
Even at age 97, Perkins could still be found in clubs on most evenings. He shuffled into Antone’s on Wednesday, March 9, an honorary but unexpected guest for The Austin Chronicle Music Anthology. Dressed to the nines, with his trademark formal hat and cane, he set up his customary table near the shoe-shine stand.
I shook his hand, thanked him profusely for coming, and asked which one of the CDs he was selling was his favorite. He tapped a few times on 1995’s Pinetop Perkins with the Blue Ice Band. I started playing it soon after I heard the news but couldn’t get passed “Whiskey-Headed Woman.” It’s too heavy, too soon.
“You get a piano, I’ll play it,” he told me then. I only wish I did.
Perkins was a true, original, and beautiful bluesman to the very end.
Update: Musicians who have played with Pinetop through the years will be gathering at Antone's tonight (March 22). Doors are at 7pm, and the Peterson Brothers at 7:30pm, followed by Pinetop's friends and fellow musicians throughout the rest of the evening. There will be a $5 cover charge.