ARTISTSONGALBUM
Garfield AkersDough Roller BluesMississippi Masters
Willie HarrisNever Drive A Stranger From Your DoorA Richer Tradition
Bukka WhiteThe Panama LimitedThe Vintage Recordings 1930-1940
Oliver CobbCornet Pleading Blues Pt. 1Male Blues of the Twenties Vol. 1
Willie "Scarecrow" OwensTravelling BluesJazzin' The Blues Vol. 1 1929-1937
Lena MatlockStop Bittin' Other Women In The BackJazzin' The Blues Vol. 1 1929-1937
Judson BrownYou Don't Know My Mind BluesPiano Blues Vol. 1 1927-1936
Mozelle AldersonTight In ChicagoBarrelhouse Mamas
Joe DeanI'm So Glad I’m Twenty One Years Old TodayPiano Blues Vol. 1 1927-1936
Big Bill BroonzyI Can't Be SatisfiedBig Bill Broonzy: All The Classic Sides
Ed BellCarry It Right Back HomeEd Bell 1927-1930
Pillie BollingShake It Like A DogEd Bell 1927-1930
Kansas City Kitty & Georgia TomHow Can You Have The Blues?Kansas City Kitty 1930-1934
Butterbeans & SusieTimes Is Hard (So I'm Savin' for a Rainy Day)Classic Blues & Vaudeville Singers Vol. 5 1922-1930
Memphis Minnie & Kansas JoeI Called You This MorningMemphis Minnie & Kansas Joe Vol. 2 1929-1930
Mississippi SheiksBoolegger’s BluesHoney Babe Let The Deal Go Down
Shreveport Home WreckersFence Breakin' BluesTexas Blues: Early Blues Masters from the Lone Star State
Georgia Cotton PickersShe's Coming Back Some Cold Rainy DayAtlanta Blues
Little Hat JonesBye Bye Baby BluesEarly Masters From the Lone Star State
Jim JacksonSt. Louis BluesJim Jackson Vol. 2 1928-1930
Blind BlakeHard Pushing PapaAll The Published Sides
Clara Burston1930 MamaBarrelhouse Women Vol. 1 1925-1930
Leola ManningLaying In The GraveyardRare Country Blues Vol.1
Bessie SmithMoan MournersThe Complete Recordings (Frog)
Freddie Redd NicholsonYou Gonna Miss Me BluesDown In Black Bottom
Speckled RedSpeckled Red’s BluesSpeckled Red 1929-1938
John OscarWhoopee Mama BluesDown In Black Bottom
J.T. Funny Papa SmithHowling Wolf Blues No. 1J. T. ''Funny Paper'' Smith 1930-1931
Blind Willie McTellTalkin' To Myself BluesThe Classic Years 1927-1940
Bayless RoseFrisco BluesBroke, Black And Blue
Troy FergusonMama You Gotta Get It FixedRare Country Blues Vol. 4 1929-c.1953
Kokomo ArnoldPaddlin' MadelineKokomo Arnold Vol. 1 1930-1935
Famous Hokum BoysPig Meat StrutBig Bill Broonzy: All The Classic Sides

Show Notes:

Blind Willie McTell, Chicago Defender Ad,
August 27, 1930

Today’s show is the fourth installment of an ongoing series of programs built around a particular year. The first year we spotlighted was 1927 which was the beginning of a blues boom that would last until 1930; there were just 500 blues and gospel records issued in 1927 and increase of fifty percent from 1926 a trend that would continue until the depression. To feed the demand other record companies conducted exhaustive searches for new talent, which included making trips down south with field recording units. Between 1927-1930 Atlanta was visited seventeen times, Memphis eleven times, Dallas eight times, New Orleans seven times and so on. The record companies advertised their records in black newspapers, mainly in the Chicago Defender, which was the nation’s most influential black weekly newspaper.

The Depression, with the massive unemployment it brought, had a shattering effect on the pockets of black record buyers. By 1931 race record sales accounted for only about 1% of total industry sales, as against 5% four years earlier. By the fall of 1929, the Depression closed down a lot of the large touring shows and theaters. Record companies went bankrupt and sales plummeted. However, by 1937, the industry recovered and by 1937 they were almost as many new blues records produced as the peak years of the 1920′s.  The depression hit the record business hard; Columbia for example was pressing 11, 000 blues and gospel records in 1927 and by May of 1930 they were pressing 2,000 records, with the number halving by year’s end. Blind Willie Johnson’s first records had sold no better than the average disc in the Columbia 1400D series – in early 1929 they would manage about 5,000 as against Barbecue Bob’s 6,000 and Bessie Smith’s 9,000 or 10,000. In mid-1930 the blind evangelist  became the star of the list – his records were still selling 5,000 copies, although Barbecue Bob was down to 2,000, Bessie Smith to 3,000 and the average release had initial sales of only just over 1,000. The other labels were hit equally hard: Paramount placed their last ad in the Chicago Defender in April, Victor placed its last ad in December, the Gennett imprint was discontinued in 1930 and Warner, who owned the Brunswick group of labels, discontinued field trips at the end of 1930. Despite the hard times, there was some superb records being produced and today we spotlight some of the big names of the blues along with several who remain utterly forgotten.

Bessie Smith, Chicago Defender Ad, July 2, 1930

With the gradual rundown of Paramount, Brunswick became the leader in the race market. Among their stable of artists was Leroy Carr and Tampa Red, among the era’s biggest blues stars. Brunswick continued to record in the field and in 1930 they made recordings in Memphis where they recorded Memphis Minnie, Robert Wilkins, Jim Jackson and Garfield Akers among others. Today we spin Jim Jackson performing a rousing version of  ”St. Louis Blues” and Garfield Akers’ “Dough Roller Blues.” Akers made his debut in 1929 backed by Joe Callicott and waxed the classic “Cottonfield Blues” Pts. 1 & 2 for Vocalion which was advertised in the February 2nd, 1930 Chicago Defender. In Knoxville they recorded Leola Manning and the Tennessee Chocolate Drops and in Dallas they recorded Gene Campbell.

In February 1930 the OKeh field unit called at Shreveport, Louisiana, to do some recording at  the request of a local radio station. while there, they recorded  a small black group who called themselves the Mississippi Sheiks. Their records went down so well that OKeh recorded 14 more numbers in San Antonio in August and a further 16 in Jackson, Mississippi, just before Christmas. The Mississippi Sheiks became the most popular string bands of the late ’20s and early ’30s. The band blended country and blues fiddle music and included guitarist Walter Vinson and fiddler Lonnie Chatmon, with frequent appearances by guitarists Bo Carter and Sam Chatmon, who were also busy with their own solo careers. The Sheiks had their first and biggest success with “Sitting on Top of the World,” which was a crossover hit and multi-million seller. The Mississippi Sheiks’ popularity peaked in the early ’30s, and their final recording session happened in 1935 for the Bluebird label.

In 1930, when most companies were considering cutting back on their race issues, the American Record Corporation entered the field. ARC had been formed in August 1929 by the merger of three small companies: the Cameo Record corporation, whose labels included Banner and Oriole, and the Pathe Phonograph and Radio Corporation, owners of Perfect. In April 1930 ARC decided to revive the Perfect race series, and this time they made sure that they used currently popular artists singing up-to -the-minute material. In April 1930 they recorded some solo blues by Georgia Tom, and some Tampa Red styled numbers by a group called The Famous Hokum Boys that included Georgia Tom and Tampa Red and Big Bill Broonzy. ARC also recorded five solo records by him and issued them under the name Sammy Sampson. In September ARC had another recording session involving once again Georgia Tom, Sammy Sampson and The Famous Hokum Boys. Hokum had been hot since Tampa Red & Georgia Tom’s “It’s Tight Like That” was a huge smash in 1928 and the labels continued to try and cash in on the craze. “Hokum” was a common vaudeville term for rowdy comedy or clever stage business.

In February 1930 Vocalion recorded sides by Memphis Minnie and Kansas Joe, with the duo hitting big with “Bumble Bee” issued in May. Columbia had recorded the duo the year before but didn’t issue all the titles. Once they saw how well “Bumble Bee” was selling they belatedly, in August 1930, issued the version they had recorded fourteen months previously.

Bukka White, Chicago Defender Ad, November 11, 1930

Among some of the other major blues artists who cut records in 1930, we spin tracks by Blind Willie McTell, Bessie Smith, Bukka White, Big Bill Broonzy and Blind Blake. White made his debut in 1930 for Victor, cutting two 78’s, one blues coupling and one gospel under the name Washington White. His “I Am In The Heavenly Way” was advertised on October 11, 1930 in the Chicago Defender. Blind Blake, one of the most popular bluesmen of the 1920’s. His only rival in popularity was Blind Lemon Jefferson, also a Paramount artist. Blake was advertised heavily in the Chicago Defender between 1926-30,with twenty-four ads appearing. He cut some 80 sides before mysteriously disappearing after a final session circa June 1932. In her heyday Bessie Smith was the highest paid black entertainer in America. She was advertised as The Empress of the Blues a title hard to argue with. She recorded prolifically between 1923-1931 with a final four-song session in 1933. Broonzy made his debut in 1928 and was an in demand session guitarist as well as waxing hundreds of sides under his own name. Today we spin Broonzy’s superb “I Can’t Be Satisfied” as well as “Pig Meat Strut” in the company of The Famous Hokum Boys.  The group was a studio outfit that consisted of Big Bill Broonzy, Georgia Tom, Frank Braswell who cut close to two-dozen sides in 1930 .

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