Entries tagged with “Jack McVea”.


ARTISTSONGALBUM
Sonny ParkerJealous BluesSonny Parker 1948-1953
Cousin JoeBaby, You Don't Know It AllCousin Joe 1945-1946 Vol. 1
Eddie ChambleeEvery Shut EyeEddie Chamblee 1947-52
Tiny Grimes & J.B. SummersHey Mr. J.B.Tiny Grimes 1950-1954 Vol. 5
Tiny GrimesFrankie And Johnny (Boogie)Tiny Grimes 1950-1954 Vol. 4
Max "Blues" BaileyComing Home BluesObscure Blues Shouters Vol. 1
Rubberlegs WilliamsThat's The BluesObscure Blues Shouters Vol. 2
Calvin BozeAngel City BluesCalvin Boze 1945-1952
Cecil GantPlayin' Myself The BluesCecil Gant 1950-1951
Cecil GantNashville JumpsCecil Gant 1950-1951
Eddie MackSeven Days BluesEddie Mack 1949-1951
Lester WilliamsDowling Street HopGoree Carter 1950-1954
Goree CarterI'm Your Boogie ManGoree Carter 1950-1954
Felix GrossWorried About You BabyFelix Gross 1947-1855
Arbee StidhamMeet Me HalfwayArbee Stidham Vol. 2 1951-1957
Jimmy "Baby Face" LewisGettin' OldJimmy "Baby Face" Lewis 1947-1955
Sonny ThompsonGum ShoeSonny Thompson Vol. 3 1951-1952
Lulu ReedLast NightSonny Thompson Vol. 3 1951-1952
Sonny ThompsonThings Ain't What They Used to BeSonny Thompson Vol. 4 1952-1954
Monte EasterMidnight RiderMonte Easter Vol. 2 1952-1960
Geeshie SmithT-Town JumpSwinging Small Combos Kansas City Style Vol. 2
Crown Prince WaterfordMove Your Hand BabySwingin' Small Combos Kansas City Style Vol.2
Myra TaylorI'm In My Sins This MorningKansas City Jumps Vol. 3
Ella Mae MorseEarly In The MorningKansas City Jumps Vol. 3
Betty Hall JonesThat Early Morning BoogieBetty hall Jones 1947-1954
Jesse PriceI'm The Drummer ManSwingin' Small Combos Kansas City Style Vol. 1
Clyde BernhardtIt's Been A Long Time BabyClyde Bernhardt 1945 -1953 Vol.2
Paul WilliamsRockin’ Chair BluesPaul Williams 1949-1952 Vol. 2
Jack McVeaNaggin' WomanJack McVea 1944-1952 Vol. 1
Jack McVeaTwo Timin' Baby BoogieJack McVea 1944-1952 Vol. 1
Walter 'Sandman' HowardWillow Tree BluesObscure Blues Shouters Vol. 2

Show Notes:

Today’s spotlight is on the Blue Moon label, a Spanish label that for the last five years or so has been reissuing some amazing recordings of jump blues and R&B from the mid-40’s to the mid-50’s. Blue Moon can been seen as a sort sister label to Document records; where Document issues the complete recorded work in chronological order of every blues artist from the pre-war era, Blue Moon has been reissuing the chronological recordings of some great jump blues pioneers from the immediate post-war era. Much of this music has been unavailable on CD and spotlights a fascinating era when jump blues was merging into R&B and eventually morphing into rock and roll. The  label has done an invaluable service by issuing the chronological recordings of neglected pioneers like Sonny Thompson, Cecil Gant, Tiny Grimes, Goree Carter, Paul Williams, Jack McVea and many others. The music on today’s program is a mix of jump blues and R&B. Jump Blues refers to an uptempo, jazz-tinged style of blues that first came to prominence in the mid- to late ’40s. Usually featuring a vocalist in front of a large, horn-driven orchestra or medium sized combo with multiple horns, the style usually features a driving rhythm, shouted vocals, and honking tenor saxophone solos. Billboard magazine first used the term “Rhythm and Blues” as the title for its black music charts in 1949, replacing “race music.” R&B evolved out of jump blues in the late ’40s, laying the groundwork for rock & roll. R&B kept the tempo and the drive of jump blues, but its instrumentation was sparer and the emphasis was on the song, not improvisation. It was blues chord changes played with an insistent backbeat.

Crown Prince Waterford/Geechie Smith Kansas City Jumps 3

I can’t possibly write about every artist in the Blue Moon catalog but I thought I’d give some background on a few including Cecil Gant, Sonny Thompson, Tiny Grimes, Jack McVea plus several of the blues vocalists like Sonny Parker, Crown Prince Waterford, Cousin Joe and others. Also I’ll give some background on the Kansas City and L.A. blues scenes of the 1940′s where much of today’s music emanated from.

While the big bands declined nationally, a number of small groups thrived in Kansas City. Myra Taylor, Walter Page and other musicians cast off from the decline of the big bands returned to Kansas City. Taylor’s early recording can be found on Blue Moon’s Kansas City Jumps Vol. 3. Julia Lee, the Jimmy Keith band, the Four Tons of Rhythm, the Jesse Price band, Dwight “Gatemouth” Moore, Geechie Smith, Tommy Douglas’s band, Oliver Todd’s Hottentots and a number of other small ensembles found steady work in the clubs at 18th and Vine, downtown and those “out in the county” that thrived in the post-war period. Geeshie Smith is featured on the CD Swingin’ Small Combos Kansas City Style Vol.2. Vernon “Geechie” Smith was a trumpeter/vocalist from the Tulsa, Oklahoma. He played early on with Ernie Fields Orchestra. He was a KC stalwart, spent many years in Kansas City and played in countless KC styled bands. He moved to L.A. where he joined Joe Lutcher’s band. After recording under his own name for the Bihari Brother’ Modern subsidiary Colonial in 1950 and for the obscure Kicks label in 1954, he drifted into obscurity. An influential drummer who was best known for supporting major performers, Jesse Price appeared in many settings through the years. His recordings are featured on the CD  Swingin’ Small Combos Kansas City Style – Vol.1:  The Complete Jesse Price 1946-1957. After moving to Kansas City in 1934, Price became an important fixture, playing with George E. Lee, Thamon Hayes, Count Basie’s orchestra (1936) prior to Jo Jones, touring with Ida Cox and later working with Harlan Leonard (1939-41). Price moved to Los Angeles in 1941, playing with Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong (1943), Stan Kenton (1944), Basie (1944), Benny Carter, Slim Gaillard (1949) and (in Kansas City) Jay McShann, among many others. He was less active in the 1960s and ’70s but led a band at the Monterey Jazz Festival as late as 1971. Price recorded 23 selections as a leader from 1946-48 (mostly for Capitol). During the 1950′s Jay McShann, Ben Webster, Jimmy Witherspoon, Lucky Enois and other nationally established musicians returned to Kansas City and revitalized the local scene.

Cecil Gant Vol. 3 Jack McVea Vol. 4

Los Angeles, in the 1940′s, became a huge center for rhythm and blues recording. T-Bone Walker had settled in Los Angeles. On any given night in the late 1940′s you could drive south on Los Angeles’ Central Avenue and hear the music of such jazz and jump titans as Buddy Collette, Charles Mingus, Wynonie Harris, Big Jay McNeely, Joe Liggins and Johnny Otis. These sounds would waft from such venues as the Lincoln Theater, the Club Alabam, the Down Beat, and Jack’s Basket Room (which featured fried chicken and biscuits by the basket). When you got all the way out to Watts, you could check out Little Harlem and The Barrelhouse. The first breakout rhythm and blues single, “I Wonder,” was recorded by Private Cecil Gant in a simple basement studio and released in 1944 on Gilt Edge Records, a short-lived L.A. indie. When “I Wonder” went to the top of Billboard’s race charts, a number of labels sprang up to capitalize on the smooth, cool, Leroy Carr-derived L.A. blues style Gant had popularized. As Mike Rowe wrote: “Unlike New York and Chicago there had been no blues or any kind of recording industry pre-war …The music as well as the industry was starting from scratch. …It was very often of Do-It yourself triumphing over the most adverse conditions.” The Black population swelled in the 1940’s, due to large manpower needs to work in the U.S. defense industry during World War II. These new arrivals needed entertainment, of course, and the local jazz and blues club scene heated up quickly. There was a host of labels recording blues and R&B in Los Angeles in the 1940s including Specialty, Imperial, Aladdin, and the umbrella of labels run by the Bihari brothers RPM/Modern/Kent/Flair/Crown were the most notable. Bob Geddins was a key player who operated numerous small labels like Down Town, Big Town, Irma, and others. May of these sides were leased to larger outfits like Chess, Specialty, Modern and others.

Sonny Thompson Vol. 5 Tiny Grimes Vol. 4

Cecil Gant, who went by the moniker the G.I. Sing-Sation, was an army private who allegedly got his first break while performing for a war bond rally in 1944. He scored a massive hit the same year with “I Wonder” the first release on the new Gilt-Edge label. The record’s huge success prompted others to form record companies devoted to black music. Gant was a first rate ballad singer in the vein of Nat King Cole and Charles Brown but he was also a superb bluesman who could lay down some storming boogie-woogie. Gant recorded prolifically for the L.A. labels Gilt-Edge and 4 Star and in Nashville, which was probably his hometown, for Bullet, Dot and Decca, meanwhile playing in nightclubs throughout the country. Between 1944 and 1951 he waxed over 150 sides before his untimely death in 1951 at the age of 38. The Blue Moon label has provided an invaluable service by issuing all of Gant’s recordings across seven CD’s.

Bandleader and pianist Sonny Thompson was among the most prolific R&B instrumentalists of the late ’40s and early ’50s. Thompson began recording for Sultan in 1946, then did several sessions for Miracle, King, Federal, and Deluxe, while also backing vocalist Lula Reed from 1951 to 1961. Thompson scored two number one R&B hits for Miracle in 1948: “Long Gone,” Pts. 1 & 2, and “Late Freight.” He landed another Top Ten and two more Top 20 singles for Miracle in 1949, and then had three Top Ten hits for King in 1952. The biggest was “I’ll Drown In My Tears,” sung by his wife Lula Reed, which reached number five. My Tears,” which reached number five. Reed was a fine singer who passed away last summer with barley a mention in the media. In the 1960’s Thompson arranged and played on the classic Freddie King sides for King. Thompson’s recordings have been collected across five CD’s spanning from 1946-1955.

Arbee Stidham Vol. 2 Eddie Mack

Blue Moon has issued all of Jack McVea’s recordings between 19944-1952 over four CD’s. McVea played baritone saxophone in the Lionel Hampton Orchestra in 1942. He led one of the West Coast’s earliest R&B combos and backed up important artists such as T-Bone Walker and Wynonie Harris. McVea’s own “Open The Door, Richard!” created one of the biggest crazes ever to come out of black music in the pre-Rock’n'Roll era. He blew tenor sax alongside Illinois Jacquet at the first ‘Jazz At The Philharmonic’ in 1944, and he jammed and recorded with Slim Gaillard and Charlie Parker.

Another important series is Blue Moon’s reissue of  all of Tiny Grimes recordings between 1944-1954 on five CD’s. Tiny Grimes was one of the earliest jazz electric guitarists to be influenced by Charlie Christian, and he developed his own swinging style. In 1938, he started playing electric guitar, and two years later he was playing in the Cats and the Fiddle. During 1943-1944, Grimes was part of a classic Art Tatum Trio, which also included Slam Stewart. In September 1944, he led his first record date, using Charlie Parker. He also recorded for Blue Note in 1946, and then put together an R&B-oriented group, “the Rockin’ Highlanders,” that featured the tenor of Red Prysock during 1948-1952. Although maintaining a fairly low profile, Tiny Grimes was active up until his death in 1989.

Cousin Joe Vol. 3 Betty Hall Jones

Today’s program also spotlights several fine blues vocalists including Sonny Parker, Cousin Joe, Eddie Mack, Arbee Stidham, Crown Prince Waterford and Betty Hall Jones.  Sonny Parker began singing and dancing as a protégé of Butterbeans and Susie. He joined Lionel Hampton’s band in 1949 and was touring France in 1955 when he suffered an onstage stroke. He never recovered and passed in 1957 at the age of 32. Between 1948 and 1954 he cut some three dozen sides.

Blue Moon has issued all of Cousin Joe’s recordings on three CD’s spanning 1945-55. Joe was 12 when his family moved New Orleans. Joe took up guitar and ukulele, and made a living playing on the Riverboats in the 30′s. By 1941, he’d moved to St. Louis to play in Sidney Bechet’s band, before heading to New York three years later. This was Joe’s most fruitful recording period cutting sides for a myriad of labels including King, Gotham, Philo, Savoy and Decca.

Eddie Mack was part of the Brooklyn blues scene in the late 40′s and early 50′s but his subsequent career is a mystery. He fronted various groups by Cootie Williams & His Orchestra (he replaced Eddie Vinson), Lucky Millinder & His Orchestra and others. He cut some two-dozen sides between 1947-1952.

The Arkansas-born, Chicago-based singer-guitarist Arbee Stidham hit the top of Billboard’s “race” chart in 1948 with his recording of “My Heart Belongs to You” and recorded prolifically over the next two decades for a variety of labels. He retired from music in 1974.

Charles “Crown Prince” Waterford was from Jonesboro, Arkansas. He sang with Leslie Sheffield’s Rhythmaires and Andy Kirk’s Twelve Clouds of Joy before beginning his career as “The Crown Prince of the Blues” in Chicago in the 1940s. Waterford shouted the blues in the then very popular manner and continued his recording career for labels like Hy-Tone, Aladdin and Capitol. In 1949, he joined the King stable. In the 1950′s he recorded for small companies and later dedicated his life to the Church and became known as Reverend Charles Waterford.

Blues vocalist, stand-up pianist and occasionally organist, Betty Hall Jones worked with Bus Moten’s band and Addie Williams in Kansas City. Returning to California, she performed as a single artist before joining drummer/vocalist Roy Milton’s band in L.A. in 1937. She almost certainly recorded on piano behind Alton Redd for the Black & White label in 1945, and accompanied Luke Jones on the Atlas recording sessions, and possibly with Red Mack for the same label in 1946 and 1947. In the same year she recorded with King Porter for Imperial label (the tremendous “That Early Morning Boogie” that we just heard) and under her own name for Atomic, Capitol and under Luke Jones’ name for Modern. She recalled cutting unissued titles behind Ray Charles for Capitol. In the 1950′s she recorded for Dootone and Combo.

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ARTIST SONG ALBUM
Blind Lemon Jefferson Long Lonesome Blues Best of
Jesse thomas Double Due Love You Jesse Thomas 1948-1958
Elmore James Mean Mistreatin' Mama Complete Fire And Enjoy Recordings
Hop Wilson I Feel So Glad Steel Guitar Flash
Otis Rush It's A Mean Old World Chicago The Blues Today!
Otis Rush Homework The Best of Duke-Peacock Blues
Big Maceo County Jail Blues ig Maceo Vol. 1 - Flying Boogie
Robert McCoy Church Bell Blues Bye Bye Baby
Meade Lux Lewis Pittsburgh Flyer Cat House Piano
Jimmy Lee Harris Dark Cloud Rising #1 George Mitchell Collection Vol. 5
Lonnie Pitchford Last Fair Deal Going Down National Downhome Blues Festival Vol. 1
John Jackson I'm A Bad Man National Downhome Blues Festival Vol. 3
Johnny Moore's Three Blazers Three-Handed Woman Los Angels Blues 1949-1950
Johnny Moore's Three Blazers Rock With It Los Angels Blues 1949-1950
Blind Joe Reynolds Married Woman Blues When The Sun Goes Down
Charlie Patton You Gonna Need Someone When You Die Screamin' And Hollerin' The Blues
John Lee Hooker Hot Spring Water Pt. 1 Urban Blues
Boogie Bill Webb Bad Dog Rural Blues Vol. 3
James Cotton Cotton Crop Blues Chicago The Blues Today!
Willie Garland Black Widow Spider Modern Blues Anthology Vol. 10
Andrew McMahon Worried All The Time Meat & Gravy From Bea & Baby
Robert Wilkins Alabama Blues Masters of the Memphis Blues
Robert Wilkins Old Jim Canaan Masters of the Memphis Blues
Joe Houston It's Really Wee Wee Hours The Big Three
Peppermint Harris Rainin' In My Heart Sittin' In With
Big Maybelle No More Trouble Out of Me The Complete OKeh Sessions
Little Willie John Suffering With The Blues 1966 (The David Axelrod/H B Barnum Sessions)
Jack McVea Two Timin' Baby Boogie New Deal
Jimmy Witherspoon Hey Mr. Landlord Urban Blues Singing Legend
Hank Marr w/ Freddie King The Push Greasy Spoon
Mississippi Matilda Hard Working Woman Blues Catfish Blues: Mississippi Blues Vol. 3
Sonny Boy Nelson Pony Blues Catfish Blues: Mississippi Blues Vol. 3
Otis Spann Wonder Why Muddy Waters Blues Band: They Done It Again! Vol. 2,
Otis Spann She's My Baby Muddy Waters Blues Band: They Done It Again! Vol. 2,

Show Notes:

Original Spivey LP 1968 P-Vine Reissue 2009
   

We cut a wide swath on today’s program with selections spanning from 1926 through 1970 with several twin spins along the way. Among those double shots are a pair of terrific sides by the incomparable Otis Spann. These lesser know numbers, “Wonder Why” and “She’s My Baby”, come from the 1967/68 LP Muddy Waters Blues Band: They Done It Again! Vol. 2 on the Spivey label. The Spivey label is a fascinating label that was apparently the  brainchild of  Len Kunstadt. In the mid 1950’s, Len Kunstadt and Victoria Spivey became companions and together they created Spivey Records in 1961. After Spivey’s death in 1976, Kunstadt carried on the label, mixing newly discovered artists with classic bluesmen until his death in 1996. Due to Spivey’s fame and musical connections she attracted some great musicians to the label including old associates like Lonnie Johnson, Lucille Hegemin, Hannah Sylvester plus a wide spectrum of artists such as Sunnyland Slim, Willie Dixon, Big Joe Williams, Koko Taylor, Roosevelt Sykes and numerous others. The label was very much a homemade affair with record sleeves that have a charming slapped together look and recording quality that varies widely. All in all there were some marvelous recordings and unfortunately the catalog has until recently never made it to the digital era. several years ago a website went up promising the remastered releases of the catalog on CD but nothing has been released yet. However, I just found out through Stefan Wirz’s meticulous Spivey discography that the Japanese P-Vine label has issued both volumes of the Muddy Waters Blues Band records on CD with bonus tracks. As soon as I figure out where to buy these you can bet I will! I do have both of these on LP, both are good with the nod going to the first volume. Spann is in excellent form on the latter LP as he does a fine duet with his wife Lucille on “Wonder Why”, goes it alone on on the rippling “She’s My Baby” bolstered by some stinging guitar from Sammy Lawhorn and does a pair of charming duets with Spivey on “Mother And Son” and “Diving Mama.” Spann also cut an entire album for Spivey in 1969, The Everlasting Blues vs. Otis Spann, which suffers from poor fidelity. Stay tuned soon for a show devoted to the Spivey label!

Other twin spins include cuts by Otis Rush, Johnny Moore’s Three Blazers, Robert Wilkins and Sonny Boy Nelson AKA Eugene Powell. Otis Rush made his reputation with his incredible recordings for the small Cobra label between 1956 and 1958. After Cobra closed up shop, Rush’s recording fortunes mostly floundered. He followed Willie Dixon over to Chess before moving on to Duke where he cut the lone single, “Homework”, and then cut records for Vanguard, and Cotillion. For Vangaurd he was involved in the three record set, Chicago The Blues Today! produced by blues historian Samuel Charters in 1966. “It’s A Mean Old World” comes from that latter session as we contrast it with the very different sounding “Homework.”

In the mid 1930′s the Moore brothers, Johnny and Oscar, relocated to Los Angeles, where Oscar joined the King Cole Trio and Johnny hooked up with Eddie Williams and Charles Brown to form The Three Blazers. Eventually Oscar would join the Blazers. The group made their debut in 1945 for Atlas before jumping to Exclusive plus cutting some sides for Modern and Aladdin. The group charted regularly through 1949 with the biggest hit being “Drifting Blues” a #2 Billboard R&B hit in 1946. All these songs were sung and often written by Charles Brown who inevitably left the group in 1948. Today’s sides were cut after Brown left.

Of the blues artists who were rediscovered and recorded anew in the 1960′s, Robert Wilkins was probably the least prolific. Born in Mississippi, Wilkins moved to Memphis as a teenager. He cut 17 sides for the Victor, Brunswick, and Vocalion labels between 1928 and 1935 that rank among the greatest blues of the era.In 1964 Wilkins was contacted and was soon in the studio recordings the album Memphis Gospel Singer for Peidmont, a wonderful record yet to be issued on CD. Here’s a little background on how the Piedmont recording came about supplied to Blues Unlimited by Richard Spottswood and published in Blues Unlimited 13, July 1964 (p.5): “The process of locating Rev. Wilkins was so simple that one might wonder why it hadn’t been done before. Early in 1964 Bill Givens of the Origin Jazz Library mentioned that it was rumored that Wilkins was living in Memphis and corresponding with a British collector. Since Dick Spottswood was too ill to travel at the time, his wife Louisa stopped at the telephone company to check the Memphis listings. She found an address, a letter was sent, and it was quickly answered. Arrangements were made for Rev. Wilkins to come to Washington to make recordings for Piedmont Records; this was done on the 13th and 16th of February 1964. Wilkins told Spottswood that actually he had never corresponded with any collector, though he was aware that a number of the old Memphis bluesmen had been recorded again. How strange that one of the best of them had been overlooked! And were it not for Bill Givens’ “false” tip he would not have been found at all. For this valuable bit of misinformation folk music collectors will be eternally in Mr. Givens’ debt.”

In 1936, Eugene Powell, along with Mississippi Matilda, Willie Harris and  some of the Chatmon family traveled to New Orleans to record for the Bluebird label.  Setting up at the St. Charles Hotel, Powell cut six sides during these sessions under the moniker Sonny Boy Nelson. From that session we spin “Pony Blues” and Matilda’s “Hard Working Woman” with guitar from Powell. In the 1970′s Powell began playing festivals and recording again. He died in 1998.

Also on tap today are some other fine country blues both past and present. Jesse Thomas moved to Dallas in 1929, when Blind Lemon Jefferson was still active but it’s unclear if he actually met Lemon. He made his debut for Victor in 1929 with a four-song session but wouldn’t record again until 1948. He waxed his greatest sides between 1948 and 1958, cutting over two-dozen sides for nine different West Coast labels. On the song “Double Due Love You” Thomas references Blind Lemon’s “Long Lonesome Blues”, which we played previously, in the song’s title and lyrics. Moving up to the 1980′s we play  performances by Lonnie Pitchford and John Jackson who were part of the The National Downhome Blues Festival, a one- time event held in 1984 in Atlanta, GA. Stretching over five days, the festival featured traditional blues artists in a small venue setting, and the shows were recorded, eventually released on four LPs in 1984. Southland has reissued this material on CD. The festival was produced by George Mitchell, famous for the blues field recordings he made he made in the 1960′s and 70′s. Mitchell also recorded the set’s opening track by Alabama bluesman Jimmy Lee Harris.

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