Tue 21 Aug 2007
Clifford Gibson: An Appreciation
Posted by Jeff under Articles, St. Louis
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While the music of artists such as Robert Johnson, Charlie Patton and Son House, to name the most obvious, have been endlessly dissected, analyzed and debated there are many artists of comparable talent who have been left in the dust. Clifford Gibson’s name doesn’t have the romantic glow of the above artists; he wasn’t from Mississippi, didn’t die young or lead a life filled with mystery, yet he left behind a small batch of superb, highly creative recordings that deserve wider attention.
Gibson cut ten sides (four have either never been found or were never issued) in June 1929, four sides in November 1929, eight sides in December 1929 and two sides in 1931. In addition he did some session work and lasted long enough to wax a few scattered post-war sides in the 1950’s and 60’s. Gibson’s early sides can all be found on Document’s Complete Recorded Works 1929-1931 while his later sides can be found on Document’s Rural Blues Vol 2 1951 - 1962. A complete discography can be found here.
Gibson was a guitarist to be reckoned with who’s playing is unflaggingly inventive, employing a sharp, limpid tone and, while bearing a high degree of originality, was clearly influenced by Lonnie Johnson. With his unpredictable, scattershot guitar runs he also bears some comparisons to Blind Lemon Jefferson although Gibson was a more sophisticated player. As Tony Russell noted, his unique sound also “depended on his using a capo as high as the fifth or even seventh fret. That and his preference for open tunings served to separate his style from… Lonnie Johnson.” By contrast his singing is strong, clear and calm a good match for his often wry, albeit gloomy songs, which are also noteworthy for keen observation and unconventional turns of phrase.
His first session features several fine numbers including the somber “Beat You Doing It”, the mournful moan of the appropriately titled “Whiskey Moan Blues” underpinned by short staccato guitar runs with both numbers featuring impressive extended solos. “Tired Of Being Mistreated, Pt. 1 & 2″ is perhaps the session’s finest track sporting an irresistibly propulsive guitar line and Gibson’s bouncy vocals as he deliver a seemingly endless litany of invective against his woman:
Ain’t gonna cut no kindling
Ain’t gonna pack no coal
I wouldn’t spend a nickel not to save your soul
‘Cause I’m tired of being mistreated, by the way you do
Want to tell everybody that I’m down on you
You taken my money, you left me cold in hand
I’m gonna black your eye and you can tell your man
‘Cause I’m tired of being mistreated, by the way you do
Want to tell everybody that I’m down on you
Gibson’s short second session produced two outstanding numbers: “Ice And Snow Blues” and “Don’t Put That Thing On Me.” Catherine Yronwode notes that the latter track is a hoodoo number: “Although ‘that thing’ is never named, the idiomatic phrase ‘don’t put that thing on me’ refers to a specific form of conjure in which a hoodoo uses physical means — generally a powder containing minerals, roots, and herbs — to curse or jinx the victim, often, specifically, the victim’s sex life.” It’s a beautiful, dreamy number as Gibson’s laconic vocal casts a spell over the listener perfectly matching the subject matter. The former number is a prime example of Gibson’s unconventional imagery:
I’m gonna build me a castle, out of the ice and snow
So I can freeze these barefooted woman, way from around my door
Just because you were a cheater, I won’t give up the game
It don’t break my heart to win, when I lose I feel the same
All eight songs from Gibson’s third session were issued including first rate material like “Bad Luck Dice”, “Levee Camp Moan”, “Blues Without A Dime” and “Society Blues.” Gibson’s mournful vocal keenly describes the mind set of the die hard gambler in the first number while “Levee Camp Moan” is a lovely, deliberately paced number and “Blues Without A Dime” is lyrically standard but stands out due to Gibson’s heartfelt delivery. The latter number sports some of Gibson’s typically lively imagery:
When I was society, the woman would not let me be
Now I’m wild and reckless, and nobody cares for me
and
Cigarettes is my pleasure and whiskey I do crave
And some long tall and slender to follow me to my grave
Gibson’s two 1931 sides find him in the company of pianist Roosevelt Sykes. The duo make a fine team on “She Rolls It Slow” which bears a strong Lonnie Johnson stamp while “Railroad Man Blues” is lyrically similar to “Beat You Doing It” from his first 1929 session. At the same date Gibson recorded two other sides in support of R.T. Hanen which may be a pseudonym for J.D. Short. The numbers feature Will Kelly on piano who is surely Roosevelt Sykes. “She’s Got The Jordan River In Her Hips” is a superb, powerfully sung number:
Now Your motor don’t run, like no Cadillac or Ford
Run like a Packard, mama, out on the road
You got Jordan river in your hips
Daddy’s screaming to be baptized
Another fascinating collaboration from 1931 finds Gibson backing country singer Jimmie Rodgers on the unissued “Let Me Be Your Sidetrack” (the issued side features just Rodgers on guitar). Interesting not only for it’s rare black/white collaboration, the two make a pleasing team with Gibson offering an inventive guitar bed to Rodgers’ lazy blues vocal. Other session work includes supporting Ed Bell on a handful of 1929 tracks and backing Jimmy Strange on a pair of 1931 numbers.
Gibson stuck around long enough to wax two sides in 1951 and four more in 1960. The 1951 sides are acetates cut at Baul Studios in St. Louis and find Gibson in good shape but pale in comparison to his early work. Lyrically both “Sneaky Groundhog” and “Let Me Be Your Handy Man” are fairly standard but Gibson’s singing is good while his guitar work shows only faint glimpses of it’s former glory. The 1960 sides, cut for Bobbin, find Gibson in a small band setting: “The Monkey Likes To Boogie” and “It’s Best To Know Who You’re Talking To” are novelty numbers with the latter finding Gibson sounding out of touch as he tries to ape a contemporary sound. “I Don’t Want No Woman” and “No Success Blues” featuring a muted electric guitarist work much better, retaining some of the timeless quality of his early sides. Clifford Gibson died as few short years later in 1963, right at the heart of the folk/blues boom, and while highly regarded among collectors, more widespread claim has eluded him.
Tired Of Being Mistreated, Pt. 1 (MP3) ![]()
Don’t Put That Thing On Me (MP3) ![]()
Levee Camp Moan (MP3) ![]()
Whistlin’ Alex Moore certainly knew intimately about this area as he related to Oliver: “Oh they were tough joints…I’d play them all, from North Dallas to the East Side…Froggy Bottom…Central Tracks…well they had just about everything up and down there from beer joints to saloons.” Moore was a resident of Dallas all his eighty years and had spent most of his working life as a cart driver, and later, hotel porter. Moore had a long career, punctuated by large recording gaps, cutting ten sides in 1929, sessions in 1947, 1951, sessions for Arhoolie and cut an album for Rounder the year before he died in 1988. Oliver describes Moore as a “folk blues poet par excellence” and “one of the most poetic blues singers on record, Alex Moore had developed as a remarkable pianist in the purest boogie and blues tradition with an eccentric inventive flair both in his vocals and his playing.” Moore’s poetic flair is on display on “Heart Wrecked Blues” and particularly his
Moore was perhaps the last of the early Texas piano although a couple of others survived long enough to make some latter day recording. Edwin ‘Buster’ Pickens and Robert Shaw ran around with the pianists who worked the Santa Fe railroad townships. Both Robert Shaw and Buster Pickens didn’t record under their own name until the 1960’s. Pickens did some session work, most notably behind Lightnin’ Hopkins and cut one full-length record in the 1960’s for the Heritage label. Oliver describes him in the 60’s, as “virtually the last of the barrelhouse and saw-mill pianists, for his contemporaries are nearly all dead …Pickens, born in 1915, was younger then many of them though he shared the work, and small, compact and tough, he is still playing. His world has been one of railroad routes and this is reflected in many of his blues.” A prime example is his
After discussing the early Texas piano players and the Santa Fe group we turn to Dallas which was the home of a number of distinctive piano players and singers they accompanied. Among them were Texas Bill Day, Neal Roberts, Willie Tyson, Whistlin’ Alex Moore and singer Billiken Johnson. Oliver notes that “as far as is known, they were more or less contemporaries, being born at the turn of the century (Alex Moore, specifically, in 1899).” He goes on to describe Dallas during this period: “Then there were 9000 blacks in Dallas, a quarter of the population. By 1930 they totalled just short of 50,000 and made up a significant part of the whole population. The hub of the black community was an area known as Central Tracks, where honky-tonks ’saloons, beer-parlours and brothels were wedged between warehouses, furniture stores and places of entertainment like Ella B. Moore’s Park Theatre, or Hattie Burleson’s dance hall. Urban expansion in Dallas was largely due to its importance as a railhead, and many railroads whose names are familiar to blues collectors had termini there. Among them were the “Katy”, the Missouri, Kansas and Texas line; the Fort Worth and Denver; the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe; the Rock Island; and the Texas a Pacific, along whose line Central Tracks was situated.”
Both Pinetop Burks and Leon Calhoun known as Son Becky, at least on record, were more boisterous players then Shine. Both shared a single session in October 1937, each cutting six sides apiece. Oliver notes that “Black Boy Shine closely resembled Conish “Pinetop” Burks both in appearance and in piano style, at least in the recollections of their contemporaries. On record “Connie” Burks used more boogie bass figures than Shine and employed more varied approaches to his blues, a matter of some surprise to those who knew them, who considered Shine the better pianist. Burks was born and raised close by Richmond and heard all the good piano men as they passed through” Becky “…had been raised by a relative near Wharton and was known by her surname, as “Son” Becky. Becky played for country suppers and followed the barrelhouse circuit east to the Piney Woods. Here traditions met, with the Louisiana and E Texas pianists running into their Houston and Santa Fe contemporary Dave Alexander, who was known as Black Ivory King, was one of eastern group who worked the ‘Flying Crow’ line between his home to of Shreveport and Port Arthur on the Gulf Coast, where Ivory Joe Hunter knew him.” Burks lays down strong, propulsive boogie piano, displaying his skill on several fine extended solos and has a deep, expressive voice. His boogie piano is heard to good effect on “Fannie Mae Blues” a song addressed too his wife and the rollicking “Shake the Shack” which owes a strong debt to “Pinetop’s Boogie Woogie.” His “Mountain Jack Blues” features a thumping bass, ragtime flavour and is a variation of the Texas staple “”The Cows” while his
Andy Boy cut only eight sides under his own name as well as backing both Joe Pullum and Walter ‘Cowboy’ Washington. Andy Boy had a rough, expressive voice offset with his sprightly blues piano laced with ragtime flourishes. Andy Boy’s songs are filled with vivid imagery, humour, clever wordplay and a times a deep pathos. One of his most memorable numbers was the rollicking
Both Andy Boy and Rob Cooper play on the records of Joe Pullum, one of the era’s most distinctive and imaginative vocalists. As Tony Russell describes, “Pullum’s voice was pitched very high and clear, yet it always sounded relaxed, and his timing was impeccable. The effect-plaintive, appealing, penetrating-was like that of a muted trumpet solo, piercing it’s way through the blues, occasionally soaring in sudden leaps. …The piano-playing behind Pullum is always satisfying stuff, whether the work of Andy Boy (who was on the third and longest session) or that of Robert Cooper (on the other three).” Cooper’s lively, ragtimey piano can be heard to good effect on the Texas staple
I’ve always been a huge fan of barrelhouse piano, which doesn’t seem to garner as much enthusiasm among blues fans as do the guitar players. In the 1920’s and 1930’s many of these itinerant piano players were captured on record. Along with St. Louis one of the more distinctive piano blues traditions arose in Texas. The Texas pianists were thankfully fairly well recorded and they left behind some marvelous music. On the 7/29 show I’m devoting an entire show to them and thought I would provide a bit of background on this fascinating tradition.
As Paul Oliver observed: “Texas was as rich in piano blues as Mississippi was in guitar blues, which is not to say that there were no great blues guitarists in Texas, or piano men in Mississippi. A cursory glance through the discographies will emphasize the fact that a remarkable number of blues pianists came from Texas. They can be grouped into “schools”, characterized by certain similarities of style and approach, that were partly a reflection of the environments in which they worked, of their friendships and associations with other pianists, and by the isolation of Texas from other states.” One school was the so-called “Santa Fe group” who were based in the southwestern part of the state where the cities of Galveston, Houston and Richmond lie. Here was where the music thrived and pianists could be found like Pinetop Burks, Son Becky, Rob Cooper, Black Boy Shine, Andy Boy, Big Boy Knox, Robert Shaw, Buster Pickens and the singers who worked with them like Walter “Cowboy” Washington and Joe Pullum. The other important school was a cluster of pianists and singers based in Dallas such as Alex Moore, Texas Bill Day, Neal Roberts Willie Tyson, and singer Billiken Johnson.
The Texas piano tradition was first documented on record by the Thomas family. George Washington Thomas, Jr., the oldest of twelve children was born in Little Rock, AK in 1883 but had moved to Houston by 1900. As David Evans states “it was the ragtime and blues of this city and the surrounding region of southeast Texas served by the Santa Fe railroad that would shape the piano styles of various family members.” George move to New Orleans and then Chicago where he published and composed close to a hundred pieces, mostly blues with many sung on the vaudeville stages by his sister Sippie Wallace and his daughter Hociel Thomas. He recorded three piano rolls in 1924 and is though to be the man behind the pseudonym Clay Custer who recorded 

