Entries tagged with “Little Brother Montgomery”.


ARTIST SONG ALBUM
Blind Lemon Jefferson Sunshine Special The Complete Classic Sides
Black Ivory King The Flying Crow Black Boy Shine & Black Ivory King 1936-1937
Jack Ranger T.P. Window Blues Dallas Alley Drag
Kelly Pace Rock Island Line Field Recordings Vol. 2
Leadbelly Midnight Special Alabama Bound
Bukka White Streamline Special The Vintage Recordings 1930-1940
Cripple Clarence Lofton Streamline Train Cripple Clarence Lofton Vol. 1 1935-1939
Henry Thomas Railroadin' Some Good For What Ails You
Leroy Carr Memphis Town Sloppy Drunk
Charlie McCoy That Lonesome Train Took... Charlie McCoy 1928-1932
Furry Lewis Kassie Jones Before The Blues Vol. 3
Jesse James Southern Casey Jones Piano Blues Vol. 1 1927-1936
Two Poor Boys John Henry American Primitive Vol. II
Lucille Bogan T& NO Blues Lucille Bogan Vol. 2 1930-1933
Sparks Brothers I.C. Train Blues The Sparks Brothers 1932-1935
Little Brother Montgomery A. & V. Railroad Blues Little Brother Montgomery 1930-1936
Eddie Miller Freight Train Blues Down On The Levee
Hound Head Henry Freight Train Special Cow Cow Davenport - The Accompanist 1924-1929
Trixie Smith Freight Train Blues Trixie Smith Vol. 2 1925-1939
Martha Copeland Hobo Bill Martha Copeland Vol. 1 1923-1927
Will Bennett Railroad Bill Sinners & Saints 1926-1931
Sam Collins Yellow Dog Blues When The Levee Breaks
Robert Johnson Love In Vain The Road to Robert Johnson
Willie Brown M&O Blues Screamin' & Hollerin' The Blues
Roosevelt Sykes The Train Is Coming Roosevelt Sykes Vol. 5 1937-1939
Cow Cow Davenport Railroad Blues Cow Cow Davenport Vol. 2 1929-1945
Sylvester Weaver Railroad Porter Blues Sylvester Weaver Vol. 2
Sleepy John Estes Special Agent (Railroad Police Blues) I Ain't Gonna Be Worried No More
Billiken Johnson Sun Beam Blues Dallas Alley Drag
Andrew and Jim Baxter KC Railroad Blues Violin, Sing The Blues For Me
George Noble The Seminole Blues Chicago Piano 1929-1936
Pink Anderson & Simmnie Dooley C.C. and O. Blues A Richer Tradition
Blind Willie McTell Travelin' Blues The Classic Years 1927-1940

Show Notes:

When a woman get the blues, she goes to her room and hides (2x)
When a man gets the blues, he catches a freight train and rides
(Trixie Smith, Freight Train Blues)

For southern Blacks the appeal of the railroads has always been both a real and a symbolic one. For them the train was a symbol of power, of freedom and escape.  As blues historian Paul Oliver wrote: “In the slavery periods when they were unable to travel between districts without written ‘bonds’ from their owners, the snorting engines, with brilliant furnaces traces their progress and clouds of black smoke that hung in the still air above the tracks long after the screaming whistles had died away, inspired them in awe which their descendants still retain.” This image carried on, in the hard times of the 1920’s and 1930s’, when the southern Blacks struggled to make a living and saw the northern cities as their saviors, where work was plentiful and a better life was to be had. As the blues developed, the railroad featured prominently in the songs. Numerous songs were sung about individual trains such as the Flying Crow, the Sunshine Special and the Panama Limited, many simply abbreviated like the C&O (Chesapeake and Ohio), T&P (Texas Pacific) or the L&N (Louisville and Nashville), many songs dealt with the hobos who rode the rails, others dealt with working for the railroad while other songs retold the famous railroad ballads of John Henry, Railroad Bill and Casey Jones. Today’s show will spotlight all of these types of railroad blues.

The title of today’s program comes from the song by Henry Thomas. Thomas, nicknamed “Ragtime Texas”, was born in 1874 in Big Sandy, Texas. The 1874 date marks him as one of the eldest-born blues performers on record. Thomas was the archetypal rambling musician who went wherever the railroads would take him. According to Mack McCormick, as told to him from a former railroad conductor, “Ragtime Texas was a big fellow that used to come aboard at Gladewater or Mineola or somewhere in there. I’d always carry him, except when he was too dirty. He was a regular hobo, but I’d carry him most of the time. That guitar was his ticket.” Speaking of his famous “Railroadin’ Some”, William Barlow calls it the most “vivid and intense recollection of railroading” in all the early blues recorded in the 1920’s.

Among the famous railroad songs featured today are two associated with Leadbelly, “Rock Island Line” and ‘Midnight Special”, and the folk ballads Casey Jones, John Henry and Railroad Bill. John Lomax recorded “Rock Island Line” at the Cummins State Prison farm, Gould, Arkansas, in 1934 from its convict composer, Kelly Pace. Leadbelly, who was with Lomax at the time, rearranged it in his own style, and made commercial recordings of it in the forties. The song refers to the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad. Lyrics appearing in the “Midnight Special” were first recorded in print by Howard Odum in 1905. The song was first commercially recorded on the OKeh label in 1926 as “Pistol Pete’s Midnight Special” by Dave “Pistol Pete” Cutrell and the following year by bluesman Sam Collins. In 1934 Lead Belly recorded a version of the song at Angola Prison for John and Alan Lomax, who mistakenly attributed it to him as the author. Leadbelly recorded at least three versions of the song, including the one we feature with the Golden Gate Quartet.

John Luther “Casey” Jones was an American railroad engineer from Jackson, Tennessee who worked for the Illinois Central Railroad. On April 30, 1900, he alone was killed when his passenger train collided with a stalled freight train at Vaughan, Mississippi on a foggy and rainy night. His dramatic death trying to stop his train and save lives made him a folk hero who became immortalized in a popular song. We spin two versions on today’s program: “Kassie Jones Pt. 1″ by Furry Lewis and “Southern Casey Jones” by Jesse James.

John Henry is an American folk hero, notable for having raced against a steam powered hammer and won, only to die in victory with his hammer in his hand. He has been the subject of numerous songs, stories, plays, and novels. The truth about John Henry is obscured by time and myth, but one legend has it that he was a slave born in Missouri in the 1840s and fought his notable battle with the steam hammer along the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway in Talcott, West Virginia. On today’s show we play a version by the duo The Two Poor Boys.

The legend of Railroad Bill arose in the winter of 1895, along the Louisville and Nashville (L&N) Railroad line in southern Alabama. Based loosely on the exploits of an African American outlaw known as “Railroad Bill,” tales of his brief but action-filled career on the wrong side of the law have been preserved in song, fiction, and theater. He has been variously portrayed as a “Robin Hood” character, a murderous criminal and a nameless victim of the Jim Crow South. He was never conclusively identified, but L&N detectives claimed he was a man named Morris Slater. Today we spin  “Railroad Bill” by Will Bennett.

Featured today are several songs about specific trains or railroad lines. Our opening track “Sunshine Special” by Blind Lemon Jefferson refers the train of the same name which was inaugurated by the Missouri Pacific Railroad on December 5, 1915, providing service between St. Louis, Little Rock, and destinations in Texas. The Sunshine Special served as the flagship of Missouri Pacific Railroad’s passenger train service. Several songs make reference to the Flying Crow, a train line connecting Port Arthur, Texas to Kansas City with major stops in Shreveport and Texarkana. Black Ivory King, Carl Davis & the Dallas Jamboree Jug Band, Dusky Dailey, Washboard Sam and Oscar Woods all recorded songs about the train. Other songs dealing with specific trains featured today include Jack Ranger’s “T.P. Window Blues” ( Texas Pacific Railroad), Lucille Bogan’s “T& NO Blues” (Texas and New Orleans Railroad), Sparks Brothers‘ “I.C. Train Blues” (Illinois Central Railroad), Little Brother Montgomery’s “A. & V. Railroad Blues” (Alabama & Vicksburg Railroad), Willie Brown’s “M&O Blues” (Mobile and Ohio Railroad), Billiken Johnson’s “Sun Beam Blues” (Sunbeam was a named passenger train operated from 1925 to 1955 between Houston and Dallas by the Texas and New Orleans Railroad), Andrew and Jim Baxter’s “K C Railroad Blues” (Kansas City Southern Railway), George Noble’s “The Seminole Blues” (Seminole Gulf Railway), and Pink Anderson & Simmnie Dooley’s “C.C. and O. Blues” (Chesapeake and Ohio). Sam Collins’ “Yellow Dog Blues” seems to refer to two trains. In 1903 W.C. Handy related how he heard a lean, raggedy, black guitarist in Tutwiler’s railroad depot, singing of going to where the “Southern cross the Yellow Dog.” The “Southern” was the Southern Railway which began operations in 1894.“The Dog” was the Yellow Dog, a name for the Yazoo Delta Railroad which opened in 1897.

Several songs like Bukka White’s ” Special Streamline” and Cripple Clarence Lofton’s “Streamline Train” refer to streamliners. A streamliner is any vehicle that incorporates streamlining to produce a shape that provides less resistance to air. The term is most often applied to certain high-speed railway trainsets of the 1930’s to 1950’s. For a short time in the late 1930s, the ten fastest trains in the world were all American streamliners.

Other trains immortalized in blues songs will be featured in the sequel to today’s show; trains such as the Cannon Ball (an Illinois Central passenger train routing between Chicago and New Orleans, now known as the City of New Orleans), the Santa Fe (Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway), the Seaboard (The Seaboard Coast Line Railroad), the Katy (the Missouri, Texas, Kansas, Texas line), the Big four (Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad ) and the New York Central among others.

  • Share/Bookmark

ARTIST SONG ALBUM
Yank Rachel & Shirley Griffith Peach Orchard Mama Art of Field Recording Vol. I
J. T. Adams Red River Art of Field Recording Vol. I
Sam Chatmon I Have To Paint My Face I Have To Paint My Face
Robert Curtis Smith Stella Ruth I Have To Paint My Face
Butch Cage & Willie Thomas Forty Four Blues I Have To Paint My Face
Little Brother Montgomery Talking/Vicksburg Blues Conversation With The Blues
Otis Spann Talking/People Call Me Lucky Conversation With The Blues
Johnny Young & Arthur Spires 21 Below Blues Roots: The Mississippi Blues Vol. 1
Jim Brewer Big Road Blues Blues Roots: The Mississippi Blues Vol. 1
Boogie Bill Webb Dooleyville Blues Goin' Up The Country
Arzo Youngblood Four Women Blues Goin' Up The Country
Babe Stovall Worried Blues The Old Ace
Roosevelt Holts Big Fat Mama Blues South Mississippi Blues
Esau Weary You Don’t Have To Go South Mississippi Blues
Houston Stackhouse Bye Bye Blues Big Road Blues
Lum Guffin Jack Of Diamonds Walking Victrola
Dewey Corley Last Night On The Road - Country Blues 1969-1974
Lattie Murrell Spoonful On The Road - Country Blues 1969-1974
Elster Anderson Black And Tan Unreleased
George Higgs Skinny Woman Blues 2 Unreleased
Lewis "Rabbit" Muse Jailhouse Blues Western Piedmont Blues
Turner Foddrell Slow Drag Western Piedmont Blues
John Tinsley Red River Blues Western Piedmont Blues
Joe Savage Joe's Prison Camp Holler Living Country Blues
James Son Thomas Standing At The Crossroads Living Country Blues
Joe Callicott Country Blues George Mitchell Collection Vol. 1 - 45
Cliff Scott Long Wavy Hair George Mitchell Collection Vol. 1 - 45
Jimmy Lee Williams Have You Ever Seen Peaches George Mitchell Collection Vol. 1 - 45
Johnny Johnson & Group I'm In The Bottom Wake Up Dead Man

Show Notes:

I suppose it sounds rather romantic spending your time roaming around the south with a tape recorder recording blues but for all the rewards and exciting discoveries it’s a stressful enterprise, not to mention a precarious way to make a living. These days hardly anyone one does it anymore and the sad fact is that blues has largely disappeared as integral part of African-American rural communities; most of the old timers have passed on and few of the younger generation are interested in blues, particularly traditional blues. Much has been written about John and Alan Lomax who scoured the south and beyond making landmark recordings for the Library of Congress from the 1930’s through the 1960’s. Less well known are those that followed in the Lomax’s footsteps; there was folklorists and researchers such as David Evans, Sam Charters, Gayle Dean Wardlow, Frederic Ramsey, Art Rosenbaum, Pete Welding, Chris Strachwitz , Bruce Bastin, Bengt Olsson, Dick Spottswood, Kip Lornell, Glenn Hinson, Tim Duffy, Siegfried A. Christmann and Axel Küstner. Some were hunting for the famous names who made records in the 1920’s and 1930’s, others were seeking to fill in biographical blanks regarding some of the older musicians coveted by collectors and then there were those who were seeking to document the blues tradition as it still existed in rural communities, men like George Mitchell and I Have To Pain My FacePeter B. Lowry. This was a very different undertaking than 1960’s blues revival which sought out and put back on the circuit such legendary artists of the past as Son House, Skip James, Bukka White and Mississippi John Hurt. The field recordings made during this era were a sort of a parallel undercurrent to the more famous artists. What they recorded in the rural communities of Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama and Mississippi in the 1960’s was a still thriving, if largely undocumented, blues culture. The bulk of theses recordings were issued on small specialist labels and many have yet to be reissued on CD. Today’s program is the first of a multi-part series on some of these remarkable recordings.

The earliest tracks come from 1960 and were made by Paul Oliver and Chris Strachwitz and come from the albums Conversations With The Blues, a companion to Oliver’s landmark book, and I Have To Paint My Face which was issued on Strachwitz’s Arhoolie label. The recordings on I Have To Paint My Face were made by Chris Strachwitz in the Summer of 1960, the same year he formed his now legendary Arhoolie record label. That summer Strachwitz and blues scholar Paul Oliver and his wife made a trip through Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas to interview and record older blues artists for a series of programs sponsored by the BBC. Among those recorded were Sam Chatmon, K.C. Douglas, Big Joe Williams, Butch Cage & Willie Thomas, Robert Curtis Smith and others. Conversations With The Blues is a series of interviews, in the artists own words, compiled from interviews with over sixty blues singers. The interviews stem from a trip Oliver made to the United States between June and Goin' Up The CountrySeptember 1960.

Today’s program features a number of recordings made by David Evans. It was Evans’ investigation into Tommy Johnson in the late 1960’s that we owe a good deal of what we know about Johnson and it was through Evans’ field recordings that Johnson’s influence comes into sharper focus. Evans recorded many men who learned directly from Johnson including Roosevelt Holts, Boogie Bill Webb, Arzo Youngblood, Isaac Youngblood, Bubba Brown, Babe Stovall, Houston Stackhouse and Tommy’s brother Mager Johnson. Long out of print are several important collections of Evans’ field recordings that gather artists influenced by Johnson. Most importantly is The Legacy of Tommy Johnson (1972), the companion LP to Evans’ Tommy Johnson biography featuring all songs that were in Johnson’s repertoire and all of which were learned by the artists from Johnson himself. Today’s show spotlights selections from South Mississippi Blues and Goin’ Up The Country. David Evans began making field recordings in 1965 when he spent about five weeks taping blues artists in Mississippi and Louisiana. The collection Goin’ Up The Country released on Decca in 1968 collects some of the best performances he recorded. The album was reissued in 1976 on Rounder and Rounder also released South Mississippi Blues in 1973, another collection of field recordings from the same period. in addition we play a cut by Houston Stackhouse with his partner Carey Mason that stem from recordings Evans made in Crystal Springs, MS in 1967.

Bengt Olsson first came to the United States in 1964, first to Chicago and then to Memphis were he made some recordings. Olsson was back in 1971, where he made recordings in Memphis and Alabama. Olsson recorded several talented artists including Lum Guffin (his album Walking Victrola was issued on Flyright), Lattie Murrell and Perry Tillis among others. Some of Olsson’s recordings appear on the CD On The Road – Country Blues 1969-1974.

slp1804Pete Welding was one of the premiere documentarians of the 1960’s blues revival. Welding began recording and interviewing artists in the late 50’s and he began writing a column in Downbeat Magazine in 1959 called “Blues And Folk.” He moved to Chicago in 1962 where he formed his Testament Records label as an outlet for his fieldwork . Other of his recordings appeared on Storyville, Prestige, Blue Note and Milestone. We spotlight some of Weldings’ recordings from the album Blues Roots: The Mississippi Blues Vol. 1 recorded by circa 1964/1965.

Between 1969 and 1980 Pete Lowery amassed hundreds of photographs, thousands of selections of recordings, music and interviews in his travels through Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia. He formed the Trix label as an outlet to release his recordings. Lowry set up the Trix Records label in 1972 starting with a series of 45’s with LP’s being released by 1973. It lasted about a decade as an active label dealing mainly with Piedmont blues artists from the Southeastern states. In addition to the seventeen issued Trix albums there is sufficient material for another 40 to 50 CD’s. Many of the artists who had albums released were recorded extensively by Lowry and in most cases there is enough material in the can for follow-up records. In fact Lowry’s unreleased recordings far exceed the released recordings. Today’s program features some unreleased tracks that Lowry was kind of enough to send me.

Living Country Blues USAIn 1980 two young German blues enthusiasts, Axel Küstner and Siegfried Christmann, came to America with the idea to document the remaining country blues tradition. With their station wagon and portable recording equipment they hit the dusty road spending a couple of months documenting blues, gospel, field hollers and work songs throughout the South. As the notes proclaim: “Traveling 10,000 miles by car in 2 1/2 months, they used 180,000 feet of tape and took hundreds of photographs to document various aspects of Country Blues, as well as work songs, fife and drum band music, field hollers and rural Gospel music, performed by 35 artists, some of whom appear on record for the first time.” From October 1st through November 30th the duo rolled through Washington, DC, Maryland, Delaware, North Carolina, Tennessee, Arkansas, Virginia, New Orleans and of course Mississippi. These remarkable recordings were first issued across 12 LP’s titled Living Country Blues USA plus one double set on the German L+R label between 1980 and 1981. They have since been reissued on CD.

From the early 1960’s to the early 1980’s George Mitchell roamed all over the south recording blues in small rural communities where the music still thrived. Many of these recordings have appeared on specialist labels like Southland, Revival, Flyright, Arhoolie and Rounder but are long out of print now. Several years ago the Fat Possum label acquired the Mitchell archive and has been reissuing the recordings.

DTD-08-Cover-ArtArt Rosenbaum is a painter, muralist, and illustrator, as well as a collector and performer of traditional American folk music. His field recordings have been collected on two 4-CD box sets on the Dust-To-Digital label called the Art Of Field Recording. Rosenbaum was also involved in producing several albums for Bluesville in the early 60’s including records by Indianapolis artists Scrapper Blackwell, Pete Franklin, Shirley Griffith, J.T.Adams and Brooks Berry. I’ll be spotlighting Rosenbaum’s blues recordings as well as interviewing him at the end of January.

The Blue Ridge Institute for Appalachian Studies at Ferrum College in Ferrum, Virginia, released a series of eight LPs in the late 1970s and early 1980s under the group title Virginia Traditions. Each album featured an aspect of traditional Virginia folk music, setting old 78s and field recordings alongside more recent field material. From that series we spotlight three tracks for the album Western Peidmont Blues.

We close the show with Johnny Johnson & Group perfroming “I’m In The Bottom” from the album Wake Up Dead Man. “Making it in hell”,  Bruce Jackson says, is the spirit behind the songs that comprise the album and book  Wake Up Dead Man is a collection of prison worksongs taped by Bruce Jackson in 1965 and 1966 in Texas prisons. Research was done at three primary institutions; the Ramsey unit (Camps 1 and 2), Ellis, and Wynne. Allowed complete freedom in these facilities, Bruce Jackson talked with, interviewed, and recorded inmates over time to collect information for this book.

  • Share/Bookmark

ARTIST SONG ALBUM
Larry Darnell Sundown 1949-1951
Mickey Champion & Jimmy Witherspoon There Ain’t Nothing Better Bam A Lam
Wee Willie Wayne Tend To Your Business Travelin' From Texas To New Orleans
Little Montgomery Up The Country Blues Piano Blues - Unissued Recordings Vol. 1
Sippie Wallace I'm A Mighty Tight Woman When The Sun Goes Down
Sippie Wallace Woman Be Wise Woman Be Wise
Bullmoose Jackson Meet Me With Your Black Dress On 1950-1953
Arbee Stidham Please Let It Be Me Chicago Blues Guitar Killers
B.B. King A Woman Don't Care The Soul Of B.B. King
Leroy Carr Ain't Got No Money Now Whiskey Is My Habit, Women Is All I Crave
Cripple Clarence Lofton Crying Mother Blues Broadcasting The Blues
Peetie Wheatstraw Shack Bully Stomp Peetie Wheatstraw Vol. 5 1937-1938
Detroit Count Detroit Boogie Detroit Blues Rarities - Hastings Street Blues Opera
Memphis Minnie Call The Fire Wagon Memphis Minnie Vol. 4 1936-1938
Helen Humes Helen's Advice 1948-1950
Cleo Brown Cleo's Boogie 1935-1951
John Lee Hooker My Daddy Was A Jockey The Classic Early Years 1948-1951
Dan Burley Fishtail Blues Jazz & Blues Piano Vol. 1 1934-1947
Brownie McGhee Meet Me In The Morning Jumpin' The Blues
Stovepipe No. 1 A Woman Gets Tired Of The Same... Broadcasting The Blues
King David's Jug Band Tear It Down Stovepipe No. 1 & David Crockett 1924-1930
Henry Thomas Run Mollie Run Before The Blues Vol. 1
Butch Cage & Willie B Thomas Sneaky Ways Old Time Black Southern String Band Music
Hayes McMullan Looka Here Woman Chasin That Devil Music
Unknown 6 Months Ain't No Sentence Field Recordings Vol. 9 1924-1939
Unknown Prison Bound Blues Field Recordings Vol. 9 1924-1939
Unknown Boogie Lovin' Field Recordings Vol. 9 1924-1939
Julius Daniels Ninety-Nine Year Blues When The Sun Goes Down
Blind Willie McTell Delia The Classic Years 1927-1940
Robert Richard Motor City Blues Banty Rooster Blues
Junior Parker I’d Rather Drink Muddy Water I Tell Stories Sad And True
Hokum Boys Gambler's Blues (St. James Infirmary Blues) The Hokum Boys 1929

Show Notes:

An varied set of blues on today’s program including some notable female singers,  several fine piano players and some fascinating field recordings. We spin two today tracks by the great Sippie Wallace that were cut almost forty years apart. From 1929 we play Sippie’s magnificent, swaggering “I’m A Mighty Tight Woman” featuring Johnny Dodds on clarinet which outshines her original version cut three years prior.  We jump ahead to 1966 for “Woman Be Wise” from the album of the same name. These recordings are recorded on tour in Denmark with Little Brother Montgomery and if anything Sippie sounds stronger than she does on her earlier recordings. Wallace was born and raised in Houston and as a child  sang and played piano in church. Before she was in her teens, she began performing with her pianist brother Hersal Thomas. By the time she was in her mid-teens, she had left Houston to pursue a musical career. In 1923, Sippie, Hersal, and their older brother George moved to Chicago. By the end of the year, she had secured a contract with OKeh Records. Her first two songs for the label, “Shorty George” and “Up the Country Blues,” were hits and Sippie soon magpie-4451-frontbecame a star. Sippie’s recordings featured jazz musicians, including Louis Armstrong, Eddie Heywood, King Oliver, and Clarence Williams; both Hersal and George Thomas performed on Sippie’s records as well. Between 1923 and 1927, she recorded over 40 songs for OKeh. She stopped performing in the 30’s and outside of a couple of sides in 1945 didn’t return to performing until the 60’s. She continued to perform and record until shortly before her death in 1986.

Among the featured piano blues today is a terrific solo version of  “Up the Country Blues” by Little Brother Montgomery. This recording comes from the album The Piano Blues – Unissued Recordings Vol. 1 on Magpie, a collection of recordings made in 1960 in England. Other pianists spotlighted include Leroy Carr, Peetie Wheatstraw, Cripple Clarence Lofton, Detroit Count, Cleo Brown and Dan Burley. Carr’s “I Ain’t Got No Money Now” cut in 1934 is a beautifully sung depression era gem set to the template of “Nobody Knows You When You’re Down And Out.” Peetie Wheatstraw is exuberant on the rocking “Shack Bully Stomp”  from 1938 backed by Lonnie Johnson. Sung by red Nelson, “Crying Mother Blues”, is a moving, poetic number underpinned by the rolling boogie piano of Cripple Clarence Lofton:

Dear mother’s dead and gone to glory, my old dad gone straight away (2x)
Only way to meet my mother, I will have to change my lowdown ways

Tombstones my pillow, graveyard gonna be my bed (2x)
Blue skies gonna be my blanket and the pale moon gonna be my spread

We jump ahead to the late 1940’s for tracks by the Detroit Count, Cleo Brown and Dan Burley. African-Americans began arriving in droves in Detroit by the 1920’s, most settling in an area called Black Bottom, later named Paradise Valley. Some of the earliest blues took place in the bars, brothels and house parties in Paradise Valley. One who played in those joints was the Detroit Count,the stage name of pianist Bob White who arrived in Detroit in 1938. He made his name with his 1948 song “Hastings Street Opera” a humorous description of the people and places of the famous street. He cut a total of six songs in 1948 plus a pair of unissued sides for King. our selection, “Detroit Boogie”, is a storming update of the classic “Pinetop’s Boogie Woogie.” Dan Burley was a strong pianist who cut his teeth in the Chicago rent parties and barrelhouses, a sound reflected in 1946’s ” Fishtail Blues” back by Brownie and Sticks McGhee. Cleo Brown, made recordings in the ’30s and ’40s, then entered the studios once again in the late ’80s after being rediscovered living in Colorado. Following the family move to Chicago in 1919, she began formal studies music on piano. By the early ’20s, she was working professionally in clubs and tent shows as well as broadcasting live with her own regular radio show. By the early ’30s, she was well-established and for the next two decades she worked almost non-stop, performing in cities across the United States and holding forth regularly in clubs such as New York’s Three Deuces. She recorded prolifically in 1935-36 for Decca and made further sessions in 1949, 50 and 51.

Negro Songs Of ProtestAmong the field recordings played on today’s program are a trio of marvelous recordings made by Lawrence Gellert of unnamed/documented singers. According to Gellert’s notes some of these recordings were recorded in Greenville, South Carolina in 1924. It seems likely that these recordings are actually from the 30’s although according to eyewitnesses Gellert was indeed recording in South Carolina in 1924. Other recordings hail from Atlanta, Georgia and date from 1928 through 1932. As one reviewer noted: “The most interesting thing about these two albums was the outspokenness of the songs against authority.” Gellert was accepted as an insider in the African American communities in which he worked and was able to record protest songs that eluded other collectors of the time.” “Boogie Lovin’” is the first of eight pieces apparently played by the same guitarist.  As Bruce Harrah-Conforth wrote in the notes to a collection of these recordings: “Through his collection we get a chance to examine blues as they were performed within the Black community, as influenced by, and as influence to the ‘race record’ industry. In all probability the people Gellert recorded never went on to become anything more than what they were, members of their community. As such, the music they made is really the folk blues: blues without the intervention of commercial urbanity.” There are many more recordings by Gellert that have yet to be issued. Some of these recordings appear on the Document collection Field Recordings, Vol. 9: Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Kentucky (1924-1939) (this includes all the recordings on the album Nobody Knows My Name issued on the Heritage label in 1984). Gellert’s initial release of these recordings was originally prepared for release on the Timely label titled Negro Songs of Protest but jackets were never printed and the only copies of the record which left Gellert’s apartment went to friends or to others who had heard about it by word of mouth; the total was about 40 discs. This material was issued on LP by Rounder in the 70’s with a follow-up album in the 80’s titled Cap’n You’re So Mean.

Other field recordings include some wonderful stringband music from Butch Cage and Willie B. Thomas recorded by Henry Oster in 1959, Blind Willie McTell performing “Delia” for Alan Lomax in 1940 in an Atlanta hotel room for John Lomax and Furry Lewis in fine form on “East St. Louis Blues” in 1968 from the album At Home In Memphis. We also hear the lone recording by Hayes McMullen who was interviewed and recorded by blues researcher Gayle Dean Wardlow. McMullen knew several of the early delta bluesman such as William Harris, Charlie Patton, Willie Brown and Ishman Bracey. We also hear from Lum Guffin who was first recorded in the 1970’s by Swedish researcher Bengt Olsson when he was 70 and again in 1980 by Axel Kunster for the Living Country Blues series. The LP Walking Victrola was his sole record, released on the Flyright label in 1973. Some of these recordings appear on the CD On The Road Again.

wee-willieFrom the 1950’s we spin tracks by Larry Darnell and Wee Willie Wayne who both recorded in New Orleans. We spin Wayne’s wailing “Tend To Your Business”, his only hit which reached # 2 on the Billboard R&B charts in 1951.  In the mid-40’s Darnell settled in New Orleans, working in the Dew Drop Inn. One night in 1949 Darnell’s act was caught by Fred Mendelsohn, co-founder and A&R director for the Regal record label who was in town scouting for new talent. He later recalled: “Darnell was doing a song called ‘I’ll Get Along Somehow’ originally popularized by Andy Kirk. He added a recitation that sent the dames screaming and hollering.” Darnell was hired on the spot where three titles were cut in early September 1949. Presented in two parts, “I’ll Get Along Somehow” made it to number two on the Billboard R&B chart not long after “For You My Love” hit number one and scored a few other hits along the way. After Regal folded he bounced through labels like Okeh, Savoy, Deluxe Argo and others. He passed in 1984. Our selection, “Sundown”, is a great showcase for his powerful pipes featuring some excellent backing vocals. Also from the 1950’s are great tracks by Brownie McGhee, John Lee Hooker,  Helen Humes and B.B. King among others.

Also worth mention are recordings featuring Stovepipe No. 1.  Stovepipe No. 1 was Sam Jones who played harmonica, guitar and stovepipe. Possibly born in the 1880’s he  spent his life in Cincinnati. He cut a dozen sides in 1924, with several unissued, plus a few sides in 1927. He recorded as a one man band, with guitarist David Crockett and with the jug bands; King David’s Jug Band cut six sides in 1930 and most likely the Cincinnati Jug Band.

  • Share/Bookmark

ARTIST SONG ALBUM
Cannon's Jug Stompers Going To Grermany Memphis Jug Band & Cannon's Jug Stomper
The Mississippi Moaner It's Cold In China Blues American Primitive Vol. II
Tommie Bradley & James Cole Adam And Eve A Richer Tradition
Geeshie Wiley Pick Poor Robin Clean American Primitive Vol. II
Lonnie Johnson What A Real Woman The Original Guitar Wizard
Big Joe Turner Sweet Sixteen Big Joe Turner: Classic Hits 1938-52
Tiny Bradshaw Knockin' The Blues Breakin' Up The House
Lonnie Lyons Flychick Bounce Houston Jump 1946-51
Johnnie Strauss St. Louis Johnnie Blues St Louis Girls 1927-1934
Lottie Kimbrough Rollin' Log Blues Kansas City Blues 1924-29
Bertha "Chippie" Hill Do Dirty Blues I Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 2
Bessie Smith Gimme A Pigfoot The Complete Recordings (Frog)
Lonesome Sundown If You Ain't Been To Houston Been Gone Too Long
Lonesome Sundown Learn to Treat Me Better I'm A Mojo Man
J.D. Short You Been Cheating Me Delta Blues
Son House Son's Blues Private Recordings Vol. 2 1964-74
Bukka White The Atlanta Special Mississippi Blues
Ashton Savoy Tell Me Baby BluesScene USA Vol. 2 - Louisiana Blues
Big Chenier The Dog And His Puppies BluesScene USA Vol. 2 - Louisiana Blues
Jay Stutes Midnight Blues BluesScene USA Vol. 2 - Louisiana Blues
Little Brother Montgomery Mistreatin' Woman Blues Little Brother Montgomery 1930-1936
Judson Brown You Don't Know My Mind Blues Piano Blues Vol. 1 1927-1936
Pinetop Burks Sundown Blues San Antonio 1937
Jesse James Southern Casey Jones Piano Blues Vol. 1 1927-1936
Calvin Frazier Lilly Mae 78
T-Bone Walker Tell Me What's the Reason Complete Recordings of T-Bone Walker 1940-1954
Pee Wee Crayton Texas Hop Blues Guitar Magic
Blind Blake Georgia Bound All The Published Sides
Big Bill & Washboard Sam By Myself Big Bill Broonzy & Washboard Sam
Carl Martin State Street Pimp #1 Crow Jane
Nappy Brown So Glad I Don’t Have To Cry... Night Time Is The Right Time
5 Royales Mr Moon Man Parts 1 & 2 Catch That Teardrop
Rev. Gary Davis Say No To The Devil Live At Gerde's Folk City
Rev. Gary Davis Sun Goin' Down Live At Gerde's Folk City

Show Notes:

Today’s wide ranging mix show spans the years 1927 through 1977. We have a whole slew of fine pre-war recordings on tap today including a set of fine female singers and a set of excellent piano players. We get things rolling today with “Going To Germany” sung in a wonderful, lazy, dreamy style by Noah Lewis. Gus Cannon was the best known of all the jugband musicians and a seminal figure on the Memphis blues scene. Cannon led his Jug Stompers on banjo and jug in a historic series of dates for the Victor label in 1928-1930. The ensemble usually included a second banjoist or guitarist, one of whom often doubled on kazoo, and the legendary Noah Lewis on harmonica. Lewis was one of the finest early harp blowers, cutting over a dozen titles with Cannon’s Jug Stompers as well eight sides under his own name.

Compared to Lewis, Blind Blake was one of the biggest blues stars of the 1920’s. His “Georgia Bound” was recorded on 17th August 1929 in Richmond in Illinois. It has a very similar melody line to the subsequent “Four Until Late” by Robert Johnson and was clearly an influence on him.

The Mississippi Moaner was another fine, if obscure,  vocalist who’s real name was Isaiah Nettles. He recorded four sides for Vocalion Records in Jackson, MS, on October 20, 1935. Only one 78 from the session was ever officially released, “Mississippi Moan” b/w “It’s Cold in China Blues” with “Chicago Blues” b/w “Good Doin’ Papa” tantalizingly unreleased.

Another mysterious and highly revered figure featured today is Geeshie Wiley, represnted by “Pick Poor Robin Clean.” Don Kent wrote in the notes to Mississippi Masters: Early American Blues Classics 1927-35 that “If Geeshie Wiley did not exist, she could not be invented: her scope and creativity dwarfs most blues artists. She seems to represent the moment when black secular music was coalescing into blues.” Wiley recorded just two 78’s in 1930 and 1931, both highly sought after and worth a fortune to 78 record collectors. There are no known photographs and little is known about her. She recorded “Last Kind Word Blues” and “Skinny Leg Blues” in Grafton, Wisconsin for Paramount Records in March of 1930, with Elvie Thomas backing her on second guitar. Thomas also recorded two songs for Paramount at the session, “Motherless Child Blues” and “Over to My House,” Wiley, providing second guitar and vocal harmonies. In 1931 Wiley and Thomas returned to Grafton to record two more sides for Paramount, “Pick Poor Robin Clean” and “Eagles on a Half.”

There are several fine female performers featured today including Bessie Smith, arguably the greatest woman blues singers of her era, Lottie Kimbrough, Bertha “Chippie” Hill and the obscure Johnnie Strauss. From Bessie’s last session in 1933 we spin her sensational “Gimmie A Pigfoot” featuring a crack band that included Frankie Newton, Jack Teagarden, Benny Goodman and Chu Berry. Lottie Kimbrough was a Kansas City blues woman whose brief recording career spanned the years 1924 to 1929. Kimbrough was a famously large woman, nicknamed “the Kansas City Butter-ball.” Her “Rollin’ Log Blues” is a tune of haunting beauty propelled by the driving guitar of Mile Pruitt. Backed by Richard Jones Jazz Wizards, “Chippie” Hill turns in a powerful performance on her “Do Dirty Blues.” Compared to the others, Johnnie Strauss is a mere footnote, waxing just four sides for Decca in 1934 backed by Roosevelt Sykes. Her hoarse, yet powerhouse vocals, backed by a fine unknown violinist make for a compelling performance on her “St. Louis Johnnie Blues.”

We spotlight a quartet of excellent piano performances from the 1930’s by Little Brother Montgomery, Judson Brown, Pinetop Burks and Jesse James. Montgomery cut some of the greatest piano blues records if the 1930’s including a remarkable eighteen song session recorded on October 16, 1936 at the St. Charles Hotel in New Orleans. Less well known and far less prolific are Judson Brown who cut just one side for Brunswick in 1930 (he also backed singers such as Marry Johnson, Jenny Pope, Mozelle Alderson and others), Jesse James who cut one four soong session in 1936 (two sides were unissued) and Pinetop Burks who cut six fine sides in San Antonio in 1937.

We feature is a trio of tracks from the LP BluesScene USA Vol. 2 – The Louisiana Blues on Storyville. The LP  collect sides cut for the Goldband label in the 1950’s and 60’s including several sides never issued. Goldband was based in Lake Charles, LA and formed by Eddie Shuler in 1945. From that album we hear excellnet sides by lesser known artists such as Big Chenier, Jay Stutes and Ashton Savoy.

In anticipation of our feature on Excello Records next week, we spin a pair of tracks by Lonesome Sundown. Cornelius Green AKA Lonesome Sundown was hired as one of Clifton Chenier’s guitarists in 1955 (Phillip Walker was the other). A demo tape was sent to producer Jay Miller who began producing him in 1956, leasing his “Leave My Money Alone” to Excello. Over the next eight years, Sundown’s Excello output included a host of memorable swamp classics before his 1965 retirement from the blues business to devote his life to the church. It was 1977 before Sundown could be coaxed back into a studio to cut Been Gone Too Long, an excellent comeback. He did some scattered live dates before passing in 1995.

We wrap up our program with two tracks by Rev. Gary Davis off the just released 3-CD set Live At Gerde’s Folk City 1962.  These sides were recorded by Stefan Grossman at Gerde’s Folk City in New York City with a two track Tandberg tape machine. Davis was Grossman’s guitar teacher at the time. These are the first time these sides have seen the light of day and sound quality is excellent.

  • Share/Bookmark

ARTIST SONG ALBUM
Joe Callicott Let Your Deal Go Down Complete Blue Horizon Sessions
Babe Stovall Worried Blues The Old Ace
James Brewer Black, Brown & White James Brewer
Blu Lu Barker New Orleans Blues Blu Lu Barker (1938-1939)
Lucille Hegamin Number 12 A Basket Of Blues
Esther Phillips How Blues Can You Get Confessin' The Blues
Johnny Littlejohn The Moon is Rising Chicago Blues At Home
Shirley Griffith Big Road Blues Indianapolis Jump
Boy Blue Joe Lee's Rock Sounds Of The South
Long Gone Miles My Kind Of Woman Juke Joint Blues
Snooky Pryor (Real) Fine Boogie Gonna Pitch A Boogie Woogie
Sammy Brown The Jockey Blues Down In Black Bottom
Charlie McFadden People People Charles "Specks" McFadden 1929-37
Little Brother Montgomery Out West Blues Little Brother Montgomery 1930-36
Lavada Durst Hattie Green Texas Down Home Blues 1948-52
Andrew Tibbs How Long 1947-1951
Tom Archia Ice Man Blues 1947-1948
Jo Jo Adams Hard-Headed Woman Blues 1946-1953
Tom Bell Worried Blues Deep River Of Song - Alabama
Memphis Minnie Too Late Memphis Minnie & Kansas Joe Vol. 4
Blind Boy Fuller Baby, I Don't Have To... Blind Boy Fuller 1935-1938 Vol. 1
Sunnyland Slim Orphan Boy Blues Sunnyland Slim & Pals
J.T. Brown Blackjack Blues 1950-1954
J.T. Brown Windy City Boogie 1950-1954
King Perry Going To California Blues 1945-1949
Clifford Gibson Don't Put That Thing On Me Clifford Gibson 1929-1931
JT Funny Paper Smith County Jail Blues JT Funny Paper Smith 1930-31
Hound Head Henry My Sweet Silver Dollar Mama Cow Cow Davenport: The Essential
Cow Cow Davenport Back In The Alley Cow Cow Davenport: The Essential
James 'Wide Mouth' Brown A Weary Silent Night Boogie Uproar
Little Caesar Wonder Why I’m Leaving Big Town Records Story
Brownie McGhee My Fault New York Blues 1946-1948

Show Notes:

I’ve been trying to get a handle on my record collection in the last couple of weeks which seems to have escaped from my record room to take over the house. I still haven’t tamed my collection but did stumble upon sA Basket Of Bluesome interesting records that are featured on today’s program. Among those are the following LP’s which are not available on CD: A Basket Of Blues (Spivey), James Brewer (Philo) and Indianapolis Jump (Flyright). A Basket of Blues is the the first album to be issued on Victoria Spivey’s Spivey record label and features sides by Lucille Hegamin, Hannah Sylvester, Victoria Spivey backed by a fine band featuring sax man Buddy Tate. A classic blues singer from the 1920’s, Lucille Hegamin survived long enough to be recorded again in the 1960’s. After performing in Seattle for a long period, Hegamin became one of the first blues singers to record in Nov. 1920, shortly after moving to New York. In addition to performing at clubs, Hegamin appeared in several Broadway shows in the 1920’s. She eventually left music, becoming a nurse in 1938. In the 1960’s she emerged, appearing at a few charity benefits before retiring from music again. In all, Lucille Hegamin recorded 68 selections between1920-26, two songs in 1932 and appeared on part of the1961 Bluesville album Songs We Taught Your Mother. She died in 1970. James Brewer was born in Brookhaven, Mississippi, moved to Chicago in the 1940’s where he spent the latter part of his life busking and performing both blues and religious songs at blues and folk festivals, on Chicago’s Maxwell Street and other venues. He was recorded by Swedish Radio in 1964, cut sides for the Heritage label and Testament plus cut the full-length albums Jim Brewer for Philo and Tough Luck for Earwig. Shirley Griffith learned first hand from Tommy Johnson as a teenager in Mississippi. Griffith missed his opportunity to record as a young man but recorded three superb albums: Indiana Ave. Blues (1964, with partner J.T. Adams), Saturday Blues (1965) and Mississippi Blues (1973), all of which are out of print.

Also while trying to organize my collection I stumbled upon a pile of CD’s on the Classics label which I evidently J.T. Brownhad plans to listen to at some point before they got buried. The Classics label is a French label that specializes in jazz and blues. Their Classics R&B series focuses on chronological resissues of post-war blues – essentially a post-war version of what the Document label does for pre-war blues. At this point the label probably has a couple of hundred releases out. The label provides a valuable service to collectors by resurrecting the output of many forgotten blues artists. Some are forgotten for a reason, others deserve a better fate but over all most don’t benefit from the chronological approach. To be fair these records were never intended to be listened to in this way, instead listeners back in the day bought the records one 78 at a time.

From the Classics catalog we spin records today by J.T. Brown, Andrew Tibbs, Tom Archia, King Perry and Jo Jo Adams. Andrew Tibbs got his start singing in church choirs. When he surreptitiously began singing blues in clubs, he used his middle name and his mother’s maiden name, becoming “Andrew Tibbs.” He was singing at Jimmy’s Palm Garden when Sammy Goldberg saw him at the club and signed him to Aristocrat; Leonard Chess saw commercial potential in recording Tibbs, and decided to invest in the company. Tibbs’ debut session has always been said to be the first one that Leonard Chess attended. After Aristocrat he cut sides for a variety of labels up until 1963. Sax man Tom Archia performed mostly in jazz and swing bands. He cut some R&B sides for Aristcrat in 1947-48 as well as backing blues singers Andrew Tibbs and Jo Jo Adams. Jo Jo Adams was among the most flamboyant singers of Chicago’s South Side who sang an urbane style of blues that prevailed in the 1940’s. He also danced, told dirty jokes, and showed off his wardrobe of loudly colored formal wear with extra-long coattails. More often than not he doubled as MC at the clubs he played. Between 1946 and 1953 he cut sides for Hy-Tone, Aristocrat, Aladdin, Tom Archia - Ice Man Blues 78Chance and Parrot. Mississippi-born John T. Brown was a member of the Rabbit Foot Minstrels down south before arriving in the Chicago. By 1945, Brown was recording behind pianist Roosevelt Sykes and singer St. Louis Jimmy Oden, later backing Eddie Boyd and Washboard Sam for RCA Victor. He debuted on wax as a bandleader in 1950 on the Harlem label, subsequently cutting sessions in 1951 and 1952 for Chicago’s United logo as well as JOB. Brown also backed artists like Elmore James and pianist Little Johnny He issued sides on Meteor and a final 1956 date for United that laid unissued at the time. In January of 1969, he was part of Fleetwood Mac’s Blues Jam at Chess album, even singing a tune for the project, but he died before the close of that year.  King Perry played violin as a child, but switched to alto sax when he wished to join a local band. In 1945 he went to Los Angles, appearing in a show with Dorothy Donegan and Nat King Cole; while there he made his first recordings as a leader. He led a band called the Pied Pipers through the middle of the 1950’s, making many records and touring across the United States multiple times. He recorded for Melodisc, United Artists, Excelsior, De Luxe, Specialty, Dot, RPM, Lucky, Unique, Look, and Hollywood during this period. After 1954 Perry went into a hiatus from music, but returned to play after moving to Bakersfield in 1967. In the 1970s he played as a one-man band with organ, saxophone, and percussion. Around this time he also released a number of comedy albums for his own label, Octive.

Lots of piano blues on deck including sides by Sammy Brown, Roosevelt Sykes, Dr. Hepcat, Little Brother Montgomery, Cow Cow Davenport and Sunnyland Slim. Sammy Brown cut two issued sides for Gennett in 1927 possibly backed by pianist Cripple Clarence Lofton or his own piano. Charlie McFadden waxed two-dozen sides for a variety of labels between 1929-1937 backed by pianist Roosevelt Sykes on most. Lavada Durst Known as more colorfully as Dr. Hepcat was the first black disc jockey in Texas on Austin‘s KVET. He published The Jives of The Jives Of Dr. HepcatDr.Hepcat based on his outlandish radio patter. As a piano player he was influenced by Pete Johnson, Meade Lux Lewis, and locally by Robert Shaw. He cut early records on Peacock, Uptown and later recordings on Documentary Arts. Cow Cow Davenport is remembered most for his famous song “Cow Cow Blues” which is one of the earliest recorded examples of the Boogie-Woogie. Davenport’s early career revolved around carnivals and vaudeville. He toured TOBA with an act called Davenport and Company with Blues singer Dora Carr and they recorded together in 1925 and 1926. Davenport briefly teamed up with Blues singer Ivy Smith in 1928 and worked as a talent scout for Brunswick and Vocalion records in the late 1920’s and played rent parties in Chicago. He moved to Cleveland, Ohio in 1930 and toured the vaudeville circuit and recorded with Sam Price. In 1938 he suffered a stroke that left his right hand somewhat paralyzed and affected his piano playing for the rest of his life, but he remained active as a vocalist until he regained enough strength in his hand to play again. He died in 1955. Hound head Henry was a singer who cut eight issued sides in 1928 all backed by pianist Cow Cow Davenport and proves himself an expressive singer on “My Sweet Silver Dollar Mama.”

As usual a good dose of pre-war blues including sides by Tom Bell, Blind Boy Fuller, Memphis Minnie, JT Funny Papa Smith and Clifford Gibson. Gibson cut ten sides (four have either never been found or were never issued) in June 1929, four sides in November 1929, eight sides in December 1929 and two sides in 1931. In addition he did some session work and lasted long enough to wax a few scattered post-war sides in the 1950’s and 60’s. Funny Papa Smith who cut twenty issued sides between 1930 and 1931. He was a superb singer/guitarist and a marvelous lyricist. Tom Bell recorded eight sides for John Lomax and the Library of Congress in 1937 and 1940. Speaking of Lomax we jump to 1959 and a recording made of Boy Blue by Alan Lomax. Blue’s real name was Roland Hayes. “Joe Lee’s Rock” and a reading of John Lee Hooker’s “Boogie Chillen” are part of a treasure trove of recordings he made in the deep South in 1959. “By nine o’clock the stereo machine was sitting on the bar,” Lomax recalled. “Forrest City Joe and his two-piece orchestra, Boy Blue and his two accompanists, along with their girlfriends and other connoisseurs of the blues, were lapping up the liquor and the music. No New York technician would have approved of the acoustics. Between takes the place was a bedlam. …The crowd danced during all the playbacks.”

Babe Stovall
Babe Stovall

Also worth mentioning are sides by two very different artists; Blu Lu Barker and Babe Stovall. Singer Blue Lu Barker was born, raised, and buried in New Orleans. In both the 1930’s and 40’s she was one of the more popular blues performers, often appearing alongside artists such as Cab Calloway and Jelly Roll Morton. Barker’s most famous recordings were done in 1938. The early Barker material features her husband Danny on banjo and guitar and the couple would continue performing together until his death. Her career continued after that, all the way up to a last recording taped live in 1998 at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. Born in 1907 in Tylertown, MS, Babe Stovall was the youngest of 11 children, most of them musicians. Stovall learned guitar when he was around eight years old, and was soon playing breakdowns, frolics, and parties in the area, even meeting and learning “Big Road Blues” from Tommy Johnson. In 1964 he moved to New Orleans, where he was “discovered” working as a street singer in the French Quarter. He recorded an LP for Verve in 1964, simply titled Babe Stovall, and did further sessions in 1966 and with Bob West in 1968 (which form the basis of The Old Ace, (released on Arcola in 2003 and the only collection currently available on CD), and became active on the folk and blues college circuit. He died in 1974.

Related Articles: (Word Docs)

-The Jives of Dr. Hepcat by Mike Rowe (Blues Unlimited no. 129, 1978)

-The Piano Blues of Dr Hepcat by Alan Govenar (Liner Notes, 1994)

-Lucille Hegamin – Blues & Views by Derrick Stewart-Baxter (Jazz Journal, 1970)

  • Share/Bookmark

ARTIST SONG ALBUM
The Spiders Love’s All I’m Puttin’ Down The Imperial Sessions
The Spiders I’m Slipping In The Imperial Sessions
The Spiders I Didn’t Want To Do It The Imperial Sessions
Blind Percy Fourteenth Street Blues And This Is Free
JT "Funny Paper" Smith Hoppin’ Toad Frog J. T. ''Funny Paper'' Smith (1930-1931)
Bayless Rose Frisco Blues Ragtime Blues Guitar
Blind Willie McTell Don't Forget It McTell & Weaver 1949 - 1950
Jimmy McCracklin Just Got To Know I Had To Get With It
Jimmy McCracklin Every Night, Every Day I Had To Get With It
Victoria Spivey Blood Hound Blues I Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 2
Merline Johnson He May Be Your Man Merline Johnson Vol. 1 (1937-1938)
Arthur Crudup Chicago Blues Arthur Crudup Vol. 1 (1941-1946)
Little Son Joe Ethel Bea Rough Treatment
Johnnie Lewis She's Taking All My Money Jook Joint Blues
Turner/Harris Blues Classic Hits 1938-1952
Big Joe Turner Sweet Sixteen Classic Hits 1938-1952
Roy Brown Too Much Loving Ain't Good Roy Brown & New Orleans R & B
Blind Blake Night & Day Blues Blues Images Presents... Vol. 6
Paramount All Stars Home Town Skiffle Pt. 1 & 2 Blues Images Presents... Vol. 6
Junior Wells Trouble Don’t Last Always Southside Blues Jam
Junior Parker How Long Can This Go On Backtracking: Duke Recordings Vol. 2
Robert Dudlow Taylor Old Helena Blues Modern Downhome Blues Vol. 3
Silas Hogan Lonesome La La Trouble - The Excello Recordings
The Blue Flamers Driving Down The Highway The Excello Story Vol. 1
Leroy Carr Midnight Hour Blues Whiskey Is My Habit...
Little Brother Montgomery No Special Rider Blues Tasty Blues
Gene Phillips Cherry Red Swinging The Blues
Gatemouth Brown Okie Dokie Stomp Boogie Uproar
Chuck Carbo Stompin' Everywhere Just A Moment
Chuck Carbo I Shouldn't But I Do Rock 'N Roll From New Orleans
Ray Johnson House Of Blues Mercury Records: New Orleans Sessions 1950-1953

Show Notes:

On the last mix show we spotlighted recordings by the recently passed Lula Reed and this week starts on a similarly somber tone as we spin sides by the recently departed Chuck Carbo. R&B singer Chuck Carbo passed away on July 11th after a lengthy battle with cancer. I first became acquainted with Carbo with the two excellent comeback records he cut for Rounder: Drawers Trouble (1993) and The Barber’s Blues (1996). I recall these records getting quite a bit of play on my radio program at the time. I soon tracked down his early recordings with the Spiders, a fabulous New Orleans vocal group who had a string of R&B hits in the 1950’s, led by Carbo and his brother Chick. Just about all these sides can be found on Bear Family’s 2-CD The Imperial Sessions. After the Spiders Carbo cut a number of 45’s, only a few that I’m familiar with, and Just Got To Know 45returned to music after a long absence. We open today with a trio of great sides by Carbo and the Spiders and conclude the show with a track by Carbo fronting The Clowns and a 45 he cut under his own name.

We have a couple of twin spins on today’s program with sides by Jimmy McCracklin and Big Joe Turner. In his heyday, from the late 1940’s through the 1960’s, he led one of the toughest, hardest rocking blues bands on the West Coast. He was a prolific and witty composer, a fine singer/pianist and was a real pioneer in defining the soul-blues style made so popular by Little Milton, Bobby Bland and others. With a pair of excellent records in the 1990’s for Bullseye he achieved some wider exposure although during his hit making days he remained something of a neglected figure with a stature that seems to have always been higher in the black community. At 87, McCracklin is still active and I was thrilled to get a chance to see him at this year’s Pocono Blues Festival. We go back to 1947 to hear Big Joe Turner teaming up with Wynonie Harris on “Blues” as Wynonie has this to say to Big Joe: “Yes the girl that used to sleep with you, Joe Turner she’s sleeping with Mr. Blues now.” This is one of four songs Turner and Harris recorded together for Imperial in 1947. We jump ahead a few years to hear Big Joe’s “Sweet Sixteen” from 1952.

On today’s show we spotlight recordings from two recent releases: Blues Images Presents Vol. 6 and And This Free. Blues Images Presents Vol. 6 is the companion CD to the latest blues calendar put out by record collector John Tefteller. Several years back Tefteller uncovered a huge cache of Paramount promotional material. Paramount marketed their “race records”, as they were called, to African-Americans, most notably in the pages of the Chicago Defender, the African-American newspaper, and sent promotional material to record stores and distributors. Tefteller bought a huge cache of this artwork from a pair of journalists who rescued them from the rubbish heap some twenty years previously. The depression essentially killed off Paramount’s advertising budget so many of these images were never sent out and hence have not been seen by anyone since they were first produced. Tefteller has been making these gorgeous ads available in his Night & Day BluesClassic Blues Artwork Calendar since 2004 and the 2009 version has just been printed. The accompanying CD is a collection of songs that match the artwork. For pre-war blues fans these CD’s are eagerly anticipated as that always include some newly discovered sides. This year is no exception with newly discovered titles by Blind Blake, Ben Curry and two test recordings of the Paramount All Star’s “Home Town Skiffle.” The Blind Blake sides were discovered in 2007 and I’m very glad to be able to play “Night And Day Blues” a very nice laid back number sporting some fine guitar solos. We also play one of the “Home Town Skiffle” tests which was a group consisting of The Hokum Boys, Georgia Tom, Will Ezell, Blind Blake, Charlie Spand and Papa Charlie Jackson. This was made as a sampler to advertise Paramount artists. It was thought Blind Lemon Jefferson was on this but he is clearly not after listening closely to these test recordings.

After languishing out of print for many years, Mike Shea’s legendary film on Chicago’s Maxwell Street Market, And This Is Free, has finally been reissued. Housed in a soft covered fold out set is a two disc set containing the 50 minute documentary And This Is Free, the 30 minute documentary Maxwell Street: A Living Memory, some fascinating archival footage, an interview with sound man Gordon Quinn, a separate CD of performances by artists associated with Maxwell Street. Form the CD we play Blind Percy & His Blind Band’s “Fourteenth Street Blues” which is supposedly a pseudonym for Blind Taggart who recorded primarily gospel material.

Southside Blues JamThe most recent song on today’s show is Junior Wells’ “Trouble Don’t Last Always” cut circa 1969/1970. The song comes from Southside Blues Jam which is easily one of Wells’ best records from this era featuring longtime partner Buddy Guy along with Otis Spann. Spann’s rumbling, two-fisted piano adds much to this date and is his last studio recording before his untimely death in April 1970. Fittingly the album is dedicated to Spann.

Among the other early blues we spin are fine sides by Bayless Rose, Blind Willie McTell, Leroy Carr, Little Brother Montgomery, J.T. “Funny Papa” Smith plus blues ladies Victoria Spivey and Merline Johnson. The mysterious Bayless Rose recorded 3 sides in 1930 plus several unissued sides and there’s some dispute if Rose is a white or black performer. “Frisco Blues” is a gorgeous instrumental sporting some amazing quick fingered playing and crystal clear, fluid tone. I’ve played Little Brother often on the show and today’s selection, “No Special Rider Blues”, was cut in 1960 but is a reprise of a song he cut at his very first session for Paramount back in 1930. This version comes from the Bluesville album Tasty Blues, one of his finest records and featuring the wonderful guitar of Lafayette Thomas. Montgomery also shows up on another song we play, “Ethel Bea”, by Little Son Joe which also features Joe’s wife, Memphis Minnie. Speaking of piano blues we play Leroy Carr’s timeless “Midnight Hour Blues.” Little is known about Merline Johnson who was one of the most prolific female blues artists of the 1930’s. She recorded over 70 sides between 1937 and 1941and on our selection, “He May Be Your Man” she’s ably supported by Blind John Davis and Lonnie Johnson. I’ve been listening quite a bit to J.T. “Funny Papa” Smith who cut twenty issued sides between 1930 and 1931. He was a superb singer/guitarist and a marvelous lyricist as he shows on the salacious “Hoppin’ Toad Frog:”

I’m harmless as I can be, I stays out of all peoples way (2x)
I’m just a little old toad, I’m gonna hop back to my home someday

I’ll hop down in your basement, don’t mean to harm a single soul (2x)
I’ll shake all of your ashes, then shovel you in some brand new coal

I don’t have no friend, by myself I’m always on the road (2x)
Just let me hop for you one time mama and you’ll keep me for your little old toad

Mama would you let a poor little old toad frog hop down in your water pond (2x)
I’ll dive down and come right out and I won’t stay in your water long

I ain’t no bottle stopper, I ain’t no police copper, I ain’t no cradle rocker, you know I ain’t the baby’s papa
But I know for my self, in your front yard is where I get my load
Well you talk you like my hoppin’, why don’t you keep me for your little toad

Mama do you know one thing, your water tank is just deep enough (2x)
I can dive down to the bottom, take my time and then tread right back up

  • Share/Bookmark