Sun 19 Jul 2009
Big Road Blues Show 7/19/09: Mix Show
Posted by Jeff under Playlists
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| ARTIST | SONG | ALBUM |
|---|---|---|
| Buck Franklin w/ Teddy Bunn | Crooked World Blues | Teddy Bunn 1929-1940 |
| Fat Hayden w/ Teddy Bunn | Brownskin Gal Is The Best... | Teddy Bunn 1929-1940 |
| Banjo Ikey Robinson | Rock Pile Blues | Banjo Ikey Robinson 1929-1937 |
| Banjo Ikey Robinson | Pizen Tea Blues | Banjo Ikey Robinson 1929-1937 |
| Johnny Moore's Three Blazers | Los Angeles Blues | Los Angeles Blues |
| Little Willie Littlefield | The Moon Is Risin' | The Modern Recordings Vol. 2 |
| Leadbelly | Good Morning Blues | Leadbelly "Live" - New York, 1947 & Austin, Texas, 1949 |
| Sam "Suitcase" Johnson | Sam's Boogie | Rural Blues Vol. 2 1951-1962 |
| Willie Lane | Too Many Women Blues | Rural Blues Vol. 1 1934-1956 |
| Guitar Nubbit | I've Got The Blues | Re-Living The Legend! |
| Charlie West | Hobo Blues | Rare 1930s & '40s Blues Vol. 3 |
| The Florida Kid | Back Log Blues | Rare 1930s & '40s Blues Vol. 3 |
| Al Miller | Somebody's Been Using That Thing | Al Miller 1927-1936 |
| Howlin' Wolf | My Troubles And Me | Sun Records The Blues Years 1950-1958 |
| Jimmy Rogers | If It Ain't Me (Who Are You Thinking Of) | Complete Chess Recordings |
| Johnny Young | Lend Me Your Love | I Can't Keep My Foot From Jumping |
| Edith Wilson | Evil Blues | Johnny Dunn & Edith Wilson Vol. 1 1921-1922 |
| Mississippi Matilda | Hard Working Woman | Catfish Blues - Mississippi Blues 03 1936-1942 |
| Butterbeans & Susie | Times Is Hard | Classic Blues & Vaudeville Singers 5 |
| Blu Lu Barker | Lu's Blues | Blu Lu Barker 1938-1939 |
| Frank Busby | 'Leven Light City | Bill Gaither Vol. 2 1936-1938 |
| Bill Gaither | Pins And Needles | Bill Gaither Vol. 1 1935-1936 |
| Hopkins, Big Joe, Brownie & Sonny | Penitentiary Blues | Rediscovered Blues |
| Big Joe Williams | Louisiana Bound | Shake That Boogie |
| Big Joe Williams | Nobody Knows Chicago | Stavin' Chain Blues |
| Sam Montgomery | Mercy Mercy Blues | Blues & Gospel From The Eastern States |
| Walter Coleman | I'm Going to Cincinnati | Rare Country Blues Vol. 3 1928-1936 |
| Baby Doo | I'm Gonna Walk Your Log | Chicago Blues Vol. 2 1939-1944 |
| Gabriel Brown | I'm Gonna Take It Easy | Shake That Thing! - East Coast Blues 1935-1953 Here |
| Big Bill Broonzy | Dialogue/It Hurts Me Too | The Big Bill Broonzy Story |
| Dan Pickett | Baby Don't You Want to Go | Shake That Thing! - East Coast Blues 1935-1953 |
| John Harris | Glad And Sorry Blues | Clifford Hayes & The Louisville Jug Bands Vol. 4 |
| Ben Ferguson | Try And Treat Her Right | Clifford Hayes & The Louisville Jug Bands Vol. 4 |
Show Notes:
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| Banjo Ikey Robinson, 1929 |
Today’s mix show is drawn heavily from the Document catalog with an emphasis on their Jazz Perspective Series. Document has done an invaluable service by issuing on CD the vast majority of African-American blues, jazz, spirituals and gospel recordings made during the pre-war era and into the early post-war era. Their Jazz Perspective series encompasses obviously jazz, but also much music that meets in that middle ground where blues and jazz intersect. Among those recording we spin terrific records by Teddy Bunn, Banjo Ikey Robinson, Edith Wilson with Johnny Dunn and Clifford Hayes and The Louisville Jug Bands.
Teddy Bunn and Ikey Robinson were contemporaries of Eddie Lang and Lonnie Johnson and like those men they played both blues and jazz. Bunn played with many of the top jazzmen of that period on guitar or banjo and sometimes he provided vocals. He also backed several notable blues singers like Cow Cow Davenport, Peetie Wheatstraw, Johnnie Temple and Victoria Spivey among others. Our selections find him backing the obscure Buck Franklin and Fat Hayden. Ikey Robinson was an excellent banjoist and singer who recorded both jazz and blues from the late ’20s into the late ’30s. After working locally, Robinson moved to Chicago in 1926, playing and recording with Jelly Roll Morton, Clarence Williams, and Jabbo Smith during 1928-1929. He led his own recording sessions in 1929, 1931, 1933, and 1935. Robinson also accompanied blues singers such as Frankie “Half Pint” Jaxon, Georgia White, Eva Taylor and Bertha “Chippie” Hill among others. Recordings of Bunn and Robinson can be found respectively on the Document collections Banjo Ikey Robinson 1929-1937 and Teddy Bunn 1929-1940.
We spin a couple of fine blues tracks by the obscure singers John Harris and Ben Ferguson recorded one day apart in June 1931 both featuring Clifford Hayes on violin. These stem from the fourth volume of recordings by Clifford Hayes & Louisville Jug Bands on Document’s Jazz Perspective series spanning the years 1924 through 1931. Hayes was among the most active and energetic of the early Louisville musicians and these
four volumes are built around him but also include several other Louisville bands. The music is a fascinating mix of blues, ragtime, pop music, minstrel, coon songs and jazz.
It probably comes as no surprise that I’ve amassed a huge percentage of the Document catalog and I never fail to stumble across great forgotten artists that deserve to be better remembered. Among those we spin tracks by Charlie West, The Florida Kid, Al Miller, Bill Gaither, Frank Busby, Willie Lane and Sam “Suitcase” Johnson among others. Charlie West recorded just two brief sessions for Bluebird and Vocalion in 1937 and 1941. Carey Bell eventually married West’s daughter and West would occasionally sing in Carey’s band. Ernest Blunt AKA The Florida Kid was a fine vocalist and lyricist who waxed eight sides for Blue Bird in 1940. Little is known of Al Miller who sang and played banjo, guitar and mandolin. He cut over two-dozen sides between 1927 and 1936. Writing in The Penguin Guide To Blues Tony Russell observed: “When the history of African-American mandolin playing is written, a page will have to be reserved for Al Miller.”
Blues guitarist Bill Gaither was easily the most popular of the bunch, cutting well over a hundred sides for Decca and OKeh between 1931 and 1941. Gaither was close to the blues pianist Leroy Carr, and following Carr’s death in 1935, he recorded as Leroy’s Buddy for a time. A fine guitarist who possessed a warm, expressive voice, Gaither was also a gifted and inventive lyricist. He was often partnered with pianist George “Honey” Hill, and the duo patterned themselves after Carr and his guitarist, Scrapper Blackwell. Frank Busby recorded just one 78 in 1937 backed by Bill Gaither and Honey Hill. We spin Busby’s “‘Leven Light City”, his version of “Sweet Old Kokomo”, which shows him to have been a very expressive singer.
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The tracks by Willie Lane and Sam “Suitcase” Johnson come from two superb Document collections: Rural Blues Vol. 1 1934-1956 and Rural Blues Vol. 2 1951-1962. These collections draw together great recordings by fine obscure performers like John Lee, Monroe Moe Jackson, Julius King, Black Diamond, John Beck plus the post-war recordings of Clifford Gibson.
Also on tap today are three sides from the 1950′s and 60′s featuring the timeless Big Joe Williams. “Nobody Knows Chicago” comes from a 1958 date featuring the great J.D. Short with the duo making a potent team. J.D. and Big Joe teamed up on the 1958 Delmark albums Piney Woods Blues where he’s heard on four tracks and is on all of Stavin’ Chain. “Mean Stepfather” comes from the excellent 1960 album Tough Times which was reissued as part of Shake Your Boogie which also includes some sides from 1969. “Penitentiary Blues” comes from a jam session between Big Joe, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee. These sides have been issued many times under a myriad of titles. I’ve taken this one form the 2-CD set Rediscovered Blues which not only includes the jam session but also a very good 1959 date between Brownie and Sonny plus sixteen strong Big Joe sides from 1968.



Stan Lewis is the owner of the seminal blues/R&B/gospel/rock label Jewel-Paula-Ronn-Records. In 1948, Lewis opened a record store, Stan’s Record Shop, on Texas Street in Shreveport, LA. Lewis became a one-stop operator (other record stores would buy from him) and distributor of independent record labels: Atlantic, Chess, Modern, Specialty, and Imperial. Lewis began a mail-order operation, advertising on John R’s (and others) nightly blues/R&B show on Nashville’s WLAC-AM, whose powerful clear channel nighttime signal was heard in most parts of the country. The record entrepreneur began to write and produce R&B and rock & roll acts. Fellow Louisianan Dale Hawkins’ 1957 number 27 pop hit on Chess, “Susie Q,” was written about Lewis’ daughter Susan. Lewis founded Jewel Records in 1963 in Shreveport, LA. He started off his new Jewel label with #728, which was his store’s address (728 Texas Street in Shreveport, Louisiana), with a single by Louisiana singer/songwriter Bobby Charles. In all, Stan Lewis issued 13 singles on Jewel in 1964, were fairly forgettable. The next year, after moving some artists to the pop/country oriented Paula subsidiary, Lewis issued 14 more singles on Jewel, mostly blues-oriented material. He signed Ted Taylor, Peppermint Harris, Cookie and His Cupcakes, and Jerry McCain, among others. His first national chart record, though, was by the Carter Brothers, with “Little Country Boy” [Jewel 745], which reached #21 on the R&B charts in the summer. At the start of 1966, Stan Lewis moved into a new field with gospel. Although Jewel’s new gospel series only issued 6 singles in 1966, it would eventually include almost 300 singles. Jewel issued 21 singles in 1966 on the including blues by Frank Frost and “Wild Child” Butler. The year 1967 brought fifteen more singles and the start of an LP series. New artists included Ray Agee, Bobby Powell, Big Mac and blues Lightnin’ Hopkins. Hopkins recorded the first album on Jewel, Blue Lightnin’, and the next two as well. The Jewel Blues series only issued five singles in 1968, and nine in 1969. New artist signings for 1968- 69 included the Roman Carter (of the Carter Brothers), Little Joe Blue, and veteran Lowell Fulson. Over the next few years, Lewis would also sign blues veterans Charles Brown, Roosevelt Sykes, John Lee Hooker, Memphis
Slim, and others. The series lasted until Jewel 852 in 1977. The Jewel label had three subsidiary labels; Paula, Ronn and Sue. In later years he aquired and reissued 1950′s blues recordings of defunct labels like JOB, Cobra and Chief.
Little Joe Blues recorded for various labels, including Kent and Chess’s Checker Records division during the early to mid-’60s. In 1966 when he racked up a modest hit in 1966 with the song “Dirty Work Is Going On,” which has since become a blues standard. He had extended stints with Jewel Records and Chess from the late ’60s into the early ’70s, and recorded until the end of the 1980s. He died in 1990.


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.”

