ARTIST SONG ALBUM
Sara Martin Teasing Brown Blues Sylvester Weaver Vol. 1 1923-27
Sylvester Weaver Penitentiary Bound Blues Sylvester Weaver Vol. 2 1927
Victoria Spivey Dirty T.B. Blues I Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 2
The Sugarman Which Woman Do I Love Texas Down Home Blues 1948-1952
John Lee Hooker Road Trouble Chicago Blues The Chance Era
Frankie Lee Sims Walking Blues Lucy Mae Blues
Kelly Pace & Convicts Rock Island Line Too Late Too Late 12
Charlie Patton Spoonful Screamin' & Hollerin' The Blues
Willie Ford & Lucious Curtis Payday Mississippi - The Blues Lineage
Ernest Rogers Baby Low Down... Boll Weavil Here - Field Recordings Vol. 16
Ollie Shepard Drunk Again Ollie Shepard Vol. 1 1927-39
Oliver Cobb The Duck’s Yas Yas Yas Male Blues Singers Twenties Vol. 1
Big Joe Turner Johnson and Turner Blues Radio Broadcasts Film Soundtracks
Todd Rhodes Your Daddy's Doggin' Around 1950-1951
Guitar Slim Lovin' Blues Living Country Blues Vol. 10
Charlie Sangster Moanin the Blues Living Country Blues Vol. 4
Lottie Murrel I Got A Gal Cross The Bottom Living Country Blues Vol. 4
Lonnie Pitchford Shake Your Moneymaker Living Country Blues Vol. 10
Joe Evans & Arthur McClain John Henry The Two Poor Boys 1927-31
Blind Willie McTell You Can’t Get Stuff... Blind Willie McTell & Curley Weaver 1949-50
Joe Morris I Hope You’re Satisfied 1950-1953
Big Mama Thornton Don't Do Me This Way Don't Freeze On Me
Olive Brown Roll Like A Big Wheel Don't Freeze On Me
Big Mama Thornton Rockabye Blues 1950-1953
Junior Wells Blues for Mayor Daley Blues Southside Chicago
Lucille Spann Cry Before I Go Cry Before I Go
Jimmy Nolen Strawberry Jam Scratchin'
Willie Headen Sunset & Vine Blame It On The Blues
Jimmy McCracklin She’s Gone 1951-1954
Guitar Nubbit I’ve Got The Blues Bluestown Story Vol. 1
Guitar Nubbit Laura Bluestown Story Vol. 1
James Cooper She Put Me Out On The Road Living Country Blues Vol. 2
Rabbit Muse Jailhouse Blues Western Piedmont Blues
James Son Thomas Cairo Blues Living Country Blues Vol. 5

Show Notes:

We cut a wide swath today, tackling blues spanning from 1925 through 1980. The half-dozen tracks from 1980 come from the series Living Country Blues USA. In 1980 two young German blues enthusiasts, Axel Kuestner and Siegfried A. Christmann, came to America with the idea to document the remaining country blues tradition. Living Country Blues USA Vol. 2With their station wagon and portable recording equipment they hit the road spending 2-1/2 months documenting blues, gospel, field hollers and work songs throughout the South. Hundreds of hours of tape was used and the resulting project came out as 14 LP’s on the German L&R label. In 1999 Evidence Records reissued some of these sides domestically as a 3-CD set. These recordings represent one of the last large scale field recording trips to canvas the south.There’s was still plenty of music to be found although it’s interesting to note that two of the great field researchers, Peter B. Lowry and George Mitchell, had both called it it quits in 1980 and after Kuestner and Christmann recordings made in the field has almost become a thing of the past. For many of the artists these were their first recordings and many never recorded again. The set also contains the debut of such artists as Cephas and Wiggins (Lowry recorded them but never issued the sides )and Lonnie Pitchford who went on to greater fame. Some like Hammie Nixon and Sam Chatmon had been pre-war recording stars. Others had learned directly from the blues masters such as Cedell Davis who played with Robert Nighthawk and Arzo Youngblood and Boogie Bill Webb who learned from the legendary Tommy Johnson. The series has finally been issued on CD although the CD’s don’t seem to be available in the US. I was able to get copies of the few CD’s I needed to complete the series and will being doing a whole show devoted to these recordings on November 9th.

Speaking of field recordings we spin some tracks recorded by John and Alan Lomax for the Library of Congress. Among those are Kelly Pace & Convicts of Cummins Farm, Gould, Arkansas singing a wonderful version of  “Rock Island Line.” This was the same prison where Lomax recorded Leadbelly and supposedly Leadbelly picked up the song after hearing this group perform it. The song would become one of his most famous numbers although he didn’t record it until 1937. Willie Ford & Lucious Curtis deliver a terrific slide driven version of Sylvester Weaver - Vol. 1“Payday.” John and Ruby Lomax were in Natchez, MS when they made recordings by Lucious Curtis and Willie Ford in October 1940. The town was still in mourning for the victims of a terrible dance-hall fire that April in which over 200 hundred people had died, including most of the Walter Barnes Band. Lucious Curtis and Willie Ford cut fourteen sides that day. From the infamous Angola Penitentiary John Lomax recorded the accomplished Ernest Rogers on the tough “Oh Oh Low Down Dirty Dog” which unfortunately is his sole recording. Moving up to the 1970′s we play a wonderful track by the obscure Rabbit Muse. Muse played ukelele and kazoo and has two 1970′s LPs on the Outlet label which have yet to be released on CD. Our selection, “Jailhouse Blues”, comes from the excellent compilation Western Piedmont Blues. This collection comes from a series of albums issued by the Blue Ridge Institute of Ferrum College, Virginia. I believe there was something like eight volumes in this series (not all blues) which have been issued on CD through the Global Village label. The bulk of the recordings are from the 1970′s and early 1980′s.

We play a a couple of twin spins by guitarists Sylvester Weaver and Guitar Nubbit. Weaver cut over two dozen selections accompanying Sara Martin through 1927.  Sara Martin began her career as a vaudeville singer around 1915 in Illinois. In 1922 she was signed to a recording contract with Okeh Records. Martin was said to have excelled as a live performer and was a star on the TOBA circuit in the early 1920′s. While primarily a popular singer Martin could get low down on the blues and was billed as the “famous moanin’ mama” as well as “the colored Sophie Tucker” reflecting her dual roles as a blues and vaudeville performer. She toured the country until the early 1930′s and recorded with Okeh until 1928. In the early 1930′s Marin retired from show business. She died in 1955. The solo “Penitentiary Bound Blues” features one of Weaver’s best vocals.

Regarding Guitar Nubbit, it was Peter Lowry who brought the obscure bluesman to the attention of collectors. I asked him about this and he offered the following recollection: “Ah, Guitar Nubbit! The year was 1964 and I was a graduate student at Rutgers in Biology. While driving around New Brunswick, NJ, I happened upon a combination shoe shine parlor/record store – it was downstairs half a flight from the front of the four-story house, on the road-side. You essentially went under the porch from the side! I found 45s of often interesting Guitar Nubbit LPstuff, and not always stuff that I heard on WNJR out of Newark.. They had Nubbit’s single on the Bluestown label (“GA Chain Gang”)… I ended up buying all that they had after hearing the first copy I purchased. Then, I sent a copy to Mike Leadbitter, editor of Blues Unlimited, for whom I was just beginning to write. They were a mystery. Someone traced the label to Chicago (!), and others tried to track down the publishing company. No luck. I don’t remember who finally got onto Skippy White, a Boston DJ, and found out that it was his label (there were a couple more Nubbit discs [Alvin Hankerson], and a couple of singles by Hibbard “Alabama” Watson). They were quite anachronistic for the day! Right up there with Atlantic recording McTell in 1949 – hardly great commercial potential, no matter how good was the music!” I’ve attached below a couple of articles I found on Nubbit.

In addition to the aforementioned Sara Martin, today’s program also spotlights a several excellent blues ladies including Victoria Spivey, Mae Glover, Big Mama Thornton, Olive Brown, Laurie Tate and Lucille Spann. “Dirty T.B. Blues” backed by a crack band is Spivey’s follow-up to her popular “T-B Blues” from 1927 and she also cut “TB’s Got Me” in 1936.  Mae Glover’s sassy, bouncy “I Ain’t Givin’ Nobody None” features the excellent guitar work and spoken accompaniment of John Byrd as Glover tells her man:

I’ll Wash you your clothes in the morning, cook jellyroll at night
When you come, home try to be so doggone nice

She cut two-dozen sides but only one short session with Byrd, a shame as those are her best sides. Moving on up we spin a pair by Big Mama Thornton; “Rockabye” finds Big Mama backed by Johnny Otis’ band with Johnny himself on vibes and some vicious fret work from Pete “Guitar” Lewis while 1967′s “Don’t Do Me This Way” finds her in more soulful vein. I know nothing about big voiced Olive Brown outside the fact that she cut a handful of sides in the the late 1940′s, 50′s and 60′s. “Roll Like A Big Wheel” is a tough rocker sporting a ripping tenor player that comes from the fine LP Don’t Freeze On Me: Independent Womens Blues on the Rosetta Label. Lucille Spann was a fine gospel-inflected singer, although she occasionally indulges in histrionics, who spent most of her in the giant shadow cast by her husband Otis, “Cry Before I Go” is the title track off her very good, and only, album cut for Bluesway in the early 1970′s. Like most of the Bluesway catalog this one remains out of print.

Also worth mention are cuts by two obscure pre-war blues artists, Oliver Cobb and Ollie Shepard. Cobb was a St. Louis trumpet player and singer who patterned himself after Louis Armstrong. He cut one 78 in 1929 for Brunswick and one 78 in 1930 for Paramount. Henry Townsend remembered him many years later: “Oliver Cobb worked around St. Louis quite a bit-he was a pretty famous guy around here. …Oliver Cobb was more jazz than blues. He could play blues, but seemingly his desire was to be in the jazz field. But even at the time he got more call for blues styles. That’s why he got a chance to go up on the session, because he kinf iof put himself into the category of playing the blues, and that’s what was in demand. …He was a great imitation of Louis Armstrong…the closest I’ve heard…” According to Townsend, Cobb drowned shortly after his June 1930 recording session with Paramount. “The Duck’s Yas Yas Yas” is a wonderful risque blues firmly in the Armstrong mold. Despite recording close to four-dozen sides between 1937 and 1941, little is known about singer/pianist Ollie Shepard.Shepard rarely rose above the ordinary by “Drunk Again”, backed by his Kentucky Boys and Lonnoe Johnson, finds him in good voice on this number which is one of best efforts.

Guitar Nubbit – Boston’s Own (Word Doc)

Guitar Nubbit – Re-Living The legend (Word Doc)

Guitar Nubbit – From Blues Unlimited 17 (Word Doc)

 

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