ARTIST SONG ALBUM
Johnny Shines Delta Pines Hey Ba-Ba-Re-Bop
Sunnyland Slim Too Late To Pray Meat & Gravy From Bea & Baby
Muddy Waters Forty Days and Forty Nights Authorized Bootleg
Two Poor Boys John Henry The Two Poor Boys 1927-1931
Leadbelly Midnight Special Alabama Bound
Kid Cole Niagra Falls Blues Rare Country Blues Vol. 3 1928-1936
Henry Thomas Shanty Blues Texas Worried Blues
Calvin Frazier Sweet Lucy 78
Johnny Fuller I Can't Succeed West Coast R&B And Blues Legend Vol.1
Jimmy Witherspoon Parcel Post Blues Hunh!
Peppermint Harris My Time After Awhile Lonesome As I Can Be
Louis Armstrong I'm Not Rough Hot Fives & Sevens (JSP)
Lonnie Johnson Fine Booze and Heavy Dues Another Night To Cry
Lonnie Johnson Lonnie's Traveling Light Spivey's Blues Parade
Lightnin' Slim Cool Down Baby Nothin' But The Devil
Eddie Boyd Where You Belong Blues Southside Chicago
Detroit Jr. Money Tree Meat & Gravy From Bea & Baby
Otto Virgial Bad Notion Blues American Primitive Vol. II
Robert Petway Catfish Blues Mississippi Blues Vol. 3 1936-1942
Son House Pearline Father Of The Folk Blues
Otis Spann & Victoria Spivey Diving Mama They Done It Again! Vol. 2
Walter Horton & Victoria Spivey Inter-Mission State Spivey's Blues Parade
Blind Willie Johnson Dark Was The Night... Slide Guitar Vol. 1 Bottles, Knives & Steel
Scrapper Blackwell Nobody Knows You... Scrapper Blackwell Vol. 3 1959-1960
Junior Wells Vietcong Blues Chicago The Blues Today!
King Biscuit Boys It's Too Bad Ann Arbor Blues Festival Vol. 4
Charlie McFadden Gambler's Blues Charlie ''Specks'' McFadden 1929-1937
Louise Johnson All Night Long Juke Joint Saturday Night
Turner Parrish The Fives Mama Don't Allow No Easy Riders Here
Sonny Boy Nelson Pony Blues Mississippi Blues Vol. 3 1936-1942
Robert Wilkins Police Sergeant Blues Masters of the Memphis Blues
Mississippi John Hurt Richland Woman Blues Live!

Show Notes:

We have a wide ranging mix on today’s program spanning the years 1925 to 1978. We feature many artists from the 1920′s and 30′s including several artists like Lonnie Johnson, Mississippi John Hurt, Eugene Powell, Victoria Spivey and Robert Wilkins who bridge both the pre-war and post-war eras. We spotlight three from Lonnie Johnson. Unlike many blues artists who recorded in the 1920′s and were later rediscovered, Lonnie was only out of the music business for a relatively short spell; he was not musically active and made no recordings between 1954 and 1959. He came back strong in the 1960′s through the assistance of Chris Albertson who got Lonnie signed to Bluesville, resulting in a number of strong recordings and an active touring schedule. Featured today are “I’m Not Rough” one of six sides Lonnie recorded with Louis Armstrong in 1927 and 1929. From the 1961 Bluesville album, Another Night To Cry, we spin “Fine Booze and Heavy Dues” and from 1963 “Lonnie’s Traveling Light” from the LP Spivey Blues Parade. The latter record is a grab bag of previously unreleased numbers recorded for the Spivey label and put together as a blues revue. Other artists include Sippie Wallace, Sonny Boy Williamson and Walter Horton among others.

Among the other artists who recorded in both the pre-war and post-war eras we spin tracks by  Son House and Mississippi John Hurt. We hear Son on the magnificent “Pearline” which like “Empire State Express” and “Louise McGhee” are newer songs. Hurt’s wonderful “Richland Woman Blues” is from a 1965 Oberlin College concert which has been issued in various configurations and sequences by several labels under different titles and with different cover art over.

Victoria Spivey, Otis Spann and Samuel Lawhorn

Victoria Spivey made her last pre-war blues in 1937 and reemerged in the early 1960′s. Shortly before she formed her own Spivey label in 1961, Spivey made a fine duo album, Woman Blues!, with  Lonnie Johnson whom she had last recorded with back in 1929. Today’s two tracks come from her Spivey LP’s; “Diving Mama” finds her teamed up with Otis Spann and comes from the album The Muddy Waters Blues Band: They Done It Again! Vol. 2 while “Inter-Mission State” finds her partnered with Walter Horton and comes from the album Spivey’s Blues Parade.

Less well known than the above artists is Eugene Powell who also recorded in the pre-war and post-war eras. In 1936, Eugene Powell, along with Mississippi Matilda, Willie Harris and some of the Chatmon family traveled to New Orleans to record for the Bluebird label. Setting up at the St. Charles Hotel, Powell cut six sides during these sessions under the moniker Sonny Boy Nelson. From that session we spin “Pony Blues.” In the 1970′s Powell began playing festivals and recording again. He died in 1998.

Among the other fine early blues performances are some excellent piano blues. Charlie McFadden was an expressive  St. Louis singer who made some superb sides between 1929 and 1937 backed by St. Louis pianists like Roosevelt Sykes (heard on our selection, “Gambler’s Blues”), Eddie Miller and “Pine Top” Sparks.
The exciting barrelhouse pianist Louise Johnson cut four songs for Paramount at the legendary 1930 session that also included sides by Charlie Patton, Willie Brown and Son House. You can hear Patton, Son House and Willie Brown shouting encouragement in the background. Turner Parrish cut eight sides between 1929 and 1933 including the the rollicking instrumental “The Fives”, a song also recorded by Hersal Thomas, Cripple Clarence Lofton and Jimmy Yancey.

Also worth mentioning is the mysterious Kid Cole of whom we play his “Niagra Fall Blues” which coincidentally makes no reference at all to the famous landmark. Kid Cole was a Cincinnati blues artist who cut four sides for Vocalion in 1928. According to Steven C. Tracy’s Going To Cincinnati, Cole most likely also recorded as Bob Coleman, cutting three sides under that name in 1929 and two sides with the Cincinnati Jug Band the same year. It’s also been suggested that he recorded under the moniker Sweet Papa Tadpole for a six song 1930 session with Tampa Red and the same year as Walter Cole for Gennett.

Also on tap are some fine Chicago blues including sides by Muddy Waters, Junior Wells, Eddie Boyd and Sunnyland Slim. Muddy’s “Forty Days And Forty Nights”comes from the new release, Authorized Bootleg: Live at the Fillmore Auditorium – San Francisco Nov 04-06 1966. This excelelnt set features the great George “Harmonica” Smith who played with Muddy for only a short stint. From the out-of-print LP Blues Southside Chicago we spin Eddie Boyd’s “Where You Belong” a session supervised by Willie Dixon. Mike Leadbitter discusses the aim of the record in his liner notes: “This album was recorded In Chicago’s Southside by Willie Dixon with one aim in mind-to provide the English enthusiast with blues played as they are played in the clubs, without gimmicks and without interfering A & R men. This album is not intended to be commercial in any way and by using top artists and top session men an LP has been produced that doesn’t sound as cold as studio recordings usually do.”

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