Entries tagged with “Kokomo Arnold”.
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Sun 2 May 2010
| ARTIST | SONG | ALBUM |
| Garfield Akers | Dough Roller Blues | Mississippi Masters |
| Willie Harris | Never Drive A Stranger From Your Door | A Richer Tradition |
| Bukka White | The Panama Limited | The Vintage Recordings 1930-1940 |
| Oliver Cobb | Cornet Pleading Blues Pt. 1 | Male Blues of the Twenties Vol. 1 |
| Willie "Scarecrow" Owens | Travelling Blues | Jazzin' The Blues Vol. 1 1929-1937 |
| Lena Matlock | Stop Bittin' Other Women In The Back | Jazzin' The Blues Vol. 1 1929-1937 |
| Judson Brown | You Don't Know My Mind Blues | Piano Blues Vol. 1 1927-1936 |
| Mozelle Alderson | Tight In Chicago | Barrelhouse Mamas |
| Joe Dean | I'm So Glad I’m Twenty One Years Old Today | Piano Blues Vol. 1 1927-1936 |
| Big Bill Broonzy | I Can't Be Satisfied | Big Bill Broonzy: All The Classic Sides |
| Ed Bell | Carry It Right Back Home | Ed Bell 1927-1930 |
| Pillie Bolling | Shake It Like A Dog | Ed Bell 1927-1930 |
| Kansas City Kitty & Georgia Tom | How Can You Have The Blues? | Kansas City Kitty 1930-1934 |
| Butterbeans & Susie | Times Is Hard (So I'm Savin' for a Rainy Day) | Classic Blues & Vaudeville Singers Vol. 5 1922-1930 |
| Memphis Minnie & Kansas Joe | I Called You This Morning | Memphis Minnie & Kansas Joe Vol. 2 1929-1930 |
| Mississippi Sheiks | Boolegger’s Blues | Honey Babe Let The Deal Go Down |
| Shreveport Home Wreckers | Fence Breakin' Blues | Texas Blues: Early Blues Masters from the Lone Star State |
| Georgia Cotton Pickers | She's Coming Back Some Cold Rainy Day | Atlanta Blues |
| Little Hat Jones | Bye Bye Baby Blues | Early Masters From the Lone Star State |
| Jim Jackson | St. Louis Blues | Jim Jackson Vol. 2 1928-1930 |
| Blind Blake | Hard Pushing Papa | All The Published Sides |
| Clara Burston | 1930 Mama | Barrelhouse Women Vol. 1 1925-1930 |
| Leola Manning | Laying In The Graveyard | Rare Country Blues Vol.1 |
| Bessie Smith | Moan Mourners | The Complete Recordings (Frog) |
| Freddie Redd Nicholson | You Gonna Miss Me Blues | Down In Black Bottom |
| Speckled Red | Speckled Red’s Blues | Speckled Red 1929-1938 |
| John Oscar | Whoopee Mama Blues | Down In Black Bottom |
| J.T. Funny Papa Smith | Howling Wolf Blues No. 1 | J. T. ''Funny Paper'' Smith 1930-1931 |
| Blind Willie McTell | Talkin' To Myself Blues | The Classic Years 1927-1940 |
| Bayless Rose | Frisco Blues | Broke, Black And Blue |
| Troy Ferguson | Mama You Gotta Get It Fixed | Rare Country Blues Vol. 4 1929-c.1953 |
| Kokomo Arnold | Paddlin' Madeline | Kokomo Arnold Vol. 1 1930-1935 |
| Famous Hokum Boys | Pig Meat Strut | Big Bill Broonzy: All The Classic Sides |
Show Notes:
 |
Blind Willie McTell, Chicago Defender Ad,
August 27, 1930 |
Today’s show is the fourth installment of an ongoing series of programs built around a particular year. The first year we spotlighted was 1927 which was the beginning of a blues boom that would last until 1930; there were just 500 blues and gospel records issued in 1927 and increase of fifty percent from 1926 a trend that would continue until the depression. To feed the demand other record companies conducted exhaustive searches for new talent, which included making trips down south with field recording units. Between 1927-1930 Atlanta was visited seventeen times, Memphis eleven times, Dallas eight times, New Orleans seven times and so on. The record companies advertised their records in black newspapers, mainly in the Chicago Defender, which was the nation’s most influential black weekly newspaper.
The Depression, with the massive unemployment it brought, had a shattering effect on the pockets of black record buyers. By 1931 race record sales accounted for only about 1% of total industry sales, as against 5% four years earlier. By the fall of 1929, the Depression closed down a lot of the large touring shows and theaters. Record companies went bankrupt and sales plummeted. However, by 1937, the industry recovered and by 1937 they were almost as many new blues records produced as the peak years of the 1920′s. The depression hit the record business hard; Columbia for example was pressing 11, 000 blues and gospel records in 1927 and by May of 1930 they were pressing 2,000 records, with the number halving by year’s end. Blind Willie Johnson’s first records had sold no better than the average disc in the Columbia 1400D series – in early 1929 they would manage about 5,000 as against Barbecue Bob’s 6,000 and Bessie Smith’s 9,000 or 10,000. In mid-1930 the blind evangelist became the star of the list – his records were still selling 5,000 copies, although Barbecue Bob was down to 2,000, Bessie Smith to 3,000 and the average release had initial sales of only just over 1,000. The other labels were hit equally hard: Paramount placed their last ad in the Chicago Defender in April, Victor placed its last ad in December, the Gennett imprint was discontinued in 1930 and Warner, who owned the Brunswick group of labels, discontinued field trips at the end of 1930. Despite the hard times, there was some superb records being produced and today we spotlight some of the big names of the blues along with several who remain utterly forgotten.
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| Bessie Smith, Chicago Defender Ad, July 2, 1930 |
With the gradual rundown of Paramount, Brunswick became the leader in the race market. Among their stable of artists was Leroy Carr and Tampa Red, among the era’s biggest blues stars. Brunswick continued to record in the field and in 1930 they made recordings in Memphis where they recorded Memphis Minnie, Robert Wilkins, Jim Jackson and Garfield Akers among others. Today we spin Jim Jackson performing a rousing version of ”St. Louis Blues” and Garfield Akers’ “Dough Roller Blues.” Akers made his debut in 1929 backed by Joe Callicott and waxed the classic “Cottonfield Blues” Pts. 1 & 2 for Vocalion which was advertised in the February 2nd, 1930 Chicago Defender. In Knoxville they recorded Leola Manning and the Tennessee Chocolate Drops and in Dallas they recorded Gene Campbell.
In February 1930 the OKeh field unit called at Shreveport, Louisiana, to do some recording at the request of a local radio station. while there, they recorded a small black group who called themselves the Mississippi Sheiks. Their records went down so well that OKeh recorded 14 more numbers in San Antonio in August and a further 16 in Jackson, Mississippi, just before Christmas. The Mississippi Sheiks became the most popular string bands of the late ’20s and early ’30s. The band blended country and blues fiddle music and included guitarist Walter Vinson and fiddler Lonnie Chatmon, with frequent appearances by guitarists Bo Carter and Sam Chatmon, who were also busy with their own solo careers. The Sheiks had their first and biggest success with “Sitting on Top of the World,” which was a crossover hit and multi-million seller. The Mississippi Sheiks’ popularity peaked in the early ’30s, and their final recording session happened in 1935 for the Bluebird label.
In 1930, when most companies were considering cutting back on their race issues, the American Record Corporation entered the field. ARC had been formed in August 1929 by the merger of three small companies: the Cameo Record corporation, whose labels included Banner and Oriole, and the Pathe Phonograph and Radio Corporation, owners of Perfect. In April 1930 ARC decided to revive the Perfect race series, and this time they made sure that they used currently popular artists singing up-to -the-minute material. In April 1930 they recorded some solo blues by Georgia Tom, and some Tampa Red styled numbers by a group called The Famous Hokum Boys that included Georgia Tom and Tampa Red and Big Bill Broonzy. ARC also recorded five solo records by him and issued them under the name Sammy Sampson. In September ARC had another recording session involving once again Georgia Tom, Sammy Sampson and The Famous Hokum Boys. Hokum had been hot since Tampa Red & Georgia Tom’s “It’s Tight Like That” was a huge smash in 1928 and the labels continued to try and cash in on the craze. “Hokum” was a common vaudeville term for rowdy comedy or clever stage business.
In February 1930 Vocalion recorded sides by Memphis Minnie and Kansas Joe, with the duo hitting big with “Bumble Bee” issued in May. Columbia had recorded the duo the year before but didn’t issue all the titles. Once they saw how well “Bumble Bee” was selling they belatedly, in August 1930, issued the version they had recorded fourteen months previously.
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| Bukka White, Chicago Defender Ad, November 11, 1930 |
Among some of the other major blues artists who cut records in 1930, we spin tracks by Blind Willie McTell, Bessie Smith, Bukka White, Big Bill Broonzy and Blind Blake. White made his debut in 1930 for Victor, cutting two 78’s, one blues coupling and one gospel under the name Washington White. His “I Am In The Heavenly Way” was advertised on October 11, 1930 in the Chicago Defender. Blind Blake, one of the most popular bluesmen of the 1920’s. His only rival in popularity was Blind Lemon Jefferson, also a Paramount artist. Blake was advertised heavily in the Chicago Defender between 1926-30,with twenty-four ads appearing. He cut some 80 sides before mysteriously disappearing after a final session circa June 1932. In her heyday Bessie Smith was the highest paid black entertainer in America. She was advertised as The Empress of the Blues a title hard to argue with. She recorded prolifically between 1923-1931 with a final four-song session in 1933. Broonzy made his debut in 1928 and was an in demand session guitarist as well as waxing hundreds of sides under his own name. Today we spin Broonzy’s superb “I Can’t Be Satisfied” as well as “Pig Meat Strut” in the company of The Famous Hokum Boys. The group was a studio outfit that consisted of Big Bill Broonzy, Georgia Tom, Frank Braswell who cut close to two-dozen sides in 1930 .
Tags: 1930 blues, Bessie Smith, Big Bill Broonzy, Blind Blake, Bukka White, Butterbeans & Susie, Chicago Defender, Ed Bell, Famous Hokum Boys, Georgia Tom, J.T. Funny Papa Smith, Jim Jackson, Kansas City Kitty, Kokomo Arnold, Leola Manning, Memphis Minnie, Mississippi Sheiks, Speckled Red
Tue 5 Jan 2010
Posted by Jeff under Playlists
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| ARTIST | SONG | ALBUM |
| Joe Callicott | Up The Country | Presenting The Country Blues |
| Sam Chatmon | Stoop Down Baby | Field Recordings From Hollandale 1976-1982 |
| Teddy Bunn | I've Come A Long Ways Baby | Blind Roosevelt Graves 1929-1936 |
| Amos Milburn | After Midnight | Complete Aladdin Recordings |
| Roosevelt Sykes | Fine And Brown | Rainin' In My Heart |
| Tony Hollis | I'll Get A Break | Chicago Blues Vol. 1 1939-1951 |
| Lonnie Johnson | Lines On My Face | Losing Game |
| Smokey Hogg | It’s Rainin' Here | Midnight Blues |
| Tarheel Slim | Somebody Changed The Lock | Lonesome Slide Guitar Blues |
| Virginia Liston | Night Latch Key Blues | Virginia Liston Vol. 2 1924-1926 |
| Clara Smith | Low Land Moan | Clara Smith Vol. 6 1930-1932 |
| Hattie Hart | Papa's Got Your Bath Water On | I Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 1 |
| Arthur 'Guitar' Kelly | How Can I Stay When All I Have Is Gone | Swamp Blues |
| Whispering Smith | Looking The World Over | Swamp Blues |
| Henry Gray | Lucky Lucky Man | More Louisiana Swamp Blues |
| Johnny "Guitar" Watson | Someone Cares For Me | Hot Just Like TNT |
| Little Miss Janice | Scarred Knees | West Coast Guitar Killers 1951-1965 Vol. 1 |
| Mississippi Sheiks | He Calls That Religion | Blues Images Vol. 3 |
| Kokomo Arnold | Policy Wheel Blues | Kokomo Arnold Vol. 2 1935-1936 |
| Louis Lasky | How You Want Your Rollin' Done | Times Ain't Like The Used To Be Vol. 1 |
| Ray Agee | Deep Trouble | Ray Agee - West Coast Blues Vol. 1 |
| Ray Agee | Tough Competition | Ray Agee - West Coast Blues Vol. 3 |
| Schoolboy Cleve | Beautiful, Beautiful Love | Going Down To Louisiana |
| Jimmy Anderson | Draft Board Blues | More Louisiana Swamp Blues |
| Edith North Johnson & Henry Brown | Nickel's Worth of Liver | Classic Blues From Smithsonian Folkways |
| Henry Brown | Henry Brown Blues | Conversation With The Blues |
| Bukka White | Fixin' To Die Blues | The Complete Bukka White |
| Tommy McClennan | Deep Sea Blues | Before The Blues Vol. 2 |
| Robert Petway | Catfish Blues | Catfish Blues - Mississippi Blues Vol. 3 1936-1942 |
| Furry Lewis | Judge Boushay Blues | Memphis Swamp Jam |
| Fred McDowell | Keep your Lamp Trimmed And Burning | Memphis Swamp Jam |
| Bukka White | Sad Day | Memphis Swamp Jam |
Show Notes:
We span a good chunk of blues history today, spinning tracks from 1924 through 1976. On tap on today’s program are a number of fine country blues recordings from the 1960′s and 70′s, a couple of album spotlights and twin spins by pianist Henry Brown and singer Ray Agee. From the blues revival era we open with tracks by Joe Callicott and Sam Chatmon who’s careers bridged the pre-war and post-war blues eras. A product of the Chatmon family that included not only Lonnie of the famous Mississippi Sheiks but also the prolific Bo Carter and several other blues-playing brothers, Sam Chatmon survived to began performing and recording again in the ’60s. Throughout the ’60s and ’70s, he recorded for a variety of labels, as well as playing clubs and blues and folk festivals across America. Chatmon was an active performer and recording artist until his death in 1983. Today’s track, “Stoop Down Baby”, comes from the collection, Field Recordings From Hollandale 1976-1982 which has recently been issued on the Mbirafon label. Some of these recordings were issued on the Albatros label in the 80’s. It’s interesting to hear Chatmon cover Chick Willis’ “Stoop Down Baby”, a relatively recent hit, it shows that he was still keeping his ears open to new material and the the song itself perfectly fits his repertoire which is built on many such ribald songs.
Joe Callicott waxed a lone 78 in Memphis in 1929, Fare Thee Well Blues b/w Traveling Mama Blues, and a year later played second guitar on Garfield Akers’ “Cottonfield Blues Parts 1 & 2.” It was the indefatigable field recorder George Mitchell who found him in Nesbit, Mississippi off Highway 51 not far from Hernando and short distance from Brights were Akers was supposedly born. Callicott’s “comeback” was about as short as his first recording career, lasting from the summer of 1967 through the summer of 1968; he recorded nineteen sides for Mitchell either late August or early September, four sides at the 1968 Memphis Country Blues Festival and seventeen sides for Blue Horizon in 1968. As Paul Oliver wrote: “A wider recognition came almost too late but Joe appeared at the 1968 Memphis Blues Festival and was looking forward to a European trip. Back at his home, with the birds whistling and witnessed by his wife and their bellcow, he recorded his last testament; he died early in 1969 and with him went the last echoes of Mississippi country music of the earliest phase of the blues.”
From 1969 we spin a trio of cuts from the album Memphis Swap Jam. Released to commemorate the 1969 Memphis Blues Festival, the album features 20 songs by the event’s most notable performers. Although the tracks date from the same period as the festival, they were recorded at Ardent Recording Studio and Royal Recording Studio in Memphis. Chris Strachwitz produced this two-LP set, and it marks one of the few occasions (if not only) when he worked in this capacity for a company other than his own Arhoolie Records. Artists like Bukka White, Furry Lewis, Fred McDowell and Sleepy John Estes had been recorded extensively during the blues revival but still sound quite inspired on these performances.
A nice companion CD to this is The 1968 Memphis Country Blues Festival With Bukka White a terrific double CD of live and studio recording by Bukka White, Furry Lewis, Joe Callicott and Robert Wilkins.
We also spotlight another great 2-LP set, Swamp Blues, which has since been reissued on CD by Ace Records. Swamp Blues is a collection of Baton Rogue artists, most of whom had recorded for the legendary Excello label. At this point the label was owned by Nashboro who had a licensing agreement with the British Blue Horizon label owned by Mike Vernon. Blue Horizon already had albums out by Lightnin’ Slim and Lonesome Sundown and was eager to get involved with this project which was issued under the Excello imprint. It was Baton Rogue blues fan Terry Pattison who got the project off the ground. Pattison was in touch with the folks at the great, now defunct, Blues Unlimited magazine and they in turn got in touch with Vernon. An attempt was made to get Lazy Lester and Lightnin’ Slim on board but to no avail. Still it was an impressive roster featuring ex-Howlin’ Wolf pianist Henry Gray, Whispering Smith, Silas Hogan, Clarence Edwards and Arthur “Guitar” Kelly.
As for our twin spins today we play two cuts by pianist Henry Brown, one in a supporting role and one solo number. Henry Brown learned to play the piano from the “professors” of the notorious Deep Morgan section of St. Louis. Brown worked clubs such as the Blue Flame Club, the 9-0-5 Club, Jim’s Place and Katy Red’s, from the twenties into the 30’s. He recorded for Brunswick with Ike Rogers and Mary Johnson in 1929, for Paramount in ‘29 and ‘30. He served in the army in the early 40’s, then formed his own quartet to work occasional local gigs in St. Louis area from the 50’s, and worked the Becky Thatcher riverboat in 1965. In addition to his pre-war recordings, he was recorded by Paul Oliver in 1960, by Sam Charters with Edith Johnson in 1961 and by Adelphi in 1969. Our cuts feature the rollicking (mostly) instrumental “Henry Brown Blues” which was recorded by Paul Oliver and comes from the companion CD to Oliver’s book Conversation With The Blues. “Nickel’s Worth of Liver” features the vocal of Edith North Johnson, a song she first cut in 1929, that time backed by Roosevelt Sykes. Johnson cut 18 sides in 1928 and 1929, including a session with Charley Patton in Grafton, WI, for Paramount Records, although it is doubtful Patton actually appeared on any of her songs. She
made her home in St. Louis, where she ran a fleet of taxis during World War II and owned a popular diner. Sam Charters recorded her with Henry Brown in 1961 for his anthology called The Blues in St. Louis Vol. 2 for Folkways Records. Born January 2, 1903, in St. Louis, she died there on February 28, 1988.
We also feature two cuts by the neglected singer Ray Agee. Agee is known primarily for his tough 1963 remake of the blues standard “Tin Pan Alley” for the tiny Sahara logo. Agee recorded for a slew of labels both large and small during the 1950′s and 60′s without much in the way of national recognition outside his Los Angeles home base. After moving to L.A. with his family, he apprenticed with his brothers in a gospel quartet before striking out in the R&B field with a 1952 single for Aladdin Records. Agee slowly slipped away from the music business in the early ’70s. Reportedly, he died around 1990. Thankfully the Famous Groove label has issued all of Agee’s 50′s and 60′s recordings across three CD’s.
Also worth mentioning are tracks by Lonnie Johnson, Little Janice, and Tony Hollis. I never get tired of Lonnie Johnson who’s guitar skills are rightly praised, yet he was also a moving singer and a superb composer. A case in point is his gorgeous “Lines On My Face”, a bit of blues poetry from his 1960 album Losing Game:
Heartaches have caused, these deep lines in my face (2x)
When you’ve been disappointed in love, your heart has no restin’ place
Each line in my face tells a story, the tears tells you the reason why
Deep lines in my face tells a story, teardrops tell you the reason why
When you been hurt in love, it shows on you face until the day you die
If I could take my poor heart and wash it, wash all these aches and pains away (2x)
But I guess I’m so in love, I hope she’ll come back to me some day
My poor heart could talk, there’s so much it could tell (2x)
When the one you love disappoints you in life, life is a livin’ hell
Tony Hollis’ small output belies his influence. Hollis played around Clarksdale, MS in the 20’s and 30’s which is where he met John Lee Hooker, providing him with his first guitar and was a major influence on Hooker’s style. In 1941 Hollis waxed seven sides for Okeh including the influential “Crawlin’ King Snake” and the first recorded version of “Cross Cut Saw Blues.”Another song from that session, “Traveling Man Blues”, waslater made famous by Hooker as “When My First Wife Quit Me.” He cut one more session in 1951 with Sunnyland Slim. Our selection, “I’ll Get A Break”, which was based on Tampa Red’s 1934 version and comes from that latter session. The song was cut by Hollis at his first session using the title “Big Time Woman.”
Little Miss Janice is a mystery. What little is known about her is that she came from Texas, she played guitar and she had a knack for songwriting as she proves on her tough “Scarred Knees.” After this recording for Proverb, she went on to cut for Paul Gayten’s Pzazz label. Johnny Adams covered “Scarred Knees” on his first LP for Rounder and Esther Phillips cut a stunning version on her 1972 album From A Whsiper To A Scream.
Tags: Amos Milburn, Bukka White, Clara Smith, Furry Lewis, Henry Gray, Joe Calicott, Kokomo Arnold, Lonnie Johnson, Mississippi Sheiks, Ray Agee, Roosevelt Sykes, Sam Chatmon, Smokey Hogg, Tarheel Slim, Teddy Bunn, Tommy McClennan, Whispering Smith
Sun 21 Sep 2008
| ARTIST |
SONG |
ALBUM |
| Casey Bill Weldon |
Lady Doctor Blues |
Bottleneck Guitar Trendsetters |
| Casey Bill Weldon |
Go Ahead, Buddy |
Bottleneck Guitar Trendsetters |
| Casey Bill Weldon |
Back Door Blues |
Bottleneck Guitar Trendsetters |
| Kokomo Arnold |
Stop, Look And Listen |
Kokomo Arnold: The Essential |
| Kokomo Arnold |
Old Original Kokomo Blues |
Kokomo Arnold Vol. 1 1930-1935 |
| Kokomo Arnold |
Long and Tall |
Kokomo Arnold: The Essential |
| Oscar "Buddy" Woods |
Lone Wolf Blues |
Texas Slide Guitars 1930-1938 |
| Oscar "Buddy" Woods |
Jam Session Blues |
Texas Slide Guitars 1930-1938 |
| Oscar "Buddy" Woods |
Come On Over to My House |
Texas Slide Guitars 1930-1938 |
| Black Ace |
Black Ace |
I'm The Boss Card In Your Hand |
| Black Ace |
Whiskey and Women |
I'm The Boss Card In Your Hand |
| Sylvester Weaver |
Guitar Rag |
Slide Guitar: Bottles, Knives, Steel, Vol. 1 |
| Sylvester Weaver |
Me And My Tapeworm |
Sylvester Weaver Vol. 2 1927 |
| Sylvester Weaver |
Toad Frog Blues |
Slide Guitar: Bottles, Knives, Steel, Vol. 2 |
| Bo Weavil Jackson |
You Can't Keep No Brown |
When The Levee Breaks |
| Bo Weavil Jackson |
Jefferson County Blues |
When The Levee Breaks |
| Bo Weavil Jackson |
Why Do You Moan? |
Backwoods Blues 1926-1935 |
| Casey Bill Weldon |
Somebody Changed the Lock |
Casey Bill Weldon: The Essential |
| Casey Bill Weldon |
Two-Timing Woman |
Casey Bill Weldon: The Essential |
| Casey Bill Weldon |
Guitar Swing |
Casey Bill Weldon: The Essential |
| Kokomo Arnold |
Milk Cow Blues |
Blues Images Presents...Vol. 5 |
| Kokomo Arnold |
Wild Water Blues |
Kokomo Arnold: The Essential |
| Kokomo Arnold |
Busy Bootin' |
Bottleneck Guitar Trendsetters |
| Oscar "Buddy" Woods |
Fence Breakin' Blues |
Texas Slide Guitars 1930-1938 |
| Oscar "Buddy" Woods |
Don't Sell It (Don't Give It Away) |
Slide Guitar: Bottles, Knives, Steel, Vol. 1 |
| Oscar "Buddy" Woods |
She's A Hum Dinger |
Voice Of The Blues |
| Sylvester Weaver |
St. Louis Blues |
Slide Guitar: Bottles, Knives, Steel, Vol. 1 |
| Sylvester Weaver |
Nappy Headed Blues |
Sylvester Weaver Vol. 2 1927 |
| Sylvester Weaver |
Bottleneck Blues |
Slide Guitar: Bottles, Knives, Steel, Vol. 1 |
| Bo Weavil Jackson |
Devil And My Brown Blues |
When The Levee Breaks |
| Bo Weavil Jackson |
Some Scream High Yellow |
The Paramount Masters |
| Bo Weavil Jackson |
Poor Boy |
Backwoods Blues 1926-1935 |
| Black Ace |
'Fore Day Creep |
I'm The Boss Card In Your Hand |
| Black Ace |
Drink On Little Girl |
I'm The Boss Card In Your Hand |
Show Notes:

Today’s show is a continuing series on forgotten blues heroes; those artists who perhaps don’t have enough sides for a full a feature and lesser-known figures that don’t fit into our other themed shows. Today we spotlight six great slide/bottleneck guitar players: Casey Bill Weldon, Kokomo Arnold, Oscar “Buddy” Woods, Black Ace, Bo Weavil Jackson and Sylvester Weaver. The Hawaiian guitar influence can be heard to good effect in the playing of Casey Bill Weldon, Oscar Woods and the Black Ace. It was a style performed flat across the player’s knees as he slides a steel bar along the strings, producing glissando or vibrato effects. Kip Lornell writes that “blues guitarists sometimes tune their instruments to an open chord (often a D Major), place their guitar in their lap and then use a bottleneck or slide to fret it. This style of playing was used as early as the late 19th and early 20th century, but became more popular during the craze for Hawaiian music that occurred during the teens.” The style was used extensively by hillbilly artists as well. Also notable in is a strong country/Western Swing influence in the playing of artists like Casey Bill, Oscar Woods and particularly Sylvester Weaver, showing that there was a good deal of cross pollination among white and black musicians.

Despite several busy years in the recording studio and a couple of medium-sized hits (“Somebody Changed The Lock On My Door” and “We Gonna Move (To The Outskirts of Town)”), very little is known about Casey Bill Weldon. It was assumed he was the Will Weldon who played with the Memphis Jug Band but that remains in dispute. Between 1927 and 1935 he cut just over 60 sides for Victor, Bluebird and Vocalion. He was also an active session guitarist, appearing on records by Teddy Darby, Bumble Bee Slim, Memphis Minnie, Peetie Wheatsraw and others. His first recordings were with Peetie Wheatsraw which clearly inspired his vocal style. His guitar style owes a clear debt to the Hawaiian guitarists and was even billed as the Hawaiian Guitar Wizard but also got some inspiration from country and Western Swing. As Tony Russell wrote regarding the influential “Somebody Changed The Lock On My Door”, “the flurry in notes on bars 3 and 4 was the first indication of a blues slide guitarist who had listened to Hawaiian players and a session the following day by the Washboard Rhythm Kings elicited further passages of playing that was as close to Sol Hoopii as to Tampa Red.” As for the influence of country, Russell writes “‘Walkin’ In My Sleep’…is a country tune, and at this point the gap between the group and contemporary Western Swing bands narrows dramatically. Not for the last time: ‘I Believe You’re Cheatin’ On Me’ opens with a figure from ‘Steel Guitar Rag’ as recorded by Bob Willis.”

Kokomo Arnold was born in Georgia, and began his musical career in Buffalo, New York in the early 1920′s. During prohibition, Kokomo Arnold worked primarily as a bootlegger, and performing music was a only sideline to him. Nonetheless he worked out a distinctive style of bottleneck slide guitar and blues singing that set him apart from his contemporaries. In the late 1920′s, Arnold settled for a short time in Mississippi, making his first recordings in May 1930 for Victor in Memphis under the name of “Gitfiddle Jim.” Arnold moved to Chicago in order to be near to where the action was as a bootlegger, but the repeal of the Volstead Act put him out of business, so he turned instead to music as a full-time vocation. From his first Decca session of September 10, 1934 until he finally called it quits after his session of May 12, 1938, Kokomo Arnold made 88 sides. Some of Kokomo Arnold’s songs proved highly influential on other musicians. His first issued coupling on Decca 7026 paired “Old Original Kokomo Blues” with “Milk Cow Blues.” Delta Blues legend Robert Johnson must’ve known this record, as he re-invented both sides of it into songs for his own use — “Old Original Kokomo Blues” became “Sweet Home Chicago,” and “Milk Cow Blues” became “Milkcow’s Calf Blues.” Arnold also did session
work backing Peetie Wheatstraw, Roosvelt Sykes, Alice Moore, Mary Johnson and others. Arnold quit the music business in disgust in 1938 but continued to play the clubs until the late 1940′s. By the time he was rediscovered in 1959 Marcel Chauvard and Jacques Demetre he had given up music altogether and didn’t even own a guitar. He showed no interest in returing to music whatsoever. Arnold died of a heart attack at the age of 67 on November 8, 1968.
Oscar “Buddy” Woods was a Louisiana street musician known as “The Lone Wolf” and a pioneer in the style of lap steel bottleneck blues slide guitar. It is said that Woods developed his bottleneck slide approach to playing blues guitar after seeing a touring Hawaiian troupe of musical entertainers in the early 1920s. Not long after arriving in Shreveport, Woods began a long association with guitarist Ed Schaffer, and together they performed as the Shreveport Home Wreckers. Woods and Schaffer made their first two recordings as the Shreveport Home Wreckers for Victor in Memphis on May 31, 1930. From this first session up until his last, a field recording for the Library of Congress made on October 8, 1940, Oscar “Buddy” Woods was involved in the making of no less than 35 sides. On May 27 and 28 1931, Ed Schaffer was in Charlotte, North Carolina recording six sides headed by white country artist (and future Governor of Louisiana) Jimmie Davis along with New Orleans-based jazz guitarist Ed “Snoozer” Quinn. Nearly a year later in Dallas, Texas (on February 8, 1932) Davis made four sides with the Shreveport Home Wreckers as accompanists, and then the Home Wreckers made another pair of sides on their own, issued this time on Victor as by “Eddie and Oscar”. Woods did not record again until made a trip to New Orleans to make some solo records for Decca on March 21, 1936. One of these recordings was of Woods’ signature tune, “Lone Wolf Blues”, and another his first recording of “Don’t Sell it- Don’t Give it Away”. These did so well in the race record market that Jimmie Davis took a renewed interest in the Shreveport Home Wreckers. By the time Woods returned to record making in a session set up by Davis in San Antonio on October 30-31, 1937, the Home Wreckers had expanded into a six or seven piece string band called The Wampus Cats. The Wampus Cats also included a female vocalist by the name of Kitty Gray, guitarist Joe Harris and mandolinist Kid West. The Wampus Cats made an additional session in Dallas on December 4, 1938, on which Kitty Gray does not appear, but unknown trumpet and saxophone players were added to the mix. Woods cut his last five selections for the Library of Congress in 1940 John Lomax wrote the following about the session: “Oscar (Buddy) Woods, Joe Harris and Kid West are all porfessional Negro guitarists and singers of Texas Avenue, Shreveport…The songs I have recorded are among those they use to cajole nickels and dimes from the pockets of listeners.” Woods died in 1956.
Babe Karo Lemon Turner AKA Black Ace grew up in a farm in Hughes Springs, Texas. He took up the guitar seriously when he moved to Shreveport in the mid-1930′s and met Oscar Woods from whom he learned the local slide guitar style, playing the guitar flat across the knees. Smokey Hogg’s brother, John Hogg, recalled that “back in Greenville, Texas, before he got into the recordin’ business, Smokey and a guy they called Black Ace…would play country dances. I’d carry Smokey on one side of town, he d play this dance over there and I’d take Black Ace on the other side of town to play. About the time the guys would be ready to wrap-up, I would run over and get Black Ace, double back and get Smokey. We would party together the rest of the night. I used to sing with Black Ace at them parties and dances. He played a guitar across his knees with a knife blade and he wanted me to sing.” By 1936 he moved to Fort Worth where he secured a gig broadcasting on local station KFJZ between 1936-1941. In 1941 he appeared in the film “The Blood of Jesus.” As his reputation grew he toured and cut six sides for Decca in 1937 (two sides recorded for ARC in 1936 were never released). War service disrupted his career and he worked a variety of jobs outside of music. Chris Strachwitz of Arhoolie Records and Paul Oliver ventured to Fort Worth in 1960 and recorded an album by him that year. Those recordings were originally issued the following year on Black Ace’s only LP, subsequently issued on CD as I Am The Boss Card In Your Hand which included some of his 1937 sides. Turner passed in 1972 showing no interest to get back in the music business after his Arhoolie session.
Bo Weavil Jackson was a shadowy figure whose name may have been Sam Butler or James Butler or was it James Jackson?. He was a street singer from Birmingham, AL who was discovered by local talent scout Harry Charles. Jackson cut six sides for Paramount circa August 1926 and six sides for Vocalion in September 1926 where he recorded as Sam Butler. His material was a mix of blues and gospel and he was one of the first slide players to record.
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| Sylvester Weaver & Sara Martin |
Sylvester Weaver was a versatile guitarist from Louisville who made the first solo recordings of blues guitar playing. Sylvester Weaver first recorded in New York in 1923, where on October 23 of that year he accompanied vaudeville blues singer Sara Martin on two numbers, “Longing for Daddy Blues” and “I’ve Got to Go and Leave My Daddy Behind,” for Okeh. Two weeks later, Weaver cut his first pair of solo recordings, “Guitar Blues” and “Guitar Rag” for the same label. The Sara Martin selections represented the first time on records that a popular female singer had been backed up solely by guitar, and were an immediate success. Weaver would cut 25 more selections accompanying Martin in the years through 1927. He also backed singer Helen Humes on sides in 1927. Weaver’s were well-received and would prove massively influential in the country market. “Guitar Rag” was later re-invented by Bob Wills into “Steel Guitar Rag” and became a country standard. Through the end of 1927, when Weaver decided to retire from music altogether, he recorded a total of 26 solo sides, and on some of the later ones Weaver was joined by another guitarist, Walter Beasley. Weaver’s work lies stylistically between blues and country music, and he had considerable impact on both musical fronts. Weaver was almost totally forgotten by the time he died in 1960. An interesting footnote is the discovery of a scrapbook Weaver kept of his musical activities. Some of the contents were published in Living Blues Magazine in 1982.