WASHINGTON (AP) - The president just couldn't say no: Mick Jagger
held out a mic almost by way of command, and soon Barack Obama was
belting out the blues with the best of them.
The East Room of the White House was transformed into an intimate
blues club on Tuesday night for a concert featuring blues all-stars of
the past, present and future - and the president himself.
The surprise performance by Obama came at the end of the playlist
when the blues ensemble was singing "Sweet Home Chicago," the blues
anthem of Obama's home town.
Buddy Guy prodded the president, saying he'd heard that the president
sang part of an Al Green tune recently, and adding, "You gotta keep it
up."
Then Jagger handed over the mic, and Obama seemed compelled to comply.
"Come on, baby don't you want to go," the president sang out twice,
handing off the mic to B.B. King momentarily, and then taking it back to
tack on "Sweet Home Chicago" at the end.
That was how Obama ended the night.
This was how he began it: Obama said sometimes there are downsides to
being the president. You can't just go for a walk, for example.
And then there are the times that more than make up for all those
frustrations, he said, like Tuesday night, when Jagger, King, Jeff Beck
and other musical giants came by the house to sing the blues.
"I guess things even out a little bit," Obama joked at the start of a
rollicking East Room concert that was electrified by Jagger and the
rest.
"This music speaks to something universal," Obama declared. "No one
goes through life without both joy and pain, triumph and sorrow. The
blues gets all of that, sometimes with just one lyric or one note. "
King, 86, arrived in a wheelchair but rose tall to kick off the night
with a raucous "Let the Good Times Roll," quickly joined by other
members of the ensemble. And he followed with "The Thrill is Gone."
From there, Obama and his wife, Michelle, were swaying in their seats
and singing along to an all-hits playlist including "St. James
Infirmary" and "Let Me Love You."
Beck slowed things down with an instrumental "Brush With the Blues,"
as anticipation built for the arrival of Jagger, who did not disappoint.
The longtime Rolling Stones frontman delivered on "I Can't Turn You
Loose" and then teamed up with Beck on "Commit a Crime." Jagger got the
president and his wife up out of their seats, swaying and clapping to
the music, and picked up the pace with "Miss You," performed with
Shemekia Copeland and Susan Tedeschi.
Obama was clearly savoring the moment, closing his eyes at times and nodding his head as he lip-synced the words.
The president rose at the end to introduce the ensemble as the "White
House Blues All-Stars" for the final song of the night, "Sweet Home
Chicago."
"For Michelle and me," the president said, "there's no blues like the
song our artists have chosen to close with - the blues from our
hometown."
With that, the ensemble wrapped up the evening with "Sweet Home
Chicago." And then Jagger handed off the mic to Obama for his
presidential coda.
In advance of the concert, Grammy-winner Keb Mo had joked during a
rehearsal break that Obama himself would perform, and there could even
be a record in the works. He joked that Obama's record would be called,
"After the second term, now I can finally get my groove on."
Maybe he wasn't joking after all.
The lineup for Tuesday's concert spanned multiple generations, from
legends like King and Guy to young faces such as 26-year-old Troy
"Trombone Shorty" Andrews and Gary Clark Jr., whose style blends hip
hop, contemporary soul and indie rock. Also performing were Warren
Haynes and Derek Trucks, with actress Taraji P. Henson as the program
host and Booker T. Jones as music director and band leader.
The blues concert will be part of the "In Performance at the White
House" series that airs on PBS. This one, designed to recognize Black
History Month, will be broadcast on Monday on PBS stations and aired
later on American Forces Network.