ARTIST SONG ALBUM
Sunnyland Slim My Heavy Load Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Sunnyland Slim Johnson Machine Gun The Aristocrat Of The Blues
Sunnyland Slim Fly Right, Little Girl 1947-1948
Sunnyland Slim She Ain't Nowhere The Aristocrat Of The Blues
Muddy Waters Good Lookin' Woman The Aristocrat Of The Blues
Little Walter Blue Baby Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Little Walter I Want My Baby Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Sunnyland Slim Illinois Central When The Sun Goes Down
Sunnyland Slim Brown Skinned Woman Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Sunnyland Slim It's All Over Now Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Memphis Minnie Kidman Blues Complete Postwar recordings 1944-53
St. Louis Jimmy Trying To Change My Ways Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Sunnyland Slim Down Home Child Sunnyland Special
Sunnyland Slim Low Down Sunnyland Train Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Sunnyland Slim When I Was Young (Shake It Baby) Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Robert Lockwood Glory For Man Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Robert Lockwood I'm Gonna Dig Myself a Hole Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Robert Lockwood Pearly B Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Sunnyland Slim Worried About My Baby Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Sunnyland Slim Sad And Lonesome Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Sunnyland Slim The Devil is A Busy Man Slim's Shout
John Brim Humming Blues Rough Treatment: J.O.B. Records Story
Tony Hollins Crawling King Snake Chicago Blues Vol. 1 1939-1951
Alfred Wallace Glad I Don't Worry No More Rough Treatment: J.O.B. Records Story
Sunyland Slim It's You Baby Live In '63
Sunnyland Slim Everytime I Get To Drinking American Folk Blues Festival 1962-1965
Sunnyland Slim She Got That Jive Meat & Gravy From Bea & Baby
Leroy Foster Louella Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
Leroy Foster Blues Is Killin' Me Sunnyland Slim & His Pals
J.B Lenoir How Much More Rough Treatment: J.O.B. Records Story
Johnny Shines Livin' In The White House Rough Treatment: J.O.B. Records Story
Sunnyland Slim Get Hip To Yourself Plays The Ragtime Blues
Sunnyland Slim Bessie Mae Smile On My Face
Sunnyland Slim You Can't Have It All Be Careful How You Vote

Show Notes:

For more than 50 years Sunnyland Slim rumbled the ivories around the Windy City, playing with virtually every local luminary imaginable and backing the great majority in the studio at one time or another. He was born Albert Luandrew in Mississippi and got his start playing pump organ. After entertaining at juke joints and movie houses in the Delta, he made Memphis his homebase during the late ’20s, playing along Beale Street and hanging out with the likes of Little Brother Montgomery and Ma Rainey. He adopted his name from the title of one of his best-known songs, “Sunnyland Train.” Slim moved to Chicago in 1939 and set up shop as an in-demand piano man, playing for a spell with John Lee “Sonny Boy” Williamson before making his debut in 1947. If it hadn’t been for the helpful Sunnyland, Muddy Waters may not have found his way onto Chess; it was at the pianist’s 1947 session for Aristocrat that the Chess brothers first met Waters. Aristocrat was but one of the many labels that Sunnyland recorded for between 1948 and 1956: Hytone, Opera, Chance, Tempo-Tone, Mercury, Apollo, JOB, Regal, Vee-Jay (unissued), Blue Lake, Club 51, and Cobra all cut dates on Slim, whose vocals thundered with the same resonant authority as his 88s. In addition, his distinctive playing enlivened hundreds of sessions by other artists during the same time frame, backing artists such as Muddy Waters, Robert Lockwood, Little Walter, Johnny Shines, Memphis Minnie, St. Louis Jimmy, John Brim and many others.

Sunnyland first surfaced on record with Jump Jackson for Specialty on September 26, 1946 singing “Night Life Blues” during a ten title session.  Sunnyland made official his debut for the small Chicago label H-Tone, cutting six sides fro the label backed by Lonnie Johnson. Later in the year he cut two two-song sessions for Aristocrat labeled Sunnyland Slim and Muddy Water and labeled Sunnyland Slim and Muddy Waters Combo. Sunnyland played a large role in launching the career of Muddy Waters. The pianist invited him to provide accompaniment for his 1947 Aristocrat session that would produce “Johnson Machine Gun.” One obstacle remained beforehand: Waters had a day gig delivering Venetian blinds. But he wasn’t about to let such an opportunity slip through his fingers. He informed his boss that a fictitious cousin had been murdered in an alley, so he needed a little time off to take care of business. When Sunnyland had finished that day, Waters sang a pair of numbers, “Little Anna Mae” and “Gypsy Woman,” that would become his own Aristocrat debut 78. Sunnyland  cut one other session in 1947;  In December he eight songs for Victor under the name Doctor Clayton’s Buddy, after the popular and recently deceased Doctor Clayton.

Circa December 1947 Sunnyland backed Muddy Waters again on a four-song session for Aristocrat. In May 1948 Sunnyland backed Little Walter at his second recording date, backing Walter on “Blues Baby b/w I Want My Baby” for the Tempo-Tone label with Muddy Waters featured on the latter track. He backed Memphis Minnie circa 1949/1950 for a four-song session for Regal playing alongside Jimmy Rogers and Ernest “Big” Crawford, both who played with Muddy Waters in the early years. From that session we spin “Kidman Blues.” Sunnyland also worked with St. Louis Jimmy on three session in 1948 and 1949 and we play “Trying To Change My Ways” from that date.

Sunnyland backed Robert Lockwood on several sessions; one for J.O.B. in March 1951, a second session for Mercury in November and again for J.O.B. in 1955. Lockwood in turn backed Sunnyland on sessions for J.O.B.  and Mercury in 1951 and again for J.O.B. in 1954 plus some sessions in 1960. Lockwood and Sunnyland made a potent team and among their collaborations we hear “Down Home Child”, “Low Down Sunnyland Train”, “Glory For Man”, “I’m Gonna Dig Myself a Hole” and “Pearly B.”

In 1951 and 1952 Sunnyland backed Leroy Foster on four songs for J.O.B. with the 1951 date listed as Baby Face and Sunnyland Trio. Sunnyland also backed J.B. Lenoir on two sessions in 1952 and 1953 for the J.O.B. label. Also at that 1953 J.O.B. Sunnyland and J.B. backed Johnny Shines on two numbers including the superb topical blues “Livin’ In The White House.”

We spin several tracks form the 1960′s; In 1960 Sunnyland traveled to Englewood Cliffs, NJ to cut a session that was released on Bluesville as the LP Slim’s Shout. From that album we play his “Devil Is A Busy Man” a song he cut several times including at his 1947 but that record seems to have disappeared. The session features King Curtis on sax. Fuel 2000 released a live date (Live ’63) with guitarist J.B. Lenoir Sunnyland almost 33 years after the original session took place at Nina’s Lounge, a small club on the near west side of Chicago of which we play another Sunnyland favorite, “It’s You Baby.” Sunnyland played the AFBF in 1964, 1980 and 1981 and we play his seminal “Everytime I Get To Drinking” backed by Hubert Sumlin.

Sunnyland continued to record steadily in the 70′s and 80′s, cutting albums for Bluesway (Plays The Ragtime Blues is an excellent date but unfortunatley out-of-print), Earwig and for his own label, Airway Records (some of this material has been gathered on two fine collections on Earwig: She’s Got A Thing Goin’ On and Be Careful How You Vote). Notable records from the 1970′s include Sad And Lonesome a fine date for Jewel featuring Walter Horton and Hubert Sumlin, the solo date Travelin’ which includes some fascinating monlogues and the 1977 session Smile On My Face sporting excellent guitar work from Lacy Gibson. There are loads of reissues of Sunnyland’s early material with notable ones including Sunnyland And His Pals a 4-CD set on JSP that spans 1947 to 1955 including many seminal sessions backing other artists, Sunnyland Special: The Cobra & J.O.B. Recordings 1949-1956 and three chronological volumes on the classics label (1947-1948, 1949-1951 and 1952-1955)). Sunnyland Slim finally died of kidney failure in 1995.

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