He recorded his second solo album, Try It Before You Buy It, in 1973. Columbia rejected it; the complete version of the record would not appear until 1990. Also in 1973, he cut Triumvirate with Dr. John and guitarist and singer John Hammond Jr. (also known as BAD). An unreleased single, "Andy's Bad", was also produced for the project. During 1979–1981 he performed often with the King Perkoff Band, sometimes introducing them as the "Michael Bloomfield and Friends" outfit. Bloomfield recorded "Hustlin' Queen", written by John Isabeau and Perkoff in 1979. He toured Italy and Sweden with guitarist Woody Harris and cellist Maggie Edmondson in the summer of 1980. He sat in with Bob Dylan at San Francisco's Warfield Theatre on November 15, 1980. Bloomfield played on Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone" and "The Groom's Still Waiting at the Altar". He continued to play live dates, with his performance at San Francisco State College on February 7, 1981, being his penultimate appearance. His final performance was at Mission Ranch, Carmel, CA, approximately 48 hours before his death.

Bloomfield came from a wealthy family, and received annual income from a trust created by his paternal grandfather, which gave him $50,000 each year.

Death

Bloomfield died in San Francisco on February 15, 1981. He was found seated behind the wheel of his car, with all four doors locked. According to police, an empty Valium bottle was found on the car seat, but no suicide note was found. The medical examiner who performed the autopsy ruled the death accidental overdose, due to cocaine and methamphetamine poisoning. Bloomfield's last album, Cruisin' for a Bruisin, was released the day his death was announced.

Bloomfield originally used a Fender Telecaster, though he had also used a Fender Duo-Sonic while recording for Columbia following his 1964 signing to the label. During his tenure with the Butterfield Blues Band, he used that Telecaster on the first Butterfield album and on their earliest tours in the fall of 1965. By November he had swapped that guitar for International Submarine Band guitarist John Nuese’s 1954 Gibson Les Paul Goldtop, acquired in Boston and used for some of the East-West sessions.

In 1967, Bloomfield swapped the Goldtop for guitar repairman/musician Dan Erlewine's 1959 Les Paul Standard and $100. The Standard had proven unpopular in the late 1950s because it was deemed too heavy and expensive by rock and roll guitarists. Gibson discontinued manufacturing the model in 1960. Bloomfield used the Standard in the Electric Flag and on the Super Session album and concerts. He later switched between the it and the Telecaster, but his use of the Les Paul inspired other guitarists to use the model and spurred Gibson to reintroduce the Standard in 1968.

Bloomfield eventually lost the guitar in Canada when a club owner kept two he had left behind as partial compensation after Bloomfield cut short a round of appearances. He had been booked at the Cave in Vancouver, from Tue. Nov. 12th, 1974, for five days, until Sat. the 16th. The band played the first night but the next day Bloomfield boarded a plane and flew home to San Francisco with virtually no notice to the club, hotel, or band members; his friend Mark Naftalin found a note on a torn piece of paper in the hotel room that read, "bye bye, sorry".

Unlike contemporaries such as Jimi Hendrix and Jeff Beck, Bloomfield rarely experimented with feedback and distortion, preferring a loud yet clean, almost chiming sound, with a healthy amount of reverb and vibrato; this approach would strongly influence Jerry Garcia, who segued from a career in acoustic-based music to electric rock at the height of the Butterfield Band's influence in 1965. One of his amplifiers of choice was a 1965 Fender Twin Reverb. His solos, like those of most blues guitarists, were based in the minor pentatonic scale and the blues scale. However, he liberally used chromatic notes within the pentatonic framework, and integrated Indian and Eastern influences in his solos.

Gibson has since released a Michael Bloomfield Les Paul, replicating his 1959 Standard—in recognition of his impact on the electric blues, his role in the revived production of the guitar, and his influence on many other guitarists. Because the actual guitar had been unaccounted for so many years, Gibson relied on hundreds of photographs provided by Bloomfield's family to reproduce it. The model comes in two configurations—a Vintage Original Specifications (VOS), modified by Bloomfield's mismatched volume and tone control knobs, missing toggle switch cover, and kidney-shaped tuners replacing the Gibson original, and a faithful process-aged reproduction of the guitar as it was when Bloomfield last played it, complete with the finish smudge below the bridge and various nicks and smudges elsewhere on the body.

Selected discography

The Paul Butterfield Blues Band

  • The Paul Butterfield Blues Band (1965)
  • East-West (1966)
  • The Original Lost Elektra Sessions (unreleased recordings from 1965)
  • East–West Live (three live versions of the track "East–West", recorded 1966–1967)

The Electric Flag

  • The Trip (1967)
  • A Long Time Comin (1968)
  • The Band Kept Playing (1974)
  • Groovin' Is Easy (Released 2002)

Solo

  • It's Not Killing Me (1969)
  • Try It Before You Buy It (1973) (Not released until 1990. Additional recordings from these sessions were released on "Bloomfield: A Retrospective" in 1983)
  • If You Love These Blues, Play 'Em as You Please (1976; reissued on CD with Bloomfield-Harris)
  • Andy's Bad (1977; unreleased title soundtrack to Andy Warhol's Bad)
  • Analine (1977)
  • I'm with You Always (Recorded 1977)
  • Michael Bloomfield (1978)
  • Count Talent and the Originals (1978)
  • Between a Hard Place and the Ground (1979)
  • Bloomfield-Harris (1979)
  • Cruisin' for a Bruisin (1981)

Collaborations

  • Blueskvarter (recorded 1964, released 2007), many Swedish CDs, recordings on Swedish radio. Bloomfield plays guitar with Little Brother Montgomery, Sunnyland Slim, Yank Rachell, Eddie Boyd and others.
  • Super Session, Bloomfield, Kooper and Stills (1968). This album has been remastered, with new editions featuring several Bloomfield performances not included on the original album, including "Blues for Nothing" and "Fat Gray Cloud".
  • The Live Adventures of Mike Bloomfield and Al Kooper (1968)
  • Fillmore East: Al Kooper and Mike Bloomfield – The Lost Concert Tapes 12/13/68 (recorded 1968, released 2003)
  • Two Jews Blues (1969), with Barry Goldberg (uncredited because of contractual constraints)
  • Fathers and Sons (1969), with Muddy Waters, Otis Spann, Paul Butterfield, Donald Dunn, Sam Lay, Paul Asbell, Buddy Miles, Jeff Carp, & Phil Upchurch. Part live, part studio recordings.
  • My Labors (1969), with Nick Gravenites
  • Live at Bill Graham's Fillmore West (1969), with Nick Gravenites, Taj Mahal, Mark Naftalin. Some of the performances at the same concerts that yielded this album were included on My Labors. Those performances, except for "Winter Country Blues", are now part Live at Bill Graham's Fillmore West 1969, released in 2009 and credited to Michael Bloomfield with Nick Gravenites and Friends.
  • Medium Cool (1969), original film soundtrack featuring Bloomfield and others
  • Steelyard Blues (1973), original film soundtrack, with Nick Gravenites and others
  • Mill Valley Bunch – Casting Pearls (1973), with Bill Vitt, Nick Gravenites and others
  • Triumvirate (1973), with John Hammond and Dr. John
  • KGB (1976), Ray Kennedy (vocals), Barry Goldberg (keyboards), Mike Bloomfield (guitar), Ric Grech (bass), Carmine Appice (drums)

Selected session work

  • So Many Roads – John P. Hammond (1965)
  • Highway 61 Revisited – Bob Dylan (1965)
  • The Peter, Paul and Mary Album – Peter, Paul and Mary (1965)
  • Fresh Berry's – Chuck Berry (1965)
  • Chicago Loop (1966)
  • Cherry Red – Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson (BluesWay, 1967)
  • "Carry On"/"Ronnie Siegel from Avenue L" [45rpm single] – Barry Goldberg, with Frank Zappa – guitar, produced by Tom Wilson
  • Grape Jam – Moby Grape (1968) – played piano
  • Living with the Animals – Mother Earth (1968) (credited as "Makal Blumfeld" due to contractual constraints)
  • Dues to Pay – Wayne Talbert & the Melting Pot (1968)
  • Lord Have Mercy on My Funky Soul – Wayne Talbert (1969)
  • Fathers and Sons – Muddy Waters (1969)
  • I Got Dem Ol' Kozmic Blues Again Mama! – Janis Joplin (1969)
  • Weeds – Brewer & Shipley (1969)
  • Moogie Woogie – The Zeet Band (1970) (credited as "Fastfingers" Finkelstein)
  • Sam Lay in Bluesland – Sam Lay (1970)
  • Gandharva – Beaver & Krause (1971)
  • Brand New – Woody Herman and His Orchestra (1971)

Posthumous releases

  • Living in the Fast Lane (1981)
  • Bloomfield: A Retrospective (1983)
  • I'm with You Always (Live 1977 recordings from McCabe's Guitar Shop, Santa Monica, CA)
  • Between the Hard Place and the Ground (Different from the original 1970s LP; containing further selections from McCabe's Guitar Shop)
  • Don't Say That I Ain't Your Man: Essential Blues, 1964–1969, an anthology that includes five songs from Bloomfield's original 1964 Columbia sessions.
  • Live at the Old Waldorf (Recorded live in 1976 and 1977 by producer Norman Dayron at the Old Waldorf nightclub)
  • Barry Goldberg & Friends – Live (Features Bloomfield on guitar on most tracks)
  • Michael Bloomfield, Harvey Mandel, Barry Goldberg & Friends (with Eddie Hoh on drums) – Solid Blues (1995, St.Clair Entertainment Group)
  • The Holy Kingdom: Music of the Gospel (1998) Bloomfield performed two songs: "Wings of an Angel" and "You Must Have Seen Jesus". Other artists on the album included the Five Blind Boys of Alabama, The Cavaliers, and The Swan Silvertones.
  • If You Love These Blues by Wolkin & Keenom (Miller Freeman Books, 2000) contains a CD of 1964 recordings made by Norman Dayron
  • From His Head to His Heart to His Hands: An Audio-Visual Scrapbook (2013); a Columbia Legacy career retrospective, produced by Al Kooper, including tapes from Bloomfield's original audition for John Hammond at Columbia Records in 1964, previously unissued live performances, and a DVD that includes the documentary film Sweet Blues: A Film About Mike Bloomfield, directed by Bob Sarles and produced and edited by Bob Sarles and Christina Keating. The film premiered at the Mill Valley Film Festival in October 2013.

References

Sources

  • Michael Bloomfield – Me and Big Joe, Re/Search Publications, 1st edition 1980, . Last éd. V/Search, December 1999,
  • Jan Mark Wolkin & Bill Keenom - Michael Bloomfield – If You Love These Blues: An Oral History Backbeat Books, 1st edition September 2000 – (with CD of unreleased music – early recordings made by Norman Dayron )
  • Ken Brooks – The Adventures of Mike Bloomfield and Al Kooper with Paul Butterfield and David Clayton Thomas Agenda Ltd, February 1999,
  • Al Kooper – Backstage Passes: Rock 'N' Roll Life in the Sixties – Stein & Day Pub (1st edition February 1977)
  • Al Kooper – Backstage Passes and Backstabbing Bastards: Memoirs of a Rock 'N' Roll Survivor Billboard Books (Updated Edition – September 1998)
  • Al Kooper – Backstage Passes and Backstabbing Bastards – Hal Leonard Corporation, new edition February 2008,
  • Ed Ward – Michael Bloomfield, The rise and fall of an American guitar hero, Cherry Lane Books (1983),
  • Ed Ward – Michael Bloomfield, The rise and fall of an American guitar hero, Multiprises, LLC (updated edition – 2016), (print) (PDF edition) (epub) (Kindle)
  • David Dann – Guitar King: Michael Bloomfield's Life in the Blues, University of Texas Press (2019), (print) (ebook)
  • Official Mike Bloomfield Site
  • Me and Big Joe by Michael Bloomfield (1980)
  • Mike Bloomfield, An American Guitarist
  • Bloomfield's Doomed Field by Al Kooper
  • Michael Bloomfield Chronology & Analysis
  • Gibson's Replica of Mike Bloomfield's 1959 Les Paul Standard Guitar
  • Bloomfield notes newsletter
  • Sweet Blues: A Film About Mike Bloomfield