Sun 2 Mar 2008
Big Road Blues Show 3/2/08: Lightnin’ Special - Lightnin’ Hopkins & His Buddies
Posted by Jeff under 1940's Blues, 1950's Blues, Texas Blues
| ARTIST | SONG | ALBUM |
|---|---|---|
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | Abilene | All The Classic Sides 1946-1951 |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | Fast Mail Rambler | All The Classic Sides 1946-1951 |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | I've Been A Bad Man | All The Classic Sides 1946-1951 |
| L.C. Williams | You'll Never Miss the Water | Lightnin' Special |
| L.C. Williams | You Can't Take It with You Baby | Lightnin' Special |
| L.C. Williams | Boogie All the Time | Lightnin' Special |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | Life I Used to Live | Lightnin' Special |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | I'm Wild About You Baby | Lightnin' Special |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | Don't Need No Job | Lightnin' Special |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | Traveler's Blues | All The Classic Sides 1946-1951 |
| Frankie Lee Sims | I’m So Glad | Lucy Mae Blues |
| Frankie Lee Sims | Boogie 'Cross the Country | Lucy Mae Blues |
| Frankie Lee Sims | Send My Soul To The Devil | Walkin’ With Frankie |
| Frankie Lee Sims | Lucy Mae Blues | Lucy Mae Blues |
| Frankie Lee Sims | Walkin’ With Frankie | Ace Story, Vol. 4 |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | Mussy Haired Woman | Lightnin' Special |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | My Little Kewpie Doll | Lightnin' Special |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | Policy Game | Lightnin' Special |
| Thunder Smith | L.A. Blues | Complete Aladdin Recordings |
| Thunder Smith | West Coast Blues | Lightnin' Special |
| Thunder Smith | Cruel Hearted Woman | Lightnin' Special |
| Thunder Smith | Can't Do Like You Used To | Lightnin' Special |
| Thunder Smith | Santa Fe Blues | Lightnin' Special |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | The War is Over | Lightnin' Special |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | That's Alright | Lightnin' Special |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | They Wonder Who I Am | Lightnin' Special |
| J.D. Edwards | Cryin' | Lightnin' Special |
| J.D. Edwards | Hobo | Lightnin' Special |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | Baby! | Country Blues |
| Long Gone Miles | I Don't Need No Army | Juke Joint Blues |
| Long Gone Miles | Let Me Play With Your Poodle | Juke Joint Blues |
| Long Gone Miles | Long Gone | Country Born |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | Nothin' But the Blues | Lightnin' Special |
| Lightnin’ Hopkins | Moving On Out Boogie | Lightnin' Special |
Show Notes:
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| Luke Miles, Lightnin’ Hopkins and Chris Strachwitz |
Today’s show spotlights the music of Sam “Lightnin’” Hopkins. Outside of one 1959 side, our focus is roughly on Hopkins’ first decade of recording (1946-1956), a prolific period which found him cutting close to 200 sides geared for the black market on a variety of different labels. After his “rediscovery” by folklorist Mack McCormick in 1959 Hopkins became an international star. In addition we also play a number of Hopkins’ buddies, those that Hopkins worked with or had a connection to like Frankie Lee Sims, Luke Miles, L.C. Williams, Thunder Smith and others.
Sam Hopkins was a Texas country bluesman of the highest caliber whose career began in the 1920’s and stretched all the way into the 1980’s. His earliest blues influence was the legendary Blind Lemon Jefferson who he met around 1920, of whom Hopkins recalled “When I was just a little boy I went to hanging around Buffalo, Texas Blind Lemon he’d come and I’d just get alongside and start playing “. Throughout the ’20s and ’30s he traveled around Texas, usually in the company of recording star Texas Alexander. The pair was playing in Houston’s Third Ward in 1946 when talent scout Lola Anne Cullum came across them. She cut Alexander out of the deal and paired Hopkins with pianist Wilson “Thunder” Smith, getting the duo a recording contract for the Los Angles based Aladdin label. They recorded as “Thunder and Lightnin’”, a nickname Sam was to use for the rest of his life. A load of other labels recorded Hopkins after Aladdin, both in a solo context and with a small rhythm section: Modern/RPM (his ”Tim Moore’s Farm” was an R&B hit in 1949); Gold Star (where he hit with “T-Model Blues” that same year); Sittin’ in With (”Give Me Central 209″ and “Coffee Blues” were national chart hits in 1952) and its Jax subsidiary; the major labels Mercury and Decca; and, in 1954, some
of his finest sides for the New York based Herald label. Hopkins’ dropped out of sight for a three year stint in the late 50’s. Fortunately, folklorist Mack McCormick rediscovered the guitarist, who he presented as a folk-blues artist. Pioneering musicologist Sam Charters produced Hopkins in a solo context for Folkways Records in 1959, cutting an entire LP in Hopkins’ tiny apartment (on a borrowed guitar). The results helped introduced his music to an entirely new audience. By the early 1960’s Hopkins went from gigging at back-alley gin joints to starring at collegiate coffeehouses, appearing on TV programs, and touring Europe. He was recording more prolifically then ever, laying down albums for World Pacific, Vee-Jay, Bluesville, Bobby Robinson’s Fire label, Candid, Arhoolie, Verve and, in 1965, the first of several LP’s for Stan Lewis’ Shreveport-based Jewel logo.
L.C. Williams was a singer/tap dancer who also occasionally drummed behind Hopkins. He arrived in Houston in 1945 and was one of the many characters who hung around in Lightning’s orbit sitting on stoops drinking beer and wine, shooting the breeze with passers-by. He made his first record in 1947 with Hopkins on piano and guitar. Hopkins plays guitar on a four-song session for Gold Star in 1948 wih Williams making some final sides for Eddie’s and Freedom between 1948-1950. He died in Houston of TB in 1960.
Frankie Lee Sims claimed to be a cousin of Lightnin’ Hopkins. Sims cut his first 78s for Blue Bonnet Records in 1948 in Dallas, but didn’t taste anything resembling regional success until 1953, when his “Lucy Mae Blues” did well down south. Sims recorded fairly prolifically for Los Angeles-based Specialty into 1954, then switched to the Ace label in 1957 to cut great rockers like “Walking with Frankie” and “She Likes to Boogie Real Low.” He recorded for Bobby Robinson in late 1960 but these sides were unreleased and didn’t surface until decades later when they were released on the British Krazy Kat label. Robinson ran the NYC based labels Fire, Fury and Enjoy. Sims died at age 53 in Dallas of pneumonia.
Thunder Smith plays piano behind Hopkins on his first two sessions for Aladdin in 1946 and 1947, never achieving the success that Hopkins did. Hopkins backed Smith on a four song session for Aladdin in 1946 with Smith cutting one session apiece in 1947 for Gold Star and in 1948 for Down Town. He reportedly died in Houston in 1965.
Luke “Long Gone” Miles was born in Louisiana in 1925 and moved to Houston in 1952. In the liner notes to his only full length LP ) “Country Born” (World Pacific, 1965) he said: “I went to Houston for one reason. I went to see Lightnin’ Hopkins. That’s what I went for and that’s what I did. Lightnin’ Hopkins taught me just about everything about blues singing. The first time I ever sang in front of an audience was in 1952 with Lightnin’. The first day I met Lightnin’ he named me “Long Gone” …and I’ve been Long Gone Miles ever since.” By 1961 Miles was in Los Angles were he cut some 45’s for Smash. After the World Pacific LP he cut singles for Two Kings in 1965, Kent in 1969 before supposedly leaving L.A. in 1970 where he wasn’t heard from again.
The bulk of the Lightnin’ Hopkins sides played todaycome from two JSP box sets: Lightning Hopkins: All The Classics 1946-1951 and Lightning Special: Volume 2 of the Collected Works. In addition the latter box sets also collects a number of sides by L.C. Williams, Frankie Lee Sims and Thunder Smith.




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