Marvin Pontiac

Location:
DETROIT, Michigan, US
Type:
Artist / Band / Musician
Genre:
Blues / Funk / Roots Music
Site(s):
Label:
Strange & Beautiful
Type:
Indie
MARVIN PONTIAC was hit and killed by a bus in June 1977 ending the life of one of the most enigmatic geniuses of modern music.
He was born in 1932, the son of an African father from Mali and a white Jewish mother from New Rochelle,
New York. The father's original last name was Toure but he changed it
to Pontiac when the family moved to Detroit, believing it to be a conventional
American name.
Marvin's
father left the family when Marvin was two years old. When his mother
was institutionalized in 1936, the father returned and brought the young
boy to Bamako, Mali where Marvin was raised until he was fifteen. The
music that he heard there would influence him forever.
At
fifteen Marvin moved by himself to Chicago where he became versed in
playing blues harmonica. At the age of seventeen, Marvin was accused
by the great Little Walter of copying his harmonica style. This accusation
led to a fistfight outside of a small club on Maxwell Street. Losing
a fight to the much smaller Little Walter was so humiliating to the
young Marvin that he left Chicago and moved to Lubbock, Texas where
he became a plumber's assistant.
Not
much is known about him for the next three years. There are unsubstantiated
rumors that Marvin may have been involved in a bank robbery in 1950.
In 1952, he had a minor hit for Acorn Records with the then controversial
song "I'm a Doggy." Oddly enough, unbeknownst to Marvin and his label,
he simultaneously had an enormous bootleg success in Nigeria with the
beautiful song "Pancakes."
His
disdain and mistrust of the music business is well documented and he
soon fell out with Acorn's owner, Norman Hector. Although, approached
by other labels, Marvin refused to record for anyone unless the owner
of the label came to his home in Slidell, La and mowed his lawn.
Reportedly
Marvin's music was the only music that Jackson Pollack would ever listen
to while he painted, this respect was not reciprocated. In 1970 Marvin
believed that he was abducted by aliens. He felt his mother had had
a similar unsettling experience, which had led to her breakdown. He
stopped playing music and dedicated all of his time and energy to amicably
contacting these creatures who had previously probed his body so brutally.
When
he was arrested for riding a bicycle naked down the side streets of
Slidell, La, it provided a sad but clear view of Marvin's coming years.
Marvin
held the tribal belief that having a photograph taken of yourself could
steal your soul, thus these candid shots are the only ones known to
exist.
In
1971 he moved back to Detroit where he drifted forever and permanently
into insanity.



Photos
of Marvin taken at Esmerelda State Mental Institution by fellow patient
Nephets Notrot.



WHAT
OTHER GREAT ARTISTS HAVE SAID ABOUT MARVIN PONTIAC.



"In my formative years, as an aspiring bass player, there was nothing
I listened to more than Marvin Pontiac."
-Flea
"A dazzling collection! It strikes me that Pontiac was so uncontainably prescient
that one might think that these tracks had been assembled today."
- David Bowie
"A Revelation." -Leonard Cohen



"This
record has changed my life." -John
Lurie



"Marvin
would kick your ass for nothing. A true genius, Marvin was a pure original."
-Iggy Pop
"The
innovation and possibility in this music leaves me speechless."
-Beck
"Marvin
is good." -Angelique Kidjo
".beds
of eerie, hypnotic, textural rhythm with that tragic voice of the American
male floating on top, or actually below." -
Mike Gordon, Phish
"I've always
been a fan of Mr. Pontiac's -- my housekeeper Cubby really loves it."



- Michael Stipe
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