July 1, 2012
Innerviews: 'Double Sax Man' back on track
Kenny Kemp
Back in the musical groove, double saxophone player Ernie Dunlap of Hurricane has rebounded from a stroke he suffered nine years ago. A self-taught musician, he plays tenor sax and alto sax simultaneously. He's had the big tenor sax for 45 years.
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Kenny Kemp
"I know God ...
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"We would get in about 10, and I would head to Printers Alley and sit in with the bands down there. I got to hang out with Boots Randolph, my idol. One night, he'd already locked the doors and he saw me coming and he unlocked the door and told me to come in. We got to be pretty good buddies.

"Remember when George Daugherty wrote that song, 'I'll Pump the Gas, Jimmy, You Run the World'? The day we released that, Elvis passed away. Frank Sinatra couldn't have got a record played that day. That was God testing me, wasn't it?

"Pee Wee King and Red Stewart wrote 'Tennessee Waltz.' I got to play a show with them in Michigan. I caught them talking in the hall, and I grabbed my two saxophones and started playing 'Tennessee Waltz,' and they were amazed. That was one of the highlights of my life, playing a song for the guys who wrote the song.

"I had my stroke in 2003. I had an abscessed tooth, and the dentist wouldn't pull it. I had a root canal. Don't ever get one. They will kill you. The Bible clearly states, 'If the eye offend thee, pluck it out.' I think that goes for teeth, too.

"After the root canal, I went to Florida in total pain. On April 29, it hit me bad. Suddenly, I couldn't walk. I didn't know what was happening to me.

"I feel blessed and bitter at the same time. Does that make any sense? Boots Randolph had a brain hemorrhage, and he had enough sense to go on and die. I have days when I just don't want to deal with stuff. If I wasn't a Christian, I would have blown my brains out years ago.

"I keep pondering if it was something I did in my past that I'm paying for. My whole right side is messed up. I'm lucky to walk. CAMC General has a great rehab program. They're kind and patient, and I owe it all to them.

"I was in the hospital six weeks. It's all foggy in my mind now. I can remember just crying my heart out, but I couldn't figure out why. It ain't no fun.

"Corba brought my saxophones to me in rehab. I got so upset. I didn't want to play them. Finally, after I got home, I got up enough nerve to pick them up.

"I couldn't remember how to put a reed on a horn, and I'd done it 5,000 times. I'd been doing it since I was 12. But things gradually came back.

"I used to love to practice. After that, I had to force myself. I'm not back yet, but I'm halfway back. It was about five years before I started really playing again. Mostly I sit in with bands.

"And I've got some tracks I play on a keyboard. I sound like a one-man band. Not bad. And don't have to put up with nobody's crap. Makes it a lot simpler.

"Music is all I've done for 45 years. We sent a boy to college with our music. It was tough, but we did it. That's gone now. If not for Social Security, I'd be dead.

"I play for nothing most of the time. I told a man the other night, 'If I have a heart attack and die on stage tonight, I will die happy.' It's in my blood.

"I'm still trying. I've got this new affinity for blues that I never had before. I listen to Muddy Waters every night. I sing blues because a blues singer doesn't have to be good, just gravelly and loud.

"I wish I'd gone to Chicago where the blues were instead of Nashville. I'd have been better off. Country was the thing for me. I was misguided.

"Corba does karaoke at the St. Albans Moose. She's got to keep her hand in it. She still sings her butt off, but not with me. I'd like to try that again, but she hasn't played keyboard in 10 years.

"I'm puzzled. I know God has a purpose for me, and I'm trying to figure out what it is. I was getting ready to record an old-time gospel album when I had the stroke.

"A gospel album is my next goal. That and going to heaven, of course. A preacher asked me, 'Is your name written in the book of life?' I said, 'Yes, but I think it's in pencil and let's hope God doesn't have an eraser handy.'

"I wanted to be the next Boots Randolph, and it wasn't meant to be. But I enjoy playing in beer joints. I've met my best friends in beer joints. I've had a great life. I've been blessed and cursed like we all have.

"This life is just a test, like a vapor and it's going to be gone. All we can do is the best we can do, and try to be kind to each other."

Reach Sandy Wells at san...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-5173.

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