Sun 27 Jun 2010
Big Road Blues Show 6/27/10: Midnight At The Barrelhouse – Johnny Otis Revisited
Posted by Jeff under Playlists, West Coast Blues
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| ARTIST | SONG | ALBUM |
|---|---|---|
| Johnny Otis | Opening Monologue & Theme Song | Vintage 1950's Broadcasts From Los Angeles |
| Jimmy Rushing | My Baby's Business | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Interview Pt. 1 | Drawn To Black Culture | |
| Johnny Otis | Midnight At The Barrelhouse | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Little Esther | Double Crossing Blues | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Interview Pt. 2 | Early Career | |
| Johnny Otis | The Jell Roll | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Johnny Otis | Boogie Guitar | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Mel Walker | Strange Woman Blues | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Interview Pt. 3 | Session Work | |
| Johnny Otis | Hangover Blues | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Little Esther | The Deacon Moves In | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Johnny Otis | New Orleans Shuffle | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Interview Pt. 4 | Harlem Nocturne | |
| The Robins | Freight Train Boogie | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Johnny Otis | All Night Long | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Linda Hopkins | Warning Blues | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Interview Pt. 5 | The Barrelhouse | |
| Pete "Guitar" Lewis | Crying With The Rising Sun | Midnight At The Barrelhouse |
| Johnny Otis | Dog Face Boy Part 1 | The Legendary Dig Masters Vol. 1 |
| Sailor Boy | Country Home | The Legendary Dig Masters Vol. 2 |
| Interview Pt. 6 | Radio & TV | |
| Johnny Otis | Number 69 Number 21 | The Legendary Dig Masters Vol. 1 |
| Interview Pt. 7 | Willie & The Hand Jive | |
| Johnny Otis | Willie & The Hand Jive | The Greatest Johnny Otis Show |
| Johnny Otis | I Believe I'll Go Back Home | Cold Shot |
| Interview Pt. 8 | 1960 & 70’s | |
| Johnny Otis | CC Rider | Cold Shot |
| Johnny Otis | Cold Shot | Cold Shot |
| Pee Wee Crayton | Things I Used To Do | The Johnny Otis Show Live at Monterey |
| Esther Phillips | Cry Me A River Blues | The Johnny Otis Show Live at Monterey |
| Interview Pt. 9 | Legacy | |
| Johnny Otis | Harlem Nocturne & Bye Bye Baby | Vintage 1950's Broadcasts From Los Angeles |
Show Notes:
Today’s show spotlights recordings by Johny Otis and the many talented performers that passed through his band or that he was involved with. This is the second show revolving around Johnny Otis and this time we celebrate the release of Midnight at the Barrelhouse, the first biography of this musical legend. Johnny has written his own books, and from a musical standpoint, most memorably, Upside Your Head!: Rhythm and Blues on Central Avenue. In addition I’ve interviewed the author, George Lipsitz, for today’s program. We take our introduction from the book:
“From the moment Johnny Otis first arrived in Los Angeles in 1943, everyday seemed to offer a marvelous new experience. He led the house band at the club Alabam and later opened his own nightclub, the Barrelhouse, in Watts. As a recording artist, he succeeded in placing fifteen songs on the best-seller charts from 1950 to 1952. Otis had one of the biggest pop music hist of all time with “Willie and the Hand Jive” in 1958. He composed top-selling songs that became successes for other artists as well including “Every Beat of My Heart” for Gladys Knight and then Pips, “So Fine” for the Fiestas, “Roll With Me Henry”, which became the “Wallflower” for Etta James, and “Dance With Me Henry” for Georgia Gibbs.” As a promoter, producer, and talent scout for Savoy, King , Duke. and other independent record labels, Otis discovered and launched the careers of Etta James, Hank Ballard, Esther Phillips, Jackie Wilson, Big Mama Thornton, Sugar Pie DeSanto, Linda Hopkins, and Little Willie John, among others. He produced big hits for Little Esther, Etta James, and Johnny Ace, as well as less commercially successful but even more artistically triumphant recordings by Charles Williams, Barbara Morrrison, and Don “Sugarcane” Harris.
As a musician, Otis played the drums on Big Mama Thornton’s recording of “Hound Dog”, on Illinois Jacquet’s “Flying Home”, and Lester Young’s “Jammin’ With Lester.” Otis provided the hauntingly beautiful vibraphone accompaniment to Johnny Ace’s “Pledging My Love”, played vibes on his own recording of “Stardust”, featuring Ben Webster on tenor saxophone, and he played piano and tambourine on Frank Zappa’s Hot Rats album. When the occasion demanded it, Otis could also play harpsichord, celesta, and timpani. As an artist, promoter, disc jockey, and television host, he brought Black music to new audiences, in the process inspiring some of his listeners to become performers themselves.
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| Billboard Magazine Ad March, 11, 1950 |
…For all his immersion in African American life and culture, Johnny Otis was not actually Black. He was a white man born as John Alexander Veliotes into an immigrant Greek family. He had grown up among Blacks and had lived much of his life as if he were Black. …At an early age Johnny felt captivated by Black culture, by the spiritual, moral, and intellectual richness he encountered in the sanctified churches that he attended with his Black playmates, by the music of gospel choirs, jazz bands, blues singers, by the way Black people dressed, danced, and talked.”
Considered by many to be the godfather of R&B, Johnny Otis – musician, producer, artist, entrepreneur, pastor, disc jockey, writer, and tireless fighter for racial equality – has had a remarkable life by any measure. Born to Greek immigrant parents in Vallejo, California, in 1921, Otis grew up in an integrated neighborhood and identified deeply with black music and culture from an early age. He moved to Los Angeles as a young man and submerged himself in the city’s vibrant African American cultural life, centered on Central Avenue and its thriving music scene. Otis began his six-decade career in music playing drums in territory swing bands in the 1930′s. He went on to lead his own band in the 1940′s and open the Barrelhouse nightclub in Watts.
Below is some background on some of today’s featured artists:
The Robins were formed when Ty Terrell Leonard and the Richard brothers Billy and Roy met at Alameda High School in San Francisco in 1945, and formed the “A-Sharp Trio” (no recordings). The trio came to Hollywood a year later, and in 1949 they were joined by Bobby Nunn, who worked at Johnny Otis’ club The Barrelhouse in Watts. The group began recording in 1949 and through 1950 cut sides for Aladdin and Savoy backed by Johnny Otis’ band.
In 1949 singer Mel Walker was discovered by Johnny Otis and joined his band, singing with Otis until around 1953. On many recordings he featured in duets with Little Esther (Phillips), and also recorded with The Robins.
In 1948 Little Esther Jones won an amateur contest in Los Angeles, singing Dinah Washington’s “Baby Get Lost” at a nightclub belonging to bluesman Johnny Otis. Otis recalls her debut at his club The Barrelhouse was hosted by popular disc jockey Hunter Hancock, and as Johnny recalls in his memoir, Upside Your Head !, “As the talent show began, Hunter called me to the microphone. Johnny he said, All week long you’ve been raving to me about a new young girl singer you’ve discovered. Yeah, Hunter, I found her singing down on 103rd. Street at the Largo Theatre. I want you all to hear her tonight, here she is, Little Esther Jones. Esther sang the blues, the crowd went nuts, and that night, thirteen-year-old Little Esther began her historic, bittersweet career. …She instantly became the teenage favorite among Black music lovers. Everywhere we went, from coast to coast, thousands of adoring fans lined up to see and hear Little Esther.” Otis brought the 13-year-old into the studio for a recording session with Modern Records and added her to his live revue. Billed as “Little Esther,” and sounding mature beyond her years, she recorded “Double Crossing Blues” with Johnny Otis, selling 400,000 copies before her 14th birthday. The record hit number one on the charts making Little Esther the youngest female singer to have a #1 hit on the R&B charts. More successful singles followed including “Mistrustin’ Blues” (#1 R&B), “Misery,” “Cupid Boogie” (#1 R&B), and “Deceivin’ Blues” (#4 R&B). A traveling review called the Savoy Records Barrelhouse Caravan of Stars hit the road for a series of one nighters across the South in early 1950 drawing huge crowds. The show included The Johnny Otis band, The Robins, Little Esther, Mel Walker, and Redd Lyte. Proving the sudden star power of Little Esther, she came in number one in a poll of the national juke box operators for best jazz and blues performer for the year of 1950.
It’s a tribute to Johnny that, just as he was there at the beginning of Esther’s career, he was there at the end. In 1984 she was admitted into a hospital for liver and kidney failure. Johnny recalls visiting her in the hospital during this period: “As I leaned towards her, my mind raced back in time. I remembered the bright-eyed, brash, talented little girl I had found in Watts years ago, and a big sob welled up in me. ‘Don’t cry, baby’, she said softly, but I cried all the way home.” She died soon after on August 7, 1984 at the age of 48. “I conducted her funeral service just as she instructed me”, Otis recalled: “No crying and bullshit eulogies”, she said. “Just my friends singing and playing and having a party.”
Pete “Guitar” Lewis joined the Johnny Otis band in 1948 and stayed until 1957. He was discovered by Johnny Otis in 1948 who signed him on the spot after he won a talent contest at his Barrelhouse Club at the Thursday Night Talent Hour. Lewis also cut a batch of fine solo sides for Federal and Peacock which also showcased his considerable singing and harmonica abilities. For Peacock he backed Johnny Ace (most notably “Pledging My Love”), Big Mama Thornton (most notably “Hound Dog”) plus others. Lewis stuck with Otis throughout the 50’s cutting some sides for Otis’ Dig label during this period. He was eventually replaced by Jimmy Nolen in 1957. Lewis went on to play with George “Harmonica” Smith with whom he recorded for Sotoplay. He died of alcohol related problems in the early 60’s.
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| Billboard Magazine Ad May, 27, 1950 |
Jimmy Nolen replaced the ailing Pete “Guitar” Lewis in the Johnny Otis Band around 1956 and played on Johnny’s big hit, “Willie And The Hand Jive” and other Capitol successes such as “Ma, He’s Making Eyes At Me” and “In The Dark.” Nolen’s guitar work is spotlighted prominently on a series of recordings Johnny and the band cut on Dig in 1956 of which we spin “Number 69/Number 21.” Striking out on his own in 1960, he formed his own band and was sought after by many of the major blues stars that came into L.A. for backing when they were without their own bands. B.B. King and T-Bone Walker would always use Jimmy and his band when they were in town without their sidemen. Jimmy played throughout California and Arizona working steadily until he decided to accept James Brown’s offer to join his band in 1965. His patented funky chicken scratch style can be heard on hits like “Papa’ Got A Brand New Bag” and many more hits between 1965 to 1983, except for the two years he left the band to go with Brown sidemen, Maceo Parker and Fred Wesley as “All the Kings Men”. He was with the band in Atlanta, GA when he suffered a fatal heart attack on December 16, 1983 at the age of 48.
We play some selections from Dig Records (originally called Ultra Records). Ultra Records was formed in 1955 by Frank Gallo, Eddie Mesner, Leo Mesner and Johnny Otis in Los Angeles California. In February 1956, the name of the label was changed to Dig Records. In 1957, Johnny Otis acquired sole ownership of the Dig Records Label. Dig Records officially issued 41 singles and 4 Long Play albums. These recordings have been issued on CD by the Ace label spread across five volumes.
We conclude the show with sides from the albums Cold Shot! and The Johnny Otis Show Live at Monterey. Though Johnny’s 1969 album Cold Shot! wasn’t much different from the straightforward R&B he’d been doing for years, it did have some updated rock, soul, and funk influences, due in large part to the presence of his teenage guitarist son, Shuggie Otis. Otis cut another album that year credited to Snatch and the Poontangs. Both albums were combined onto one CD on an Ace reissue in 2002, with the addition of two previously tracks. Monterey was an R&B oldies show in 1970 that featured artists Johnny had worked with back in the early days and they were still in fine form. The disc stars Otis, Esther Phillips, Eddie Vinson, Joe Turner, Ivory Joe Hunter, Roy Milton, Roy Brown, Pee Wee Crayton, and Johnny’s guitar wielding son, Shuggie.
-Listen to the George Lipsitz interview (edited, MP3, 30 min)













