Entries tagged with “Jim Jackson”.
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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 22 Mar 2009
Posted by Jeff under Playlists
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| ARTIST |
SONG |
ALBUM |
| John Cephas |
When I Grow Too Old To Dream |
Unreleased |
| John Cephas |
Naylor Rag |
Unreleased |
| Bessie Smith |
Them "Has Been" Blues |
Complete Recordings (Frog DGF 40-47) |
| Butterbeans & Susie |
He Likes It Slow |
Hot Fives and Sevens (JSP) |
| Lucille Bogan |
Shave 'em Dry |
Lucille Bogan Vol 3 1934-35 |
| Snooks Eaglin |
Country Boy Down In New Orleans |
Country Boy Down In New Orleans |
| Snooks Eaglin |
By The Water |
Rural Blues Vol. 1 & 2 |
| Snooks Eaglin |
I Get The Blues When It Rains |
The Sonet Blues Story |
| 5 Royales |
I Ain't Getting Caught |
It's Hard, But It's Fair |
| Ike Turner |
It's Gonna Work Out Fine |
Ike's Instrumentals |
| Detroit Junior |
Money Tree |
Meat & Gravy From Bea & Baby |
| Lonnie Johnson |
Get Yourself Together |
He's A Jelly Roll Baker |
| Big Bill Broonzy |
Oh Yes |
Big Bill Broonzy Vol. 9 |
| Bo Carter |
The Law Gonna Step On You |
Bo Carter Vol. 2 1931-1934 |
| Cat Iron |
Jimmy Bell |
Cat-Iron Sings Blues and Hymn |
| Son Thomas |
After The War |
Gateway To The Delta |
| Scott Dunbar |
Liza Jane |
From Lake Mary |
| Louis Jordan |
How Blue Can You Get? |
The Complete Decca Recordings |
| B.B. King |
How Blue Can You Get? |
Live At The Regal |
| Sloppy Henry |
Say I Do |
Atlanta Blues |
| Barbecue Bob |
Chocolate To The Bone |
Barbecue Bob Vol. 1 |
| Curley Weaver |
Tippin' Tom |
Atlanta Blues |
| Jim Jackson |
St. Louis Blues |
Jim Jackson Vol. 2 1928-1930 |
| Larry Davis |
Angels In Houston |
Angels In Houston |
| Junior Parker |
Feelin' Bad |
Sun Records: The Blues Years 1950-58 |
| Howlin' Wolf |
Well That's Alright |
Sun Records: The Blues Years 1950-58 |
| Sunnyland Slim |
She Got That Jive |
Meat & Gravy From Bea & Baby |
| Reverend Robert Wilkins |
The Prodigal Son |
Blues At Newport |
Show Notes:
 |
| John Cephas, Photo by Tom Pich for National Endowment of the Arts |
|
A somber note hangs over today’s show as we pay tribute to the recently departed John Cephas and Snooks Eaglin. John Cephas, best known as the guitarist and singer with the duo Cephas & Wiggins died March 4th. He was 78. Both Cephas and Wiggins were born in Washington, D.C., although Wiggins was a quarter century younger than his partner; they met at a jam session in 1977, and both performed as regular members of Big Chief Ellis’ band prior to Ellis’ death. The duo had been recording since the early 80’s, cutting records for Flying Fish, Rounder and most recently Alligator. The tracks featured today were the first by Cephas, cut in the mid-70’s by Pete Lowry but never released at the time. Lowry has given me permission to play these cuts which are not available anywhere else. Lowry recorded Cephas & Wiggins extensively in 1980 and recorded Cephas in-depth in 1976.
Snooks Eaglin passed away on February 18th. In true New Orleans fashion he was given a full jazz funeral send off. I first encountered Snooks via his terrific Black Top Records of the late 1980’s and 90’s. After the label’s demise Snooks only recorded one more album, The Way It Is, in 2001 which happens to be one of my favorites. Fans of Snooks’ later electric records may be surprised that his earliest records (1958-1959) which are all acoustic. From that period we spin the charming “Country Boy Down In New Orleans” from the wonderful
album of the same name on Arhoolie. We also play the soulful “By The Water” cut for Imperial in 1960 and “I Get The Blues When It Rains” from 1971’s The Sonet Blues Story.
We do a bit of compare and contrast today by playing two versions of the classic “How Blue Can You Get?”, one by Louis Jordan and the other by B.B. King. Johnny Moore’s Three Blazer’s cut the original version in 1949 which we played on the program a couple of weeks back. It was covered in 1951 by Louis Jordan which is where B.B. King first heard the song. King began using it in his live act at recorded it on his classic Live At The Regal album from 1963.
There’s plenty vintage blues from the 1920’s and 30’s including a trio of sides from Atlanta artists Peg Leg Howell, Sloppy Henry and Barbecue Bob. Like Memphis, Atlanta was a staging post for musicians on their way to all points. It’s not surprising then that the first country blues musician, Ed Andrews, was recorded there in 1924. The company that recorded him, Okeh, was one of many to send their engineers to Southern cities to record local talent. Companies like Victor, Columbia, Vocalion and Brunswick made at least yearly visits until the depression. Between 1927-1930 Atlanta was visited seventeen times by the record companies. Among the bluesmen to record in Atalanta in the 1920’s, the first to arrive in the city was Joshua Barnes Powell, known as Peg Leg because of a shooting accident in 1916. We also hear Peg Leg in the
company of singer Sloppy Henry. Henry cut sixteen between 1924 and 1929 for the Okeh label. Within a year or so of Howell’s arrival in Atlanta, Robert Hicks came to the city. He learned guitar, as did his older brother Charlie, and their friend Curley Weaver from the latter’s mother Savannah Weaver. Hicks earned his nickname from his day job as the chef of a barbecue restaurant and Columbia photographed him for their publicity material in his work apron. As Barbecue Bob he became the most heavily recorded Atlanta bluesman of the 1920’s with his records selling steadily for Columbia until his untimely death in 1931.
We also feature some fine blues ladies including Susie Hawthorne, one half of the popular Butterbeans & Susie, Lucille Bogan and Bessie Smith. Butterbeans and Susie were a comedy duo that began touring with the Theatre Owners Booking Association (TOBA) and later moved to vaudeville before signing with Okeh Records. They cut close to 70 sides for the label between 1924 and 1930. Our track, “He Likes It Slow”, from 1926 features Louis Armstrong on cornet. From the same year we play Bessie Smith’s “Them ‘Has Been’ Blues.” This cut comes form the the eight volume series on the Frog label that collects all of Bessie’s recordings. Sound quality on this series is outstanding, noticeably better then Columbia’s series, which is interesting since Columbia had the actual masters to work with. The Frog series is a testament to the skills of engineer John R.T. Davies and label owner David French, who commissioned collectors for the best available originals. Sadly Davies and French both passed before the completion of the series. From Lucille Bogan we spin her classic “Shave ‘Em Dry.” This of course is the clean version. The unreleased version is extremely explicit and if aired would surely be the end of my broadcasting career!
 |
| Butterbeans & Susie |
We close out our show with a stunning version of “Prodigal Son” by Robert Wilkins recorded live at Newport in 1964. During the 1920’s and 1930’s, Tim Wilkins was one of the most popular blues artists associated with Beale Street. He left the blues world to become an ordained minister. When the Rolling Stones recorded Wilkins’ “Prodigal Son” in the early ’60s (originally titled “That’s No Way To Get Along”), blues researchers found Wilkins at home in Memphis, ministering to the congregation at the Lane Avenue Church of God in Christ and performing gospel songs at street corner revivals. He returned to recording with the album Memphis Gospel Singer in 1964, a classic record that yet to make it to CD. He performed at several festivals including Newport in 1964 and the Memphis Country Blues Festival in 1968. He passed in 1987.
Tags: Barbecue Bob, Big Bill Broonzy, Bo Carter, Cat Iron, Howlin' Wolf, Jim Jackson, John Cephas, Junior Parker, Lonnie Johnson, Louis Jordan, Robert Wilkins, Snooks Eaglin, Son Thomas, Sunnyland Slim
Sun 11 Jan 2009
| ARTIST |
SONG |
ALBUM |
| Tampa Red |
It’s Tight Like That (take 2) |
Tampa Red Vol. 1 1928-29 |
| Tampa Red |
What Is It That Tastes Like Gravy? |
The Essential |
| Tampa Red |
Toogaloo Blues |
Tampa Red Vol. 4 1930-31 |
| Madyln Davis |
Too Black Bad |
Tampa Red Vol. 1 1928-29 |
| Ma Rainey |
Black Eye Blues |
Mother Of The Blues |
| Ma Rainey |
Sleep Talking Blues |
Mother Of The Blues |
| Tampa Red w/ Frankie Jaxon |
Mama Don't Allow... |
Tampa Red Vol. 3 1929-30 |
| Tampa Red w/ Frankie Jaxon |
Saturday Night Scrontch |
Tampa Red Vol. 3 1929-30 |
| Lucille Bogan |
Coffee Grindin’ Blues |
The Essential |
| Victoria Spivey |
Don’t Trust Nobody |
Victoria Spivey Vol. 3 1929-1936 |
| Tampa Red |
Bumble Bee Blues |
Tampa Red Vol. 4 1930-31 |
| Tampa Red |
That Stuff You Sell |
Tampa Red Vol. 3 1929-30 |
| Tampa Red |
Boogie Woogie Dance |
The Essential |
| Mary Johnson |
Dawn Of Day Blues |
Barrelhouse Mamas |
| Mary Johnson |
Death Cell Blues |
Twenty First Street Stomp |
| Tampa Red |
Dead Cats On The Line |
The Essential |
| Tampa Red |
You Can't Get That Stuff No More |
Tampa Red Vol. 4 1930-31 |
| Tampa Red |
No Matter How She Done It |
The Essential |
| Tampa Red |
Kingfish Blues |
The Essential |
| Tampa Red |
Stockyard Fire |
The Essential |
| Tampa Red |
Mean Mistreater Blues |
The Essential |
| James "Stump" Johnson |
Jones Law Blues |
James ''Stump'' Johnson 1929-64 |
| Jim Jackson |
Jim Jackson's Jamboree-Part II |
Jim Jackson Vol. 2 1928-30 |
| Tampa Red |
Stormy Sea Blues |
Tampa Red Vol. 7 1935-36 |
| Tampa Red |
Seminole Blues |
Tampa Red Vol. 9 1937-38 |
| Tampa Red |
Delta Woman Blues |
Tampa Red Vol. 9 1937-38 |
| Tampa Red |
Bessemer Blues |
Tampa Red Vol. 10 1938-39 |
| Tampa Red |
It Hurts Me Too |
The Essential |
| Tampa Red |
She’s Love Crazy |
Tampa Red Vol. 12 1941-45 |
| Tampa Red |
Let Me Play with Your Poodle |
The Essential |
| Tampa Red |
Mercy Mama Blues |
Tampa Red Vol. 12 1941-45 |
| Tampa Red |
1950 Blues |
Tampa Red Vol. 14 1949-51 |
| Tampa Red |
Love Her With A Feelin' |
Tampa Red Vol. 14 1949-51 |
| Tampa Red |
Rambler’s Blues |
Tampa Red Vol. 15 1951-53 |

Show Notes:
During his heyday in the 1920’s and 30’s, Tampa Red was billed as “The Guitar Wizard,” and his stunning slide work on steel National or electric guitar shows why he earned the title. His 25 year recording career produced hundreds of sides: hokum, pop, and jive, but mostly blues (including classic compositions “Anna Lou Blues,” “Black Angel Blues,” “Crying Won’t Help You,” “It Hurts Me Too,” and “Love Her with a Feeling”). Early in Red’s career, he teamed up with pianist, songwriter, and latter-day gospel composer Georgia Tom Dorsey, collaborating on double entendre classics like “Tight Like That.” Tampa’s slide playing was widely admired and influential on the likes of Robert Nighthawk, Elmore James and Earl Hooker. Jim O’Neal neatly summed up Tampa’s place in blues history when he wrote the following in 1975: “Few figures have been as important in blues history as Tampa Red; yet no bluesman of such stature has been so ignored by today’s blues audience. As a composer, recording artist, musical trendsetter and one of the premier urban blues guitarists of his day, Tampa Red remained popular with black record buyers for more than 20 years and exerted considerable influence on many post-World War II blues stars who earned greater acclaim for playing Tampa’s songs than Tampa himself often did.”
Tampa was born Hudson Woodbridge in Smithville, Georgia with various birth dates given between 1900 and 1908. His parents died when he was a child, and he moved to Tampa, Florida, where he was raised by his aunt and grandmother and adopted their surname, Whittaker. He emulated his older brother, Eddie, who played guitar, and he was especially inspired by an old street musician called Piccolo Pete, who first taught him to play blues licks on a guitar. In the 1920’s, having already perfected his slide technique, he moved to Chicago, Illinois, and began his career as a musician, adopting the name “Tampa Red” from his childhood home and red hair.
In the 1920’s, having already perfected his slide technique, he moved to Chicago, Illinois, and began his career as a musician. His big break was being hired to accompany Ma Rainey and he began recording in 1928. In 1928 Whittaker, through the intercession of J. Mayo “Ink” Williams, teamed up with pianist Thomas Dorsey a. k. a. Georgia Tom and recorded the Paramount label hit “Tight Like That”-a number based upon Blind Blake’s “Too Tight” and Papa Charlie Jackson’s “Shake That Thing.” With “It’s Tight Like That”, in a bawdy and humorous style that became known as “hokum.” The success of “Tight Like That” prompted several other record other versions for Paramount, and initiated the blues genre known as hokum Early recordings were mostly collaborations with Thomas A. Dorsey, known at the time as Georgia Tom. Tampa Red and Georgia Tom recorded almost 60 sides, sometimes as “The Hokum Boys” or, with Frankie Jaxon, as “Tampa Red’s Hokum Jug Band”. Tampa had actually met Georgia Tom around 1925 and Tom recalled those early years: “We played Memphis, I think Louisville, down to Nashville; we was down in Tennessee, or in Mississippi just across he line. We recorded in Memphis at the Peabody Hotel in 1929), and I left him down in Memphis and he got another week’s at the Palace Theater there. They liked him so well they hired him with just he and his guitar. …We played just anywhere. Party, theater, dance hall, juke joint. All black. See we wasn’t high-powered enough. Other fellows who were in the high music echelon got those jobs with the whites. The money was bigger up there.” Outside the studio Tom and Tampa worked together or separately joined sometime by their frequent studio partner, Frankie “Half Pint” Jaxon who primarily played the night clubs.
In 1928, Tampa Red became the one of the first bluesmen to play a National steel-bodied resonator guitar,
the loudest and showiest guitar available before amplification; acquiring one in the first year they were available. This allowed him to develop his trademark bottleneck style, playing single string runs, not block chords, which was a precursor to later blues and rock guitar soloing. The National guitar he used was a gold-plated tricone, which was found in Illinois in the 1990s and later sold to the “Experience Music Project” in Seattle. Tampa Red was known as “The Man With The Gold Guitar”, and, into the 1930s, he was billed as “The Guitar Wizard”.
When Dorsey left the blues field in 1932 to take up a career as gospel songwriter and choir director, Tampa continued his path of fame as blues artist. In 1934 he launched his fruitful career with the Victor/Bluebird label. Following the repeal of prohibition in 1933, venues for blues music proliferated in Chicago, and Tampa Red became one of the city’s hottest live acts, often with the backing of his band, the Chicago Five. With his close friends Big Bill Broonzy and Lester Melrose, a producer for Bluebird Records, Tampa Red was a leader of the Chicago scene. In 1934 he signed for Victor Records. He formed the Chicago Five, a group of session musicians who created what became known as the Bluebird sound, a precursor of the small group style of later jump blues and rock and roll bands. He was a close friend and associate of Big Bill Broonzy and Big Maceo Merriweather. His wife, Frances, acted as his business manager, and Tampa’s house served as the blues community’s rehearsal hall and an informal booking agency. According to the testimony of Broonzy and Big Joe Williams, Red cared for other musicians by offering them a meal and a place to stay and generally easing their transition from country to city life. A frequent visitor to Whittaker’s apartment, Willie Dixon recalled, in I Am the Blues, how “Tampa Red’s house was a madhouse with old-time musicians. Lester Melrose would be drinking all the time and Tampa Red’s wife would be cooking chicken.” After the signing with Victor/bluebird Tampa stuck to Chicago and found steady work at a club across the street from his house called the H&T. Blind John Davis, who met Tampa in 1936, recalled: “Tampa’s the onliest one I know could could close his eyes and run across the street and run right into his job. And he worked there for about eight or nine years.”
Through the 1940’s Tampa remained a prime seller among black audiences with hits like “Let Me Play With Your Poodle” and “She Wants To Sell My Monkey.” During his Bluebird stint, between 1934 and 1953, he recorded over 200 sides. In addition to recordings he regularly played the clubs such as Club Georgia, the Flame Club, Sylvio’s, the Purple Cat , the 708 club, the Zanzibar, the Peacock and the C&T Lounge all of which were black clubs on Chicago’s South and West sides. Tampa’s music continued to evolve as Jim O’Neal notes: “…He was right there swinging with horns when big band jump blues were in fashion, and he had the boogie numbers down, too; even on his last Victor sessions he had adapted to the mainstream ’50’s Chicago blues sound with featured harmonica backing from Sonny Boy Williamson (Rice Miller) and Big Walter Horton. He was following trends, but setting them too with numbers that many other bluesmen were to re-record in later years. …Less frequently was Tamap a solo act; Big Maceo teamed up with him for for a while, and after Maceo suffered a stroke, Sunnyland Slim filled in until Maceo’s protege Johnnie Jones took over on piano. By now Tampa also had added support from a drummer, Odie Payne Jr., and Johnnie would sing about half the numbers when he, Tampa, and Odie worked the Peacock and the C&T in 1949. Johnnie also sang on at least a dozen of Tampa’s later records.” His last hit was 1949’s “When Things Go Wrong With You (it Hurts Me Too)” which briefly hit the national R&B charts. By the early 1950’s Tampa rarely played the clubs anymore and he made his final commercial recording for Victor in 1953.
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| Left to right, standing: Jazz Gillum, Tampa Red and Little Bill Gaither. Sitting: Jack Dupree and Big Bill with Tampa’s dog which “drank whiskey just like we did and helped us sing.” |
His wife’s death in 1953 was a blow from which Tampa Red never recovered. He had always been a heavy drinker, and his alcoholism became acute. Like many of his contemporaries, he was “rediscovered” by a new audience in the late 1950s. At this time, Samuel Charters also encountered the once-famed guitarist. In his work Country Blues, Charters recalled Whittaker’s life during this period of musical retirement: “He lives quietly, a dignified, gentle little man, usually wearing a buttoned sweater, his shoes carefully polished. He spends his afternoons visiting friends, walking along the rows of brownstone apartments that line the streets of his neighborhood, a scarf carefully folded around his neck and his overcoat collar turned up. He still owns a guitar, but hasn’t played much in recent years.” He went back into the studio in 1960 [two solo records for Prestige/Bluesville], but his final recordings were undistinguished.” He showed little interest in returning to music or talking to interviewers. Tampa passed away in Chicago in 1981.