performance, recorded live 4-7 November 1971, was released a year later as Sugar Cane’s Got the Blues, featuring a crack backing band anchored by former Soft Machine drummer Robert Wyatt (another prog connection!).
This album has been re-released over 30 years later on the new Promising music imprint, and what a re-release it is. Again packed in a card gatefold sleeve recreating the original album design, the CD has been printed to look like a traditional vinyl LP. Extensive liner notes take the listener through the events that led up to this concert performance, including thumbnail biographies of the other band members, which included Terje Rypdal and Volker Kreigel on guitars, Wolfgang Dauner on keyboards and Neville Whitehead on electric bass. Of course, the focal point is Sugar Cane himself, with his soulful, West Coast R&B vocals battling for prominence with his electric violin licks. Promising Music should be congratulated for ensuring this classic slice of bluesy fusion remains in print for another generation to discover.
This review is available in book format (hardcover and paperback) in Music Street Journal: 2008 Volume 5 at lulu.com/strangesound.
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