Entries tagged with “Frank Stokes”.
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Sun 20 Jun 2010
| ARTIST | SONG | ALBUM |
| Edna Hicks | Cemetery Blues | Edna Hicks/Hazel Meyers/Laura Smith Vol. 2 1923-1927 |
| Interview Pt. 1 | Alberta Hunter & Ida Cox. | |
| Ida Cox | Graveyard Dream Blues | Ida Cox Vol. 1 1923 |
| Interview Pt. 2 | 1200 Series Launch | |
| Edna Taylor | Good Man Blues | Female Blues Singers Vol. 14 1923-1932 |
| Edmonia Henderson | Worried 'bout Him Blues | Female Blues Singers Vol. 9 1923-1930 |
| Lena Wilson | Four Flushin' Papa | Lena Wilson Vol. 1 1922-1924 |
| Interview Pt. 3 | Ma Rainey | |
| Ma Rainey | Dead Drunk Blues | Mother Of The Blues |
| Papa Charlie Jackson | I'm Looking For A Woman Who... | Papa Charlie Jackson Vol. 2 1926-1928 |
| Blind Lemon Jefferson | Rambler Blues | Best Of Blind Lemon Jefferson |
| Interview Pt. 4 | Blind Blake | |
| Blind Blake | Georgia Bound | Best Of Blind Blake |
| Ethel Waters | Down Home Blues | Ethel Waters 1921-1923 |
| Interview Pt. 5 | Selling Records | |
| Alice Moore | Black And Evil Blues | St. Louis Bessie & Alice Moore Vol. 1 1927-1929 |
| Madlyn Davis | Kokola Blues | Female Blues Singers Vol. 5 1921-1928 |
| Frank Stokes | You Shall | Best Of Frank Stokes |
| Interview Pt. 6 | Mayo Williams & Thomas Dorsey | |
| Walter "Buddy Boy" Hawkins | How Come Mama Blues | Screamin' & Hollerin' The Blues |
| Teddy Darby | Lawdy Lawdy Worried Blues | Before The Blues Vol. 1 |
| Tommy Johnson | Alcohol And Jake Blues | Chasin That Devil Music |
| Willie Brown | Future Blues | Screamin' & Hollerin' The Blues |
| Interview Pt. 7 | Talent Scouts | |
| Charlie Patton | Mississippi Boweavil Blues | Screamin' & Hollerin' The Blues |
| Charlie Spand | Good Gal | Dreaming The Blues |
| James ' Boodle-It' Wiggins | Gotta Shave 'em Dry | The Paramount Masters |
| Will Ezell | Playing The Dozen | Mama Don't Allow No Easy Riders Here |
| Jabo Williams | Jab’s Blues | Juke Joint Saturday Night |
| Bobby Grant | Nappy Head Blues | The Paramount Masters |
| Hokum Boys | Gambler's Blues | The Hokum Boys Vol. 1 1929 |
| William Moore | Ragtime Millionaire | Broadcasting The Blues |
| Geeshie Wiley & Elvie Thomas | Pick Poor Robin Clean | I Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 1 |
| Blind Joe Reynolds | Ninety-Nine Blues | Blues Images Vol. 2 |
| Edward Thompson | Showers Of Rain Blues | A Richer Tradition |
| Bumble Bee Slim | No Woman No Nickel | Bumble Bee Slim Vol. 1 1931-1934 |
| Skip James | Cherry Ball Blues | Complete Early Recordings |
| Interview Pt. 8 | Skip James | |
| King Solomon Hill | The Gone Dead Train | The Paramount Masters |
| Son House | Preachin' The Blues Pt.1 | Screamin' & Hollerin' The Blues |
Show Notes:
Paramount records recorded some of the greatest blues artists of the 20′s and early 30′s and today we kick off the second of a multi-part feature on the label. In addition we’ll also be airing and interview I did with Alex van der Tuuk the author of Paramount’s Rise And Fall. Paramount Records was founded in 1917 as a subsidiary of the Wisconsin Chair Company of Port Washington, Wisconsin. The chair company had made some wooden phonograph cabinets by contract for Edison Records. Wisconsin Chair decided to start making its own line of phonographs with a subsidiary called the “United Phonograph Corporation” at the end of 1915. It made phonographs under the “Vista” brand name through the end of the decade; the line failed commercially. In 1917 a line of phonograph records was debuted with the “Paramount” label. They were recorded and pressed by Chair Company subsidiary “The New York Recording Laboratories, Incorporated.” In its initial years, the Paramount label offered recordings of standard pop-music fare, on records recorded with below-average audio fidelity pressed in below-average quality shellac. In the early 1920′s, Paramount was still racking up debts for the Chair Company while producing no net profit. Paramount began offering to press records for other companies at low prices. The Paramount Record pressing plant was contracted to press discs for Black Swan Records. When that later company floundered, Paramount bought out Black Swan and thus got into the business of making recordings by and for African-Americans. These so-called “race music” records became Paramount’s most famous and lucrative business. Paramount’s “race record” series was launched in 1922 with its 1200 “race” series exclusively devoted to black music. The early catalog was dominated by female blues singers such as Lucille Hegamin, Alberta Hunter and Monette Moore and a bit later with records by stars Ida Cox and Ma Rainey. A large mail-order operation and weekly advertisements in black owned newspapers like the Chicago Defender were keys to the label’s early success. The label’s successful recordings by Blind Lemon Jefferson and Blind Blake shifted the focus from women singers to male. The label went on to record some of the era’s most celebrated male blues artists such as delta legends Charlie Patton, skip James, Tommy Johnson, Son House, Willie Brown plus diverse artists such as Buddy Boy Hawkins, the Mississippi Sheiks, Charlie Spand, Papa Charlie Jackson among many others. The onset of the depression crippled the recording industry and Paramount was eventually discontinued in 1932.
We open part two of our Paramount feature as we did our first, with some of the women who dominated the label’s catalog in the early years before being eclipsed by the popularity of the solo male blues artists. Today we spin tracks by Edna Hicks, Ida Cox, Edna Taylor, Edmonia Henderson, Lena Wilson Ma Rainey, Ethel Waters and others.
Blues singer Edna Hicks was born in New Orleans and was the half-sister of Lizzie Miles and her brother was the trumpet player Herb Morand. Edna left New Orleans sometime around 1916 and worked in a variety of vaudeville and musical comedy shows. She began recording in 1923 with Victor and went on to make records with Brunswick, Gennett, Vocalion, Ajax, Columbia and Paramount. In 1925 she died due to burns that she suffered in an accident involving gasoline in her home in Chicago.
Ida Cox sang in church choirs as a child in Georgia. She ran away from home in 1910 when she was a teenager and performed in minstrel and tent shows as a comedienne and singer. She toured the country throughout the Teens and 1920s sometimes singing with Jazz greats like Jelly Roll Morton and with King Oliver at the Plantation Cafe in Chicago. In 1923 she began her recording contract with the Paramount label, who billed her as the Uncrowned Queen of the Blues. She cut around ninety sides for the label through 1929.
Alongside Bessie Smith, who recorded for Columbia, Ma Rainey is one of the most celebrated woman blues singers of the era. Rainey first appeared onstage in 1900, singing and dancing in minstrel and vaudeville stage revues. In 1902 she married the song and dance man William “Pa” Rainey and from then on became known as Ma Rainey. The couple formed a song and dance act that included blues and popular songs. They toured the country, but primarily the South and became a popular attraction as part of Tolliver’s Circus, The Musical Extravaganza and The Rabbit Foot Minstrels, where Rainey befriended a young Bessie Smith. It was not until 1923 that Ma Rainey signed a recording contract with Paramount. She was billed as the “Mother of the Blues”, recording 100 songs between 1923 and 1928 for the label.
Ethel Waters was one of the most popular African-American singers and actresses of the 1920s. She moved to New York in 1919 after touring in vaudeville shows as a singer and a dancer. She made her recording debut in 1921 on Cardinal records but switched over to the Black Swan label, and recorded “Down Home Blues” and “Oh Daddy” the first Blues numbers for that company. In 1924 she cut five sides for Paramount. She frequently sang with Fletcher Henderson during the early 1920s, but by the mid-1920s Waters had became more of a pop singer.
The heyday of woman blues singers started to fade toward the mid to late 20′s. Paramount’s earliest male blues star was Papa Charlie Jackson who made his debut in 1924 followed by in 1926 by big selling artists Blind Lemon Jefferson and Blind Blake. In addition to those artists, who we profiled in part one, we spin tracks by Frank Stokes and several fine piano players including Charlie Span and Will Ezell. Frank Stokes and partner Dan Sane recorded as The Beale Street Shieks, a Memphis answer to the musical Chatmon family string band, the Mississippi Shieks. Stokes was already playing the streets of Memphis by the turn of the century, about the same time the blues began to flourish. A medicine show and house party favorite, Stokes was remembered as a consummate entertainer who drew on songs from the 19th and 20th centuries. Solo or with Sane and sometimes fiddler Will Batts, Stokes recorded 38 sides for Paramount and Victor.
Next to nothing is known about barrelhouse pianist Charlie Spand (PDF). He waxed 22 sides for Paramount between 1929 and 1931 and two final sessions for Okeh in 1940. Spand first made a name for himself on the Detroit scene of the 1920′s.
Ezell’s early career was spent as an itinerant musician playing dances, labor camps and logging mills in Louisiana, Texas and Arkansas. Ezell had a recording career that lasted for four years beginning in 1927 and he produced total of 17 tracks (including alternative takes) for Paramount Records. It was in his role as “house pianist” for Paramount that he supported artists such as Blind Roosevelt Graves, Bertha Henderson and was rumored to have worked for Bessie Smith. His success disappeared during the Depression and nothing is known of him after his last recording session in 1931.
Tags: Alice Moore, Blind Blake, Blind Lemon Jefferson, bumble Bee Slim, Charlie Patton, Edna Hicks, Ethel Waters, Frank Stokes, Hokum Boys, Ida Cox, King Solomon Hill, Ma Rainey, Papa Charlie Jackson, Paramount Records, Skip James, Son House, Teddy Darby, Tommy Johnson, Walter Buddy Boy Hawkins, Will Ezell
Sun 30 May 2010
| ARTIST | SONG | ALBUM |
| Alberta Hunter | Chirping The Blues | Alberta Hunter Vol. 1 1921-1923 |
| Interview Pt. 1 | Beginnings | |
| Monette Moore | Texas Special Blues | Monette Moore Vol. 2 1924-32 |
| Interview Pt. 2 | Early Artists | |
| Lucille Hegamin | St. Louis Gal | Lucille Hegamin Vol.2 1922-1923 |
| Trixie Smith | Praying Blues | Trixie Smith Vol. 1 1922-1924 |
| Interview Pt. 3 | House Pianists & Talent Scouts | |
| Ma Rainey | Yonder Comes The Blues | Mother Of The Blues |
| Papa Charlie Jackson | Up The Way Bound | Papa Charlie Jackson Vol. 2 1926-1928 |
| Interview Pt. 4 | Blind Lemon Jefferson | |
| Blind Lemon Jefferson | Dry Southern Blues | Best of Blind Lemon Jefferson |
| Blind Blake | Sea Board Stomp | Best of Blind Blake |
| Bo Weavil Jackson | You Can't Keep No Brown | The Paramount Masters |
| Interview Pt. 5 | Chicago Defender Ads | |
| Gus Cannon | Poor Boy, Long Ways From Home | Masters of the Memphis Blues |
| Frank Stokes | Mr. Crump Don't Like It | Best of Frank Stokes |
| Charlie Patton | Screamin' And Hollerin' The Blues | Screamin' And Hollerin' The Blues |
| Interview Pt. 6 | Charlie Patton | |
| Johnnie Head | Fare Thee Well Blues | Country Blues Collector's Items 1924 - 1928 |
| Rube Lacey | Ham Hound Crave | The Paramount Masters |
| Blind Leroy Garnett | Chain 'Em Down | Mama Don't Allow No Easy Riders Here |
| Interview Pt. 7 | Recording Process | |
| Cow Cow Davenport | Jim Crow Blues | The Essential |
| Barrel House Welch | Larceny Woman Blues | The Paramount Masters |
| Sara Martin | Death Sting Me Blues | Sara Martin Vol. 4 1925-1928 |
| Lottie Kimbrough | Rolling Log Blues | I Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 1 |
| Edith Johnson | Good Chib Blues | I Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 2 |
| George Carter | Rising River Blues | A Richer Tradition |
| Clifford Gibson | Tired Of Being Mistreated | Clifford Gibson 1929-1931 |
| Interview Pt. 8 | Grafton Studios | |
| Geeshie Wiley | Last Kind Words | Before The Blues Vol. 2 |
| Little Brother Montgomery | No Special Rider Blues | Juke Joint Saturday Nigh |
| Wesley Wallace | No. 29 | Down On The Levee |
| Mary Johnson | Key to The Mountain Blues | The Paramount Masters |
| Louise Johnson | On The Wall | Screamin' And Hollerin' The Blues |
| Mississippi Sheiks | He Calls That Religion | Blues images Vol. 3 |
| Interview Pt. 9 | Lost Paramounts | |
| Cincinnati Jug Band | Tear It Down | Rare Country Blues Vol. 3 1928-1936 |
| Roosevelt Graves | Crazy 'Bout My Baby | Blind Roosevelt Graves 1929-1936 |
Show Notes:
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| 1924 Paramount Catalog |
Paramount Records recorded some of the greatest blues artists of the 20′s and early 30′s and today we kick off a multi-part feature on the label. In addition we’ll also be airing and interview I did with Alex van der Tuuk the author of Paramount’s Rise And Fall. Paramount Records was founded in 1917 as a subsidiary of the Wisconsin Chair Company of Port Washington, Wisconsin. The chair company had made some wooden phonograph cabinets by contract for Edison Records. Wisconsin Chair decided to start making its own line of phonographs with a subsidiary called the “United Phonograph Corporation” at the end of 1915. It made phonographs under the “Vista” brand name through the end of the decade; the line failed commercially. In 1917 a line of phonograph records was debuted with the “Paramount” label. They were recorded and pressed by Chair Company subsidiary “The New York Recording Laboratories, Incorporated.” In its initial years, the Paramount label offered recordings of standard pop-music fare, on records recorded with below-average audio fidelity pressed in below-average quality shellac. In the early 1920′s, Paramount was still racking up debts for the Chair Company while producing no net profit. Paramount began offering to press records for other companies at low prices. The Paramount Record pressing plant was contracted to press discs for Black Swan Records. When that later company floundered, Paramount bought out Black Swan and thus got into the business of making recordings by and for African-Americans. These so-called “race music” records became Paramount’s most famous and lucrative business. Paramount’s “race record” series was launched in 1922 with its 1200 “race” series exclusively devoted to black music. The early catalog was dominated by female blues singers such as Lucille Hegamin, Alberta Hunter and Monette Moore and a bit later with records by stars Ida Cox and Ma Rainey. A large mail-order operation and weekly advertisements in black owned newspapers like the Chicago Defender were keys to the label’s early success. The label’s successful recordings by Blind Lemon Jefferson and Blind Blake shifted the focus from women singers to male. The label wnet on to record some of the era’s most celebrated male blues artists such as delta legends Charlie Patton, skip James, Tommy Johnson, Son House, Willie Brown plus diverse artists such as Buddy Boy Hawkins, the Mississippi Sheiks, Charlie Spand, Papa Charlie Jackson among many others. The onset of the depression crippled the recording industry and Paramount was eventually discontinued in 1932.
Like all the early race labels, Paramount’s fledgling catalog was dominated by women singers. As Tony Russell wrote: “Blinded by the aurora of Blind Lemon Jefferson and his fellow bluesman, it is easy to lose sight of the fact that for much of the ’20s blues was almost exclusively women’s business, whether on the vaudeville stage or amidst the smoking lights of the tent show.” We open the program with tracks by Alberta Hunter, Monette Moore, Lucille Hegamin, Trixie Smith and Ma Rainey. Hunter would become one of Paramount’s top sellers and her releases were given full-page ads in the Chicago Defender. According to Alex van der Tuuk, Hunter “had been working for a couple of years at the Dreamland Theater in Chicago and had started her recording career with Black Swan in New York, but had become disenchanted with them because they did so little to ptomote her records in contrast with the big buildup they were affording Ethel Waters.” She switched to Paramount in 1922 where her recordings launched Paramount’s 1200 race series. Hunter wrote a lot of her own material and her song “Down Hearted Blues”, became Bessie Smith’s first record in 1923. Hunter staid with the label through 1924, cutting around three-dozen sides.
Alongside Bessie Smith, who recorded for Columbia, Ma Rainey is one of the most celebrated woman blues singers of the era. Rainey first appeared onstage in 1900, singing and dancing in minstrel and vaudeville stage revues. In 1902 she married the song and dance man William “Pa” Rainey and from then on became known as Ma Rainey. The couple formed a song and dance act that included blues and popular songs. They toured the country, but primarily the South and became a popular attraction as part of Tolliver’s Circus, The Musical Extravaganza and The Rabbit Foot Minstrels, where Rainey befriended a young Bessie Smith. It was not until 1923 that Ma Rainey signed a recording contract with Paramount. She was billed as the “Mother of the Blues”, recording 100 songs between 1923 and 1928 for the label.
Less well remembered are Monette Moore, Lucille Hegamin and Trixie Smith. Monette Moore began her career accompanying silent films in Kansas City and then toured the vaudeville circuit as a pianist and singer. In the early 1920s she made her way to New York and became active in musical theater. Her recording career began in 1923. She cut over a dozen sides for Paramount. Lucille Hegamin was the second African-American Blues singer to release a record in 1920, just few months after Mamie Smith’s groundbreaking success with “Crazy Blues.” Hegamin’s first record was “The Jazz Me Blues” and “Everybody’s Blues” for Arto Records and it sold well enough, but her next record in 1921 “Arkansas Blues” and “I’ll Be Good But I’ll Be Lonesome” was one of the most popular records of 1921 and made her a star of the blossoming Blues scene. It was issued on several different labels including paramount. Trixie Smith was born in Atlanta and around 1915 moved north to New York to work in show business. At first she worked in minstrel shows and on the TOBA vaudeville circuit. In 1922 Smith made her first recordings for the Black Swan label and later that year she won a blues singing contest in New York beating out Lucille Hegamin and others with her song “Trixie’s Blues.” In 1924 Smith made her debut for Paramount, cutting twenty sides for the label through 1926.
The heyday of woman blues singers started to fade toward the mid to late 20′s. Paramount’s earliest male blues star was Papa Charlie Jackson who made his debut in 1924 followed by in 1926 by big selling artists Blind Lemon Jefferson and Blind Blake as well as the lesser known, but superb slide player, Bo Weavil Jackson who’s records made virtually no impact among the blues buying public.
“Papa” Charlie Jackson was a six-string banjo who was one of the earliest and most successful of the solo blues singer/instrumentalists. ackson settled in Chicago on the famed Maxwell Street around 1920 where he began earning a living by playing on street corners and at house parties. In 1924 he cut his first solo sides “Papa’s Lawdy Blues” and “Airy Man Blues” for the Paramount label. During this period Jackson also became a sideman with many of the hot groups in and around Chicago.He also recorded with Ma Rainey and Ida Cox before his subsequent death around 1938.
In 1925 Blind Lemon Jefferson was discovered by a Paramount recording scout and taken to Chicago to make his first records either in December 1925 or January 1926. Jefferson was the first male blues artist to attain a national audience. His extremely successful recording career continued until 1929 when he died under mysterious circumstances. He recorded over 100 sides all for the Paramount label, except one 78 for OKeh. Forty-four ads for his records in the Chicago Defender between 1926 and 1930.
Blind Blake was one of the most popular bluesmen of the 1920’s with his only rival in popularity was label mate Blind Lemon Jefferson. Blake’s records were advertised heavily in the Chicago Defender with twenty-four ads featured. And as Tony Russell sums up: “Blind Blake’s most remarkable achievement as a recording artist was that in a career lasting almost six years, in which he made about 80 sides, he was never reduced, whether by slipping skill, waning inspiration or the single-mindedness of record company executives, from a multifaceted musician to a formulaic blues player.”
Paramount is famous for its roster of delta blues artists which boasted Son House, Charlie Patton, Tommy Johnson, Ishman Bracey, Skip James, Willie Brown, Louise Johnson, Geeshie Wiley and Rube Lacy. Credit for much of this talent goes to Henry C. Spier, a music store owner from Jackson, Mississippi who scoured the south for talent and was responsible for getting Son House, Skip James and Charlie Patton on record. Paramount asked Gennett to record 14 tunes by Patton at their Richmond, Indiana studio in June 1929. “Pony Blues” b/w “Banty Rooster Blues” was the first issued and was a hit. In all, Patton recorded 38 numbers for Paramount in 1929. Patton cut one more session for Paramount in 1930 and three final sessions for Vocalion in 1934.
In 1930, Arthur Laibley who had produced Patton’s last session for Paramount, stopped in Lula to arrange another session with Patton. Patton was famous throughout the Delta and had already recorded close to forty sides for Paramount. Patton told Laibley about House and about two other musicians Willie Brown and Louise Johnson, setting the stage for one of the blues most legendary recording sessions. The group headed to the Paramount studios in Grafton, WI, where House recorded six songs at the session, Brown four (“Kicking In My Sleep Blues b/w Window Blues” has never been found – or has it?), Johnson four and four by Patton backed by Brown.
-Listen to the Alex van der Tuuk interview (edited, MP3, 1 hr.)
Tags: Alberta Hunter, Blind Blake, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Charlie Patton, Clifford Gibson, Frank Stokes, Geeshie Wiley, Gus Cannon, Little Brother Montgomery, Lucille Hegamin, Ma Rainey, Mississippi Sheiks, Papa Charlie Jackson, Paramount Records, Sara Martin, Trixie Smith
Sun 10 Jan 2010
Posted by Jeff under Playlists
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| ARTIST | SONG | ALBUM |
| Alabama Sheiks | Travelin' Railroad Man Blues | Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Andrew & Jim Baxter | K. C. Railroad Blues | Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Bo Carter | East Jackson Blues | Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Bo Carter | Tellin' You ‘Bout It | Bo Carter Vol. 2 1931-1934 |
| Frank Stokes | Right Now | Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Frank Stokes | I'm Going Away Blues | Best Of Frank Stokes |
| Jack Kelly | World Wandering Blues | Memphis Shakedown |
| Mobile Strugglers | Memphis Blues | Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Peg Leg Howell | New Jelly Roll Blues | Atlanta Blues |
| Peg Leg Howell | Beaver Slide Rag | Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Johnson Boys | Violin Blues | Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Tom Nelson | Blue Coat Blues | Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Tommie Bradley & James Cole | Adam And Eve | Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Alec Johnson | Sister Maude Mule | Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow! |
| Charlie McCoy | Your Valves Need Grinding | Charlie McCoy 1928-1932 |
| Joe McCoy | Look Who's Coming Down The Road | Charlie & Joe McCoy Vol. 1 |
| Henry Williams & Eddie Anthony | Lonesome Blues | Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Henry Williams & Eddie Anthony | Georgia Crawl | Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow! |
| Mississippi Sheiks | Bed Spring Poker | Mississippi Sheiks Vol. 3 1931 |
| Mississippi Sheiks | Bootlegger's Blues | Mississippi Sheiks Vol. 1 1930 |
| Big Joe Williams | Worried Man Blues | Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow! |
| State Street Boys | Rustlin' Man | Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow! |
| Kansas City Blues Stompers | String Band Blues | Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow! |
| Peetie Wheatstraw | Throw Me In The Alley | Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow! |
| Tennessee Chocolate Drops | Knox County Stomp | Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow! |
| Sloppy Henry | Long Tall, Disconnected Mama | Atlanta Blues |
| Macon Ed & Tampa Joe | Wringing That Thing | Peg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930 |
| Macon Ed & Tampa Joe | Worrying Blues | Peg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930 |
| Henry "Son" Sims | Tell Me Man Blues | Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Charlie Patton | Runnin' Wild Blues | Screamin' & Hollerin' The Blues |
| Mississippi Sheiks | Lazy Lazy River | Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow! |
| Texas Alexander | Frost Texas Tornado Blues | Texas Alexander Vol. 3 |
| Wilson Jones (Stavin' Chain) | Can't Put My Shoes On | Field Recordings Vol. 16 1934-1940 |
Show Notes:
It was Lonnie Johnson who gave the title to today’s program when exclaimed, “Violin, sing the blues for me!” during a recording session for Okeh Records in 1928, released under the name the Johnson Boys. The title was also used for a collection of violin blues on the Old Hat label which we feature extensively on today’s show. We also feature a number of tracks from Old Hat’s companion CD, Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow! The violin once played a significant role in the early history of recorded blues. As collector Marshall Wyatt points out, “the violin once held center stage in the rich pageant of vernacular music that evolved in the American South… and the fiddle held sway as the dominant folk instrument of both races until the dawn of the 20th century.” Today, outside of a few exceptions, African-American music has mostly abandoned the violin to white country fiddlers. Many black musicians active during the 1920s and ’30s came from a string-band tradition rooted in the 19th century, an era predating the blues when fiddles and banjos were the predominant instruments, and guitars a rarity. Black fiddlers and string bands were still common in the South throughout the 1920s, were not entirely ignored by the record industry, but were they were certainly under-represented. Some black string bands incorporated blues into their repertoires in order to keep abreast of trends. As the record business began to rebound in the mid-1930s, musical trends became rapidly modernized due to the spreading influence of mass media, and black fiddlers found even fewer recording opportunities. Below you will find some background on some of today’s featured artists.
Bo Carter, who played guitar and violin, was one of the most popular bluesmen of the ’30’s, cutting over a hundred sides between 1928 and 1940.
He also worked with his brothers, Lonnie and Sam Chatmon, in the popular Mississippi Sheiks band. The Mississippi Sheiks were one of the most popular string bands of the late ’20s and early ’30s with a repertoire that drew upon all facets of black and white rural music: blues, pop music, hokum, white country and traditional songs. Their rendition of “Sitting on Top of the World” has become an enduring standard. The group consisted of 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.In addition to featuring several tracks by Bo Carter and Mississippi Sheiks, we also hear the Sheiks backing Texas Alexander on the topical “Frost Texas Tornado Blues.” On April 9th 1934 the group backed Alexander on eight numbers.
Beginning in 1926, Peg Leg Howell performed a number of guitar blues for Columbia Records in Atlanta, but he also joined with his “Gang” to record rollicking stomps and rags, led by Eddie Anthony’s wailing fiddle. Our selection, both sides of a 78, “New Jelly Roll Blues” b/w “Beaver Slide Rag” were recorded on April 8, 1927 and advertised in the Chicago Defender. He arrived in the city in 1923 and was recorded by Columbia in November 1926. Howell’s first session featured him solo and are certainly appealing but it’s the rough, exciting stringband music he recorded with His Gang that really grabs attention. The gang consisted of Henry Williams on guitar and the infectious alley fiddle of Eddie Anthony. The duo backed Howell on two dozen sides. Williams apparently died in jail in January 1930 while serving time for vagrancy and Anthony passed in 1934, after which Howell gave up music. Henry Williams & Eddie Anthony cut one 78 together in 1928, the stupendous “Lonesome Blues” b/w/ “Georgia Crawl.” Singer Sloppy Henry cut sixteen sides between 1924 and 1929. At a 1928 session he was backed by Peg Leg Howell and Eddie Anthony, heard to good effect on the colorfully titled “Long Tall, Disconnected Mama” in which Anthony exclaims “I got good chicken and this vio-leen.” Eddie Anthony also recorded as Macon Ed with the mysterious Tampa Joe, cutting eight sides in 1930.
Will Batts was a fine fiddler based in Memphis who worked with Frank Stokes and Jack Kelly. Frank Stokes and partner Dan Sane recorded as The Beale Street Shieks, a Memphis answer to the musical Chatmon family string band, the Mississippi Shieks. Stokes was already playing the streets of Memphis by the turn of the century, about the same time the blues began to flourish. A medicine show and house party favorite, Stokes was remembered as a consummate entertainer who drew on songs from the 19th and 20th centuries. Solo or with Sane and sometimes fiddler Will Batts, Stokes recorded 38 sides for Paramount and Victor. Jack Kelly is believed to be from North Mississippi but spent most of his life in Memphis where he sang on the streets and worked with musicians like Frank Stokes, Dan Sane, Will Batts and later Little Buddy Doyle and Walter Horton. In 1933 he cut 14 sides by the South Memphis Jug Band which included Will Batts on violin, Dan Sane on guitar and D.M. Higgs on jug. He cut ten more sides in 1939 with Batts, and Little Son Joe. Kelly’s last known sides were made in 1952 with Walter Horton for the Sun.
Both Lonnie Johnson and Big Bill Broonzy are best remembered for their guitar playing but both also played violin and luckily recorded with the instrument. By the time Lonnie Johnson recorded his “Violin Blues”, he was already one of the most prolific and influential musicians in blues. Johnson himself led a long and illustrious career as a guitarist, and is primarily remembered for his dazzling guitar work. But it was the violin that first captured his imagination, and his early career in New Orleans was spent honing his skills as a fiddler, first in his father’s string band, then as a young professional performing on excursion boats along the Mississippi. Johnson signed with Okeh in 1925, and played violin on nearly two-dozen early recordings. The State Street Boys were a studio group who cut eight sides in 1935. The group consisted of Big Bill Broonzy (who plays violin on our selection “Rustlin’ Man” plus four others), Jazz Gillum, Carl Martin and others. Martin was also a member of the The Tennessee Chocolate Drops, a group consisting of Howard Armstrong, Ted Bogan and Carl Martin.
Charlie McCoy ranked among the great blues accompanists of his era and his accomplished mandolin and guitar work can be heard on numerous recordings in a wide variety of settings from the late 1920’s through the early 40’s. His brother Joe McCoy was well known for his association with his wife Memphis Minnie where he played the part of Kansas Joe. Between 1929 and 1934 (they divorced in early 1935) they cut around one hundred sides together. After Joe and Minnie separated Joe occupied himself in small bands, singing with the Harlem Hamfats, working as a songwriter and working with his brother Charlie. Charlie McCoy’s “Your Valves Need Grinding” features the violin of Bo Carter while Joe McCoy’s “Look Who’s Coming Down The Road”, a version of Tommy Johnson’s “Maggie Campbell”, features a rousing unknown violinist.
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| Andrew & Jim Baxter |
We play several fine, little known, rural string bands on today’s program. The fiddle-guitar duo known as the Alabama Sheiks cut two records for Victor, which were released in 1931, a time when industry sales were crippled by the Great Depression. Another duo was the father and son team Andrew and Jim Baxter, of Calhoun, Georgia. The duo cut sides for Victor between 1927-29, and even waxed one tune with a white string band, The Georgia Yellow Hammers. Rural string band the Mobile Strugglers got started just as the major record companies began to lose interest in string bands. The group featured two fiddlers, Charles Jones and James Fields, and included guitarist Paul Johnson, banjo picker Lee Warren and Wesley Williams on double bass. The Mobile Strugglers recorded seven songs for the American Music label in 1949. Wilson Jones, who wnet by the moniker Stavin’ Chain, led a fine stingband judging by the group’s six recordings. The group was recorded in Louisiana by John Lomax for the Library of Congress in 1934.
You don’t expect to hear the violin in the context of Delta blues but there are some recorded example. At his second recording session on Oct. 31, 1935 Big Joe Williams was backed by fiddle player Chasey Collins. Collins in turn was backed by Williams on two numbers. Delta bluesman Henry “Son” Sims is best known as the fiddler who played with Charley Patton. Although he led a rural string band called the Mississippi Corn Shuckers for several years, the first recording that Sims did was with Patton, who asked him to come along to Wisconsin for a 1929 Paramount session. Sims also recorded under his own name on two separate occasions; during the Patton session when he cut four songs, including our selection “Tell Me Man Blues,” and several years later with guitarist and singer McKinley Morganfield, (who later became known as Muddy Waters).
Our survey of blues violin players end about mid-century when that kind of music on commercial records became virtually extinct. Eventually, a few black fiddle players returned to the studio, most often for small specialist labels. Among those include Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown who first recorded on fiddle in 1959 for the Peacock label in Houston, Butch Cage of Mississippi who worked with Willie Thomas and recorded extensively by folklorist Harry Oster, L.C. Robinson who made records for Bluesway and Arhoolie in the 1970′s and Howard Armstrong who renewed his career in the 1970s playing mandolin and fiddle with old pals Carl Martin and Ted Bogan on albums for Rounder and Flying Fish.
Tags: Alabama Sheiks, Andrew and Jim Baxter, Big Joe Williams, Bo Carter, Charlie McCoy, Charlie Patton, Eddie Anthony, Frank Stokes, Henry Sims, Jack Kelly, Joe mcCoy, Lonnie Johnson, Mississippi Sheiks, Mobile Strugglers, Peg Leg Howell, stringband blues, Violin blues, Will Batts
Sun 21 Jun 2009
| ARTIST |
SONG |
ALBUM |
| Tommy Johnson |
Cool Drink Of Water Blues |
When The Sun Goes Down |
| Ishman Bracey |
Trouble Hearted Blues |
Legends Of Country Blues |
| William Moore |
One Way Gal |
Ragtime Blues |
| Henry Thomas |
Don't Ease Me In |
Texas Worried Blues |
| Mississippi John Hurt |
Avalon Blues |
Avalon Blues: Complete 1928 Recordings |
| Pink Anderson & Simmie Dooley |
Every Day In The Week Blues |
Sinners & Saints 1926-1931 |
| Bessie Smith |
Devil's Gonna Git You |
The Complete Recordings |
| Hattie Burleson |
Jim Nappy |
I Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 2 |
| Elizabeth Johnson |
Be My Kid Blues |
I Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 1 |
| Uncle Bud Walker |
Look Here Mama Blues |
Mississippi Blues Vol.1 1928-1937 |
| Johnnie Head |
Fare The Well Blues Pt. 1 |
Country Blues Collector's Items 1924-1928 |
| William Harris |
Bull Frog Blues |
Mississippi Masters |
| Charley Lincoln |
Gamblin' Charley |
Charley Lincoln 1927-1930 |
| Nellie Florence |
Midnight Weeping Blues |
Slide Guitar Vol. 2 - Bottles, Knives & Steel |
| Barbecue Bob |
Ease It to Me Blues |
Complete Recorded Works Vol. 2 |
| Blind Willie McTell |
Statesboro Blues |
When The Sun Goes Down |
| Curley Weaver |
No No Blues |
Atlanta Blues |
| Ma Rainey |
Black Eye Blues |
Mother Of The Blues |
| Tampa Red |
It's Tight Like That |
Tampa Red Vol. 1 1928-1929 |
| Leroy Carr |
Prison Bound Blues |
Whiskey Is My Habit... |
| Scrapper Blackwell |
Down And Out Blues |
Scrapper Blackwell Vol. 1 1928-1932 |
| Eddie Miller |
Freight Train Blues |
Down On The Levee |
| Pine Top Smith |
I'm Sober Now |
Shake Your Wicked Knees |
| James Boodle-It Wiggins |
Keep A-Knockin' An You Can't... |
Boogie Woogie & Barrelhouse Piano Vol. 2 |
| Cow Cow Davenport |
Chimin' The Blues |
Mama Don't Allow No Easy Riders Here |
| Lonnie Johnson |
Violin Blues |
Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Bo Carter |
East Jackson Blues |
Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Robert Wilkins |
Jail House Blues |
Masters of the Memphis Blues |
| Jim Jackson |
What A Time |
Jim Jackson Vol. 2 1928-1930 |
| Furry Lewis |
Kassie Jones - Part 1 |
Masters of the Memphis Blues |
| Frank Stokes |
What’s The Matter Blues |
Masters of the Memphis Blues |
| Frenchy's String Band |
Texas And Pacific Blues |
Saints & Sinners 1926-1931 |
| Victoria Spivey |
New Black Snake Blues Pt. 1 |
Lonnie Johnson Vol. 4 1928-1929 |
| Fannie Mae Goosby |
Dirty Moaner Blues |
Female Blues Singers 7 G/H 1922-1929 |
Show Notes:
Today’s show is the second installment of an ongoing series of programs built around a particular year. The bulk of the information for today’s show notes comes from the books Recording The Blues (reprinted along with two other titles in Yonder Come The Blues) by Robert M.W. Dixon and John Godrich and Blues & Gospel Records, 1890-1943 by Robert M.W. Dixon, John Godrich and Howard Rye.
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. The average blues or gospel record had sales in the region of 10,000. In 1928 the figure was 1,000 or so lower which was still a thriving market. Paramount, the market leader at the time, brought talent up to their northern studios. 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 record in black newspapers, mainly in the Chicago Defender, which was the nation’s most influential black weekly newspaper.
During the peak years there were five major companies issuing records for the race market: Okeh, Columbia, Paramount, Brunswick-Balke-Collender (encompassing Brunswick and Vocalion (a division of Gennett). Victor was the only label to systematically exploit the the blues talent around Memphis. Their second visit there, in January and February 1928, yielded three times as much material as their initial 1927 visit. Among those recorded were Blind Willie McTell, Jim Jackson, Memphis Jug Band, Frank Stokes, Tommy Johnson, Ishman Bracey, Furry Lewis, Cannon’s Jug Stompers among many others. In August alone the label cut some 180 sides, mostly by black artists.
Jim Jackson’s “Kansas City Blues” was the massive hit of 1927 and in 1928 that honor went to “How Long How Long Blues” by Leroy Carr and “It’ Tight like That” by Tampa Red and Georgia Tom, both records issued by Vocalion. The highly suggestive “It’ Tight like That” was cut in September of 1928 which was just a few months after Vocalion dropped their tag “Better and Cleaner Race Records.” Vocalion also cut several sides by Leroy Carr’s guitarist, Scrapper Blackwell in 1928. In 1928 Brunswick recorded Bo Carter, Fannie Mae Goosby and Hattie Burleson among others.
In 1926 Columbia and OKeh merged but the labels were run by separate management for three years after the merger and did not compete for the same artists. Since 1927 OKeh had been issuing a new record every six weeks by Lonnie Johnson and issued some two-dozen sides by him in 1927 and about half that number in 1928. After the takeover by Columbia, OKeh made no field recordings until 1928 when they visited Memphis where they recorded blues singers such as Tom Dickson and the now legendary recordings by Mississippi John Hurt. They also recorded Sloppy Henry and Uncle Bud Walker in Atlanta a few months afterwards. Lonnie Johnson went with the unit, himself recording in both Memphis and san Antonio. In San Antonio he backed Texas Alexander who OKeh had initially recorded in New York the previous August. Columbia also made field recordings in Atlanta and Dallas where they recorded blues singers such as Barbecue Bob and his brother Charley Lincoln, Pink Anderson with Simmie Dooley, Peg Leg Howell, Curley Weaver, Lillian Glinn among many others.
The only race company that made no field trips was Paramount. Despite this Paramount remained the market leader in records released and singers recorded. Paramount issued records by the many of the blues biggest stars.
Tags: Bessie Smith, Bo Carter, Cannon’s Jug Stompers, Cow Cow Davenport, Frank Stokes, Furry Lewis, Henry Thomas, Ishman Bracey, Jim Jackson, Leroy Carr, Lonnie Johnson, Ma Rainey, Mississippi John Hurt, Pine Top Smith, Pink Anderson, Robert Wilkins, Tampa Red, Tommy Johnson, Victoria Spivey
Sun 29 Mar 2009
| ARTIST |
SONG |
ALBUM |
| Texas Alexander |
Range In My Kitchen Blues |
Texas Alexander Vol. 1 |
| Lonnie Johnson |
Tin Can Alley Blues |
The Original Guitar Wizard |
| Victoria Spivey |
Murder In The First Degree |
Victoria Spivey Vol. 2 1927-1929 |
| Martha Copeland |
Police Blues |
Martha Copeland Vol. 1 1923-1927 |
| Butterbeans & Susie |
Jelly Roll Queen |
Louis Armstrong: Hot Fives and Sevens |
| Lucille Bogan |
Jim Tampa |
Lucille Bogan Vol. 1 1923-1929 |
| Margaret Thornton |
The Jockey Blues |
Barrelhouse Mamas |
| Memphis Jug Band |
Kansas City Blues |
Memphis Jug Band and Cannon's Jug Stompers |
| Vol Stevens |
Baby Got The Rickets... |
Memphis Jug Band and Cannon's Jug Stompers |
| Gus Cannon |
My Money Never Runs Out |
Memphis Jug Band and Cannon's Jug Stompers |
| Julius Daniels |
Ninety-Nine Year Blues |
Atlanta Blues |
| Charlie Lincoln |
Jealous Hearted Blues |
Charlie Lincoln & Willie Baker |
| Barbecue Bob |
Barbecue Blues |
Barbecue Bob Vol. 1 |
| Peg Leg Howell |
New Jelly Roll Blues |
Atlanta Blues |
| Blind Lemon Jefferson |
Rambler Blues |
The Complete Classic Sides |
| Papa Charlie Jackson |
Scoodle Um Skoo |
Papa Charlie Jackson Vol. 2 1926-1928 |
| Blind Blake |
Wabash Rag |
All The Published Sides |
| Bobby Grant |
Nappy Head Blues |
Backwoods Blues 1927-1935 |
| Sam Collins |
Jailhouse Blues |
When The Levee Breaks |
| William Harris |
I'm Leavin' Town |
William Harris & Buddy Boy Hawkins |
| Jaybird Coleman |
Mistreatin' Mama |
The Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of |
| Big Boy Cleveland |
Goin' To Leave You Blues |
A Richer Tradition |
| Papa Harvey Hull |
France Blues |
Before The Blues Vol. 1 |
| Jim Jackson |
Jim Jackson's Kansas City Blues-Pt.1 |
Jim Jackson Vol. 1 1927-1928 |
| Furry Lewis |
Big Chief Blues |
Masters Of Memphis Blues |
| Frank Stokes |
It's A Good Thing |
Masters Of Memphis Blues |
| Clara Smith |
That's Why The Undertakers Are Busy Today |
Clara Smith Vol. 4 1926-1927 |
| Bessie Smith |
A Good Man Is Hard o Find |
The Complete Recordings (Frog) |
| Richard "Rabbit" Brown |
James Alley Blues |
The Greatest Songsters 1927-1929 |
| Andrew & Jim Baxter |
K.C. Railroad Blues |
Violin, Sing The Blues For Me |
| Henry Thomas |
Red River Blues |
Texas Blues: Early Masters |
| Blind Willie McTell |
Mama, 'Taint Long Fo' Day |
The Classic Years 1927-1940 |
| Nugrape Twins |
The Road Is Rough & Rocky |
Saints & Sinners 1926-1931 |
| Blind Willie Johnson |
It's Nobody's Fault But Mine |
Blind Willie Johnson & the Guitar Evangelists |
Show Notes:

Today’s show is the first installment of an ongoing series of programs built around a particular year. The bulk of the information for today’s show notes comes from the books Recording The Blues (reprinted along with two other titles in Yonder Come The Blues) by Robert M.W. Dixon and John Godrich and Blues & Gospel Records, 1890-1943 by Robert M.W. Dixon, John Godrich and Howard Rye.
The year 1927 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. Paramount, the market leader at the time, brought talent up to their northern studios. 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 record in black newspapers, mainly in the Chicago Defender, which was the nation’s most influential black weekly newspaper.
After neglecting the race market, Victor decided to jump in the field in 1926 with negligible results. Victor’s fortunes turned around when they hired Ralph Peer who had been responsible for building up the race and hilliby catalogs for OKeh. In February 1927 Peer ventured out with the Victor filed unit to Atlanta, Memphis and finally New Orleans. Among the artists recorded in Memphis were the Memphis Jug Band, Furry Lewis and Frank Stokes. In Atlanta recordings were made by Julius Daniels, Blind Willie McTell and others. In New Orleans the major find was songster Richard “Rabbit” Brown who recorded six sides.
Early in 1927 Mayo Williams, who had built up the Paramount catalog, formed his Black Patti label. The recordings were made by Gennett, with half the material issued on Gennett’s own labels. Black Patti Records debuted with advertisements in May of 1927, with some two dozen discs said to already be available. The repertory included jazz, blues, sermons, spirituals, and vaudeville skits, most (but not quite all) by African American entertainers. A total of 55 different discs were manufactured. Williams found running his own label not as lucrative and easy as he had hoped, and closed up operations before the end of 1927. Among the notable blues artists recorded were Papa Harvey Hull, Sam Collins, Clara Smith, Jaybird Collins among others.
When Black Patti folded in August 1927, Vocalion quickly hired him as a talent scout. Williams hit pay dirt with Jim Jackson’s “Jim Jackson’s Kansas City Blues” which was released in December 1927 and was an immediate hit.
Gennett began recording blues in 1923 but was the only major label not to have a separate race series. Gennett recorded most of their recordings at their Richmond, Indiana and New York studios. They made one group of recordings in the South in Birmingham Alabama in 1927. Among those recorded during this trip were Jay Bird Coleman, Daddy Stovepipe,, William Harris and Joe Evans.Other artists to appear on the label included Sam Collins and Cow Cow Davenport.
Columbia’s race records were primarily issued on the 1400-D series which ran from December 1923 through April 1933. The first country blues singer to appear on the series was Peg Leg Howell who was recorded in Atalanta in November 1926 and the following year in April. Also recorded in April 1927 were Robert Hicks aka Barbecue Bob. According to Robert M.W. Dixon John Godrich in their book Recording The Blues, 10, 850 copies of “Barbecue Blues” b/w “Cloudy Sky Blues” were pressed. Initial sales were so good that Hicks was called to New York in the middle of June to record 8 more numbers, and when Columbia returned to Atlanta in November they not only recorded a further 8 selections by Barbecue Bob, but also 6 by his brother Charley Lincoln, who sang the same sort of songs in very much the same style. In December 1927 the Columbia field unti went to Dallas and Memphis. Notable artists recorded in Dallas inluded Blind Willie Johnson, the Dallas String Band, Lillian Glinn while Memphis yielded important recordings by Reubin Lacy and Pearl Dickson.

In 1926 Columbia and OKeh merged but the labels were run by separate management for three years after the merger and did not compete for the same artists. Since 1927 OKeh had been issuing a new record every six weeks by Lonnie Johnson and issued some two-dozen sides by him in 1927. Johnson also backed other OKeh artists that year including Texas Alexander and Victoria Spivey. OKeh also recorded two sessions by Blind Lemon Jefferson, exclusively a Paramount artist, but these were never issued. Today’s show features tracks by all these artists as well as the duo of Butterbeans & Susie who cut close to 70 sides for the label between 1924 and 1930.
The only race company that made no field trips was Paramount. Despite this Paramount remained the market leader in records released and singers recorded. Paramount issued records by the many of the blues biggest stars. In 1927 the label issued records by Blind Lemon Jefferson and Blind Blake both of whom were extensivley advertised in the Chicago Defender. Other big names were Ma Rainey, Lucille Bogan Ida Cox, and Papa Charlie Jackson.
Tags: Barbecue Bob, Bertha "Chippie" Hill, Bessie Smith, Blind Blake, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Blind Willie Johnson, Blind Willie McTell, Clara Smith, Frank Stokes, Jim Jackson, Lizzie Miles, Lonnie Johnson, Memphis Jug Band, Papa Charlie Jackson, Peg Leg Howell, Sam Collins, Texas Alexander
Sun 8 Feb 2009
Posted by Jeff under Playlists
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| ARTIST |
SONG |
ALBUM |
| Bo Carter |
All Around Man |
Bo Carter Vol. 3 1934-1936 |
| Mississippi Blacksnakes |
Farewell Baby Blues |
Miss. String Bands & Associates |
| The Mississippi Sheiks |
Bootlegger's Blues |
Mississippi Sheiks Vol. 1 1930 |
| Sam Chatmon |
Hollandale Blues |
Sam Chatmon's Advice |
| Luke 'Long Gone' Miles |
Bad Luck Child |
Country Boy |
| James Cotton |
Straighten Up Baby |
Sun Records The Blues Years 1950-58 |
| Big Maceo |
Texas Stomp |
Big Maceo Vol. 2 - Big City Blues |
| Robert McCoy |
Bye Bye Baby |
Bye Bye Baby |
| Nora Lee King |
Cannon Ball |
Sammy Price & Blues Singers Vol. 2 |
| Fluffy Hunter |
Fluffy's Debut |
I'm A Bad, Bad Girl |
| Robert Nighthawk |
Crowing Rooster Blues |
Masters Of Modern Blues Vol. 4 |
| Lonnie Johnson |
Blues Around My Door |
Blues By Lonnie Johnson |
| The Two Charlies |
Tired Feeling Blues |
Charley Jordan Vol. 3 1935-37 |
| Ed Bell |
Big Rock Jail |
Ed Bell 1927-1930 |
| Willie Baker |
Weak-Minded Blues |
Charley Lincoln & Willie Baker |
| Doctor Clayton |
Watch Out Mama |
Doctor Clayton 1935-1942 |
| Washboard Sam |
My Feet Jumped Salty |
Washboard Sam Vol. 6 1941-42 |
| Alec Johnson |
Sundown Blues |
Miss. String Bands & Associates |
| Richard "Rabbit" Brown |
Never Let The Same Bee Sting... |
The Greatest Songsters 1927-1929 |
| Kid Prince Moore |
Mississippi Water |
Kid Prince Moore 1936-1938 |
| Frank Stokes |
Tain't Nobody's Business If I Do |
Memphis Masters |
| John Lee Ziegler |
If I Lose, Let Me Lose |
George Mitchell Collection Vol. 6 |
| Lum Guffin |
Jack Of Diamonds |
Walking Victrola |
| Jesse Fuller |
Leaving Memphis |
Frisco' Bound |
| Frank Hovington |
Mean Old Frisco |
Lonesome Road Blues |
| Scrapper Blackwell |
Back Door Blues |
Scrapper Blackwell Vol. 1 |
| Black Bottom McPhail |
Down In Black Bottom |
Scrapper Blackwell Vol. 1 |
| John Lee Hooker |
The Motor City Is Burning |
Urban Blues |
| John Lee Hooker |
I Gotta Go To Vietnam |
Urban Blues |
| Sonny Boy Williamson I |
Sugar Gal |
Sonny Boy Williamson I Vol. 5 |
Show Notes:
We open our latest mix show with a quartet of songs revolving around the Chatmon brothers including numbers by Bo Carter, Mississippi Blacksnakes, The Mississippi Sheiks and Sam Chatmon. One of the most popular bluesmen of the ’30′s, Bo Carter cut over a hundred sides between 1928 and 1940. Bo and his brothers Lonnie and Sam Chatmon also recorded as members of the Mississippi Sheiks with singer/guitarist Walter Vinson. Bo died in 1964 but Sam hung in long enough to take advantage of the blues revival, recording prolifically in the 1960′s and 70′s. Unfortunately most all of the LP’s he cut seem to be out-of-print. Today’s selection, “Hollandale Blues”, is from the 1979 Rounder album, Sam Chatmon’s Advice. The Mississippi Blacksnakes cut ten songs over three sessions in 1931for Brunswick with the likley personal of
Bo and Sam Chatmon, Charlie McCoy with Walter Vinscon only on the first session.
Moving up to the 1960′s and 70′s we spin some great records by some lesser known players including Luke “Long Gone” Miles, Lum Guffin, Frank Hovington and John Lee Ziegler. Luke Miles was born in Louisiana in 1925 and moved to Houston in 1952. In the liner notes to his only full length LP Country Born (World Pacific, 1965) he said: “I went to Houston for one reason. I went to see Lightnin’ Hopkins. That’s what I went for and that’s what I did. Lightnin’ Hopkins taught me just about everything about blues singing. The first time I ever sang in front of an audience was in 1952 with Lightnin’. The first day I met Lightnin’ he named me “Long Gone” …and I’ve been Long Gone Miles ever since.” By 1961 Miles was in Los Angles were he cut some 45′s for Smash. After the World Pacific LP he cut singles for Two Kings in 1965, Kent in 1969 before supposedly leaving L.A. in 1970. Our selection comes from the LP Country Boy (Sundown, 1984) which is a collection of mostly unreleased sides from 1961 and 1962. Just recently a liver CD of of Miles surfaced from 1985 titled Riding Around In My V8 Ford Live in Venice, California. He died in 1987. Unfortunately just about all of Miles’ recordings remain out of print.
The other gentleman were recorded in the 1970′s, an extension you could say of the 1960′s blues revival that swept up many fine bluesman who never got the opportunity to record in their younger days. Lum Guffin was first recorded in the 1970′s by Swedish researcher Bengt Olsson when he was 70 and again in 1980 by Axel Kunster for the Living Country Blues series. The LP Walking Victrola was his sole record, released on the Flyright label in 1973. Some of these recordings appear on the CD On The Road Again. Frank Hovington was an exceptional guitarist in the Piedmont tradition who was reluctant to record but made some superb recordings in 1975 released (issued on the LP Lonesome Road Blues first on Flyright and then on Rounder with additional tracks on the CD Gone With The Wind) and 1980 for the Living Country Blues series. Ziegler passed away May of last year. He cut just a handful of recordings, the best recorded by George Mitchell in the late 1970′s plus some sides made in the 1990′s and issued on the Music Maker label.
We play a twin spin by John Lee Hooker from his Bluesway years. Hooker cut several albums for Bluesway in the 1960′s including: Live At Cafe Au-Go-Go (1966), Urban Blues (1967), Simply The Truth (1968), If You Miss ‘Im… I Got ‘Im (1970)and Kabuki Wuki (1973). Our selections come from Simply The Truth and the excellent Urban Blues featuring Hooker in the company of sidemen like Eddie Taylor, Wayne Bennett, and Louis Myers. Bluesway has been ill served reissue wise, with only a handful of releases issued on CD, usually by labels other than the parent company MCA, and in many cases these CD’s themselves are out of print. I’ll be doing a show on the label in the near future. Urban Blues was issued on CD in 1994 by BGO with three bonus cuts. One of those bonus cut is the stomping “I Gotta Go To Vietnam” featuring some wild wah wah guitar from Hooker’s cousin Earl Hooker. The “The Motor City Is Burning” is a harrowing account of the 1967 Detroit riots. The flash point began at a drinking joint at Twelfth Street and Clairmount Avenue and quickly spread out. Looting and fires spread through the Northwest side of Detroit, then crossed over to the East Side. Within 48 hours, the National Guard was mobilized, to be followed by the 82nd airborne on the riot’s fourth day. As police and military troops sought to regain control of the city, violence escalated. At the conclusion of 5 days of rioting, 43 people lay dead, 1189 injured and over 7000 people had been arrested. Hooker gives a vivid account of the action:
Ohhh the Motor City is burning, ain’t a thing in the world that I can do
Don’t you know, don’t you know the big D is burning
Ain’t a thing in the world that Johnny can do
My hometown is burning down to the ground, worster than Vietnam
Well it started on Twelfth Street and Clairmount this morning, I just don’t know what it’s all about (2x)
The fire wagon kept coming, the snipers just wouldn’t let them put it out
Firebombs bursting all around me, soldiers standing everywhere (2x)
I could hear the people screaming, sirens filled the air
 |
| Doctor Clayton |
Also on deck today are some prime 1940′s Chicago blues by Sonny Boy Williamson I, Yank Rachel, Washboard Sam and Doctor Clayton. At the time of his untimely death in 1948 at the age of 34, Sonny Boy was still at his creative peak as she proves on “Sugar Gal” from 1947, a storming update of his classic “Sugar Mama Blues” with a some killer electric guitar from William Lacey. Rachel’s “Up North Blues (There’s A Reason)” from 194 sports some wonderful playing by Sonny Boy and is just one of a batch of sides they cut together between 1938 and 1941. Also on that track is the prolific Washboard Sam who is also heard on his “My Feet Jumped Salty” featuring some stunning amplified guitar from Big Bill Broonzy. Both Sonny Boy I and Washboard Sam will be featured in upcoming programs. Nearly 50 years after his untimely death the exceptional singer and masterful songwriter known as Doctor Clayton is little spoken of today. Clayton worked strictly as a vocalist (by some accounts he could play piano and ukulele), employing an impressive falsetto technique, later refined into a powerful, swooping style that was instantly recognizable. In addition he was an unparalleled songwriter, writing mostly original material with a rare wit, intelligence and social awareness. Clayton’s vocal style was widely emulated and a number of his songs became blues standards. Despite the high esteem he was held in by fellow blues artists and his popularity during his lifetime Clayton’s fine blues recordings remain largely ignored. “Watch Out Mama” is a fine example of his songwriting, filled with a dash of violence and humor:
You clown when you get ready, stay out late as you please
Come home drunk and staggering, and weak in your knees
But watch out momma, Doctor Clayton gonna sneak up on you
Yes, I’m gonna whip your nappy head, just as soon as I find you
As usual we spin some fine piano records including tracks by Big Maceo, Sammy Price and Robert McCoy.
Alongside his protege Johnnie Jones and later Otis Spann, Big Maceo is among the greatest Chicago piano men. During the 1940′s he worked with Tampa Red and the duo made some magnifecnt sides including our selection, the romping “Texas Stomp.” Sammy Price fine boogie woogie playing is heard backing Nora Lee King on “Cannon Ball” her uptown rendition of Cow Cow Davenport’s immortal “Cow Cow Blues.” King cut a dozen sides between 1941and 1944 before fading into obscurity. Alabama barrelhouse pianist Robert McCoy had two rare LPs in the early 1960′s on the Vulcan label. A few years back Delmark acquired the masters and reissued the material on CD for the first time with many previously unissued tracks. Unfortunatley no tracks from his second Vulcan album have been included. These were his first recordings as leader although he recorded in the 1930′s accompanying Guitar Slim, Jaybird Coleman and Peanut The Kidnapper. McCoy was part of the fertile Birmingham piano tradition, learning piano from Cow Cow Davenport and Jabbo Williams.
Tags: Big Maceo, Bo Carter, Doctor Clayton, Earl Hooker, Elmore James, Frank Hovington, Frank Stokes, James Cotton, Jesse Fuller, John Lee Ziegler, Lonnie Johnson, Richard "Rabbit" Brown, Robert Nighthawk, Sam Chatmon, Scrapper Blackwell, Sonny Boy Williamson I, Washboard Sam, Yank Rachel