Entries tagged with “Wright Holmes”.


ARTISTSONGALBUM
Dan PickettBaby Don't You Want to Go1949 Country Blues
John Lee HookerMy Daddy Was A JockeyGotham Golden Classics
Wright HolmesGood Road BluesAlley Special
Jimmy RushingLotsa PoppaBig Band Blues
Charlie GonzalesHi-Yo SilverCharlie Gonzales
Bill JenningsStompin' With BillStompin' With Bill
Thelma CooperTalk To Me DaddyThelma Cooper & Daisy Mae & Her Hepcats
Daisy Mae & Her HepcatsStuff You Gotta WatchThelma Cooper & Daisy Mae & Her Hepcats
Lil ArmstrongRock It BoogieThe Boogie Box Vol. 11
Sonny Boy JohnsonQuinsellaAlley Special
David "Pete" MckinleyShreveport BluesAlley Special
Stick Horse HammondTruck 'Em on DownAlley Special
J.B. SummersStranger In TownJB Summers & The Blues Shouters
TNT TribbleCadilliac BluesT.N.T. Tribble Vol. 1
Harry CraftonIt's Been A Long Time BabyGotham Recording Star
Sonny TerryFour O'Clock BluesGotham Record Sessions
Champion Jack DupreeOld, Old WomanChampion Jack Dupreed: Early Cuts
Baby Boy WarrenMy Special Friend BluesDetroit Blues 1938-1954
Great GatesCome Back HomeThe Great Gates
Len McCallPhiladelphia BoogiePhiladelphia Boogie
J.B. SummersHey Mr. J.B.JB Summers &The Blues Shouters
Jimmy PrestonNumbers Blues1948 -1950
Cousin JoeFly Hen BluesComplete 1945-1947 Vol. 1
Tiny GrimesCall Of The WildTiny Grimes Vol. 4
Doug QuattlebaumFoolin' MeEast Coast Blues
Tarheel SlimYou're A Little too SlowEast Coast Blues
Sonny TerryBaby Let’s Have Some FunGotham Record Sessions
Cousin JoeYou Ain't So Such-A-MuchComplete 1945-1947 Vol. 1
Harry CraftonRusty DustyHarry Crafton 1949-1954
Earl BosticFlamingoLet's Ball Tonight Pt. 1
Tiny GrimesRockin' And Sockin'Tiny Grimes Vol. 3
Wright HolmesAlley SpecialAlley Special
Dan PickettRide to a Funeral in a V-81949 Country Blues
John Lee HookerHouse Rent BoogieGotham Golden Classic

Show Notes:

Sam Goody launched the Gotham label in 1946. Focusing on blues, spirituals, and jazz, Goody’s most successful artist was Eal Bostic. In 1948, Goody sold Gotham along with Bostic’s contract to Irvin Ballen of Philadelphia. Ballen’s two labels, Apex and 20th Century had been moderately successful, but he hoped Bostic could deliver a national hit. Instead, the breakthrough came from Gotham’s gospel series, a 1949 release “Touch Me Lord Jesus” by the Angelic Gospel Singers. With that success, Ballen continued releasing Gotham and 20th Century sides from both local artists and catalogs acquired by other labels. Ballen’s roster included doo-wop, R&B, blues and gospel. Among the label’s blues artists were Dan Pickett, John Lee Hooker, Sonny Terry, Champion Jack Dupree and Cousin Joe among others. By the late 50’s Gotham and 20th Century were phased out as Ballen turned his attention to the record-pressing end of the business. The Gotham label has been well served on the reissue front, first as a series of reissue albums in the 1980′s on the Krazy Kat label, with these issued on CD with the same track listing and notes on the Collectables label.

The Gotham label issued some very fine down-home blues in the late 1940′s and early 1950′s. One of the label’s most intriguing artists was the brilliant and mysterious Dan Pickett. Back in the 1960′s some of the most highly prized 78′s among blues collectors were the rare Gotham records of Dan Pickett. These were valued, not only for their rarity but for the fact that they were among the finest commercial recordings of country blues in the post war era. His real, James Founty, was confirmed on a signature from an August 1949 contract with Gotham. Pickett was born and died in Alabama and field trips in the early 90’s have solved most mysteries although most of the research remains unpublished. He recorded five singles for Gotham plus four unreleased tracks in 1949. Pickett’s repertoire was derived almost exclusively from 1930’s race recordings, synthesizing the styles of Tampa Red, Blind boy Fuller, Buddy Moss and others  into a unique sound of his own.

Other down-home artists featured today include Wright Holmes, Stick Horse Hammond, Sonny Boy Johnson, David “Pete” Mckinley, John Lee Hooker, Sonny Terry and Dave Quattlebaum. Wright Holmes, who cut six sides in Houston in 1947, had an serpentine, unorthodox boogie style showcased most arrestingly on his “Good Road Blues”, one of two songs we play by him today. He was rediscovered and interviewed by Blues Unlimited magazine but had turned to religion and was no longer playing blues. John Lee Hooker was never one to pass up a recording deal even if he was under contract to another label. He cut a handful of superb sides for Gotham in 1950-51 under the name Johnny Williams. Sonny Boy Johnson, heard here in on our selection,”Quinsella,” was very obviously a devotee of John Lee “Sonny Boy” Williamson, and not a bad singer in his own right. He waxed eight sides between 1947 and 1948. Harmonica player and vocalist Sonny Terry cut some stunning material for Gotham in 1952. Some of it was issued, and much of it wasn’t. This material is collected on the CD Sonny Terry – Gotham Records Sessions. Doug Quattlebaum cut three sides for Gotham in 1953, cut some sides for Testament in 1961 and the same year cut the excellent LP Softee Man Blues for Bluesville.

For the most part Gotham specialized in R&B and jump blues. The label employed a number of fine vocalists propelled by swinging bands including Charlie Gonzalez, Harry “Fats” Crafton, T.N.T. Tribble, Great Gates, Len McCall,  Cousin Joe and female singers like Daisey Mae and Thelma Cooper. Not much is known about Charlie Gonzalez except that he was a fine Blues shouter who could also handle Blues ballads with equal aplomb. He also recorded as Charles Prince and Bobby Prince.

Harry “Fats” Crafton was a fine guitarists and singer who’s s career was varied; he joined Gotham as an artist, became a songwriter, and then led bands of his own – The Jivetones (later known as The Craft Tones) and The Sonotones. He cut a dozen sides for Gotham in 1949 and 1950.

Drummer and singer T.N.T. Tribble first came to fame in 1951 and soon after began recording for Gotham. He often recorded with the exciting trumpet great Frank Motley and even led his own eclectic band, T.N.T. Tribble and His Crew. Tribble also was a much in-demand session man. He recorded as the drummer with Ike and Tina Turner in the early ’60s on “A Fool In Love” and “It’s Gonna Work Out Fine.”

Edward Gates White aka “The Great Gates” enjoyed a recording career as an R&B vocalist from 1949 to 1955, before changing to recording jazz organ instrumentals. He continually shifted between various small West Coast labels such as Selective, Kappa and Miltone (issued on Gotham as well).

Growing up in New Orleans, Cousin Joe began singing in church before crossing over to the blues. He picked up the piano instead, playing Crescent City clubs and riverboats. He moved to New York in 1942, gaining entry into the city’s thriving jazz scene. He recorded for King, Gotham, Philo, Savoy, and Decca along the way and after returning to New Orleans in 1948, he recorded for DeLuxe and Imperial in 1954.

Len McCall was a smooth, big voiced singer who’s legacy consists of a lone 78 cut for the label in 1947, the B-side “Philadelphia Boogie” gives today’s show its title.

Thelma Cooper was a Gotham recording artist in the late ’40s; her ‘girlie’ voice and undeniably suggestive and sexy lyrics were considered ahead of their time. Daisey Mae cut a handful of sides for Gotham in 1955 and 1956.

Gotham’s roster featured a couple of notable sax men including Jimmy Preston and Earl Bostic. Alto sax player Jimmy Preston was one of the fathers of the Rock and Roll sound. He recorded his best work in the late 1940′s for Gotham Records in Philadelphia. He cut over two-dozen sides for Gotham between 1948 and 1950. After the war, alto sax man Bostic formed his own band. He switched to the Gotham label, where he had a Top 10 R&B hit with a cover of  ”Temptation.” Two years latter, Syd Nathan lured him away to his Cincinnati-based label, King, and Bostic remained one of King’s featured artists until his death. He died after suffering a second heart attack while playing a hotel opening  in Rochester, New York.

Gotham’s roster contained two outstanding guitarists, Bill Jennings and Tiny Grimes. Jennings started playing the ukulele at an early age and switched to guitar since he wanted to be taken seriously. A long-time member of Louis Jordan’s Tympany Five, Jenning’s versatility made him an in-demand recording artist. He recorded a handful of sides under his own name for Gotham in the 1950’s. Tiny Grimes was one of the earliest jazz electric guitarists to be influenced by Charlie Christian, and he developed his own swinging style. In 1938, he started playing electric guitar, and two years later he was playing in the Cats and the Fiddle. During 1943-1944, Grimes was part of a classic Art Tatum Trio, which also included Slam Stewart. In September 1944, he led his first record date, using Charlie Parker. Grimes played in the jive group The Cats And The Fiddle and was part of the classic Art Tatum Trio before he put together his own group in the late 1940′s. Called The Rockin’ Highlanders, the group featured Grimes’ electric guitar playing as well as the tenor of Red Prysock. Grimes cut over a dozen sides for Gotham between 1949 and 1950.

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ARTIST SONG ALBUM
Leroy Ervin Rock Island Blues Texas Down Home Blues 1948-1952
Peter Warfield Morning Train Blues Texas Down Home Blues 1948-1952
Any Thomas My Baby Quit Me Blues Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Perry Cain All The Way From Texas Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Lee Hunter Back To Santa Fe Texas Down Home Blues 1948-1952
Jesse James Please Ma'am Forgive Me Down Home Blues Classics Texas
Charlie Braddix Boogie Like You Wanna Texas Down Home Blues 1948-1952
Willie Lane Howlin' Wolf Blues Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Rattlesnake Cooper Lost Woman Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Mercy Dee Walton Evil And Hanky Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Johnny Beck You Gotta Lay Down Mama Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Manny Nichols No One To Love Me Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Lil Son Jackson Cairo Blues Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Sonny Boy Davis I Don't Live Here No More Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Buddy Chiles Jet Black Woman Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Dr. Hepcat Hattie Green Texas Down Home Blues 1948-1952
James Tisdom Winehead Swing Texas Down Home Blues 1948-1952
Stickhorse Hammond Alberta Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Lawyer Houston Western Rider Blues Lightnin' Special Vol. 2
Smokey Hogg Penitentiary Blues Pts. 1 & 2 Texas Down Home Blues 1948-1952
John Hogg West Texas Blues Texas Down Home Blues 1948-1952
Luther Stoneham January 11, 1949 Blues Texas Down Home Blues 1948-1952
The Sugarman Which Woman Do I Love Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Sam Suitcase Johnson Sam's Coming Home Texas Down Home Blues 1948-1952
Alex Moore Neglected Woman Texas Down Home Blues 1948-1952
Thunder Smith Big Stars Are Falling Lightnin' Special Vol. 2
L.C. Williams You Can't Take It With You Baby Lightnin' Special Vol. 2
Frankie Lee Sims Married Woman Lucy Mae
Ernest Lewis No More Lovin' Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Miss Country Slim In My Girlish Days Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Little Son Tillis Skin And Bones Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Sonny Boy Holmes TNT Woman Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52
Big Son & Lillian Tillis Ten Long Years Down Home Blues Classics Texas 1946-52

Show Notes:

The music on today’s program spans a fascinating period, roughly the first decade of post-war blues, when the blues was evolving into what would be called R&B and a short hop later to rock and roll. Today’s however is a throwback; this is rough and tumble down-home blues geared towards an audience that was still eager to hear earthy rural blues. Many of these listeners were still in the south while many other were transplanted southerners still eager to hear the older styles. These were exciting times with numerous small labels throwing their hat in the ring to try to cash in on the market.  Our spotlight is on the Texas variety of down-home blues. Some of today’s artists achieved a measure of success such as Lightnin’ Hopkins, Lil Son Jackson and Smokey Hogg while those like Lawyer Houston, Ernest Lewis, Manny Nichols, Stickhorse Hammond, Sonny Boy Holmes, Johnny Beck and others cut fine sides but remain utterly obscure outside of hardcore collectors. Between 1944 and 1964, more than 600 record companies tried their hands at recording blues. Many failed or had limited success while others grew and became major players. This was “the last grand hurrah of local blues recorded for, and often by, local entrepreneurs.”

By the early 1950’s, competition among independent record labels in Texas was intense. Macy’s, Freedom, and Peacock (as well as Bob Shad’s New York-based Sittin-In-With) were all involved in recording local and regional blues musicians. In Houston there were fewer opportunities for recording than in Dallas until after World War II, when several independent labels were started. The earliest to record blues was Gold Star, founded by Bill Quinn in 1946 as a hillbilly label to record Harry Choates. In 1947 Quinn decided to enter the “race” market by recording Lightnin’ Hopkins. Today’s program features several Gold Star artists including Lil Son Jackson, Leroy Ervin, Andy Thomas, Lee Hunter and Perry Cain who gives us the title for today’s show. Among the Dallas labels we spin tracks form Blue Bonnet and (Star) Talent. Blue Bonnet Records was formed by Herb Rippa in 1947 in Dallas as a hillbilly label but near the end of Blue Bonnet’s three-year existence Rippa began recording a handful of blues artists, most notable being Frankie Lee Sims. Pianist Charlie Braddix cut two sides for the label in 1948. Both Willie Lane and Rattlesnake Cooper cut sides for (Star) Talent, a Dallas label owned by father and daughter Jesse and Louise Erickson. The label recorded blues, country and gospel and cut the sides first sides by Rufus Thomas and Professor Longhair.

Frankie Lee Sims: Cross country Blues

The spirit of Lightnin’ Hopkins looms over many of these recordings and we play tracks by some who were in Hopkins orbit. Thunder Smith played piano behind Hopkins on his first two sessions for Aladdin in 1946 and 1947, never achieving the success that Hopkins did. Hopkins backed Smith on a four song session for Aladdin in 1946 with Smith cutting one session apiece in 1947 for Gold Star and in 1948 for Down Town. He reportedly died in Houston in 1965. L.C. Williams was a singer/tap dancer who also occasionally drummed behind Hopkins. He arrived in Houston in 1945 and was one of the many characters who hung around in Lightning’s orbit, sitting on stoops drinking beer and wine, shooting the breeze with passers-by. He made his first record in 1947 with Hopkins on piano and guitar. Hopkins plays guitar on a four-song session for Gold Star in 1948 with Williams making some final sides for Eddie’s and Freedom between 1948-1950. He died in Houston of TB in 1960. Frankie Lee Sims claimed to be a cousin of Lightnin’ Hopkins. Sims cut his first 78′s for Blue Bonnet Records in 1948 in Dallas, but didn’t taste anything resembling regional success until 1953, when his “Lucy Mae Blues” did well down south.  Sims recorded fairly prolifically for Los Angeles-based Specialty into 1954, then switched to the Ace label in 1957 to cut great rockers like “Walking with Frankie” and “She Likes to Boogie Real Low.” He recorded for Bobby Robinson in late 1960 but these sides were unreleased and didn’t surface until decades later when they were released on the British Krazy Kat label. Robinson ran the NYC based labels Fire, Fury and Enjoy. Sims died at age 53 in Dallas of pneumonia.

Mercy Dee Walton was a Texas émigré, who had played piano around Waco from the age of 13 before hitting the West Coast in 1938. He debuted on record in 1949 with “Lonesome Cabin Blues” for the tiny Spire logo, which became a national R&B hit. Those sides were cut in Fresno, but Los Angeles hosted some of the pianist’s best sessions for Imperial in 1950 and Specialty in 1952-53. After a lengthy layoff, Walton returned to the studio in a big way in 1961, recording prolifically for Chris Strachwitz’s Arhoolie label. He died the following year in December 1962.

In 1946, Lil’ Son Jackson shipped off a demo to Bill Quinn, who owned Houston based Gold Star Records. Jackson scored a national R&B hit, “Freedom Train Blues,” in 1948. It would prove Jackson’s only national hit, although his 1950-1954 output for Imperial Records must have sold consistently, judging from how many sides the L.A. firm issued. He gave up the blues during the mid-’50s after an auto wreck, resuming work as a mechanic. Arhoolie Records boss Chris Strachwitz convinced Jackson to cut an album in 1960. Jackson died May 30, 1976, in Dallas, TX, from cancer.

Smokey Hogg was a down-home bluesman who scored a pair of major R&B hits in 1948 and 1950 (“Long Tall Mama” and “Little School Girl”) and cut prolifically for a slew of labels including Exclusive, Modern, Bullet, Macy’s, Sittin’ in With, Imperial, Mercury, Specialty, Fidelity, Combo, Federal, and Showtime). Smokey’s cousin John Hogg also played the blues, waxing six sides in 1951.

One of the last of the old-time Texas barrelhouse pianists, Alex Moore was an institution in Dallas, his lifelong home. Moore had one of the longest recording careers in blues history. Moore began performing in the early ’20s, playing clubs and parties around his hometown of Dallas; he usually performed under the name Whistlin’ Alex. In 1929, he recorded his first sessions, for Columbia Records. Moore didn’t record again until 1937, when he made a few records for Decca. Moore didn’t record again until 1951, when RPM/Kent had him cut several songs. Arhoolie Records signed the pianist in 1960, and those records helped make him a national name. For the rest of the ’60s, he played clubs and festivals in America, as well as a handful of festival dates in Europe. He continued to perform until his death in 1989. The year before his death, he recorded a final album titled Wiggle Tail.

Among the great unknowns are artists such as Manny Nichols, Son Tillis, Laywer Houston,  Nathaniel “Stickhorse” Hammond, Wright Holmes, Lee Hunter, Sonny Boy Holmes, Luther Stoneham and Dr. Hepcat among others. Manny Nichols cut nine sides between 1949-1953 for several small labels, first in Texas and then in California. He also recorded as West Texas Slim. In addition he backed the mysterious Miss Country Slim on one record. J.R. Fullbright, owner of Elko Records, first brough Son Tillis in the studio in Longview, Texas but these were unreleased. He then brought him over to Gold Star where he cut several sides. Interviewed in 1968, Fullbright though Tillis was in the penitentiary for life for murder. Nathaniel “Stickhorse” Hammond is one of the oldest performers featured, having been born in Dallas in 1896. Laywer Houston cut an eight-song session for Atlantic in 1950 and another eight-song session circa 1953/54 that was never issued. Lavada Durst AKA Dr.Hepcat was the first black disc jockey in Texas on Austin‘s KVET. He published The Jives of Dr.Hepcat based on his outlandish radio patter. He cut early records on Peacock, Uptown and later recordings on Documentary Arts. Wright Holmes had only three sides issued in 1947, with several unissued. He was rediscovered and interviewed by Blues Unlimited magazine but had turned to relgion and was no longer playing blues. Lee hunter was the brother of the more famous Ivory Joe Hunter and cut a lone 78 for Gold Star in 1948.

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