Big Road Blues Show 3/24/24: Blues Is a Feeling – Multi-Instrumentalists

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Bertha Henderson w/ Blind Blake Let Your Love Come Down Paramount Jazz
Ed Bell w/ Clifford Gibson Tooten Out Ed Bell 1927-1930
Peetie Wheatstraw Police Station Blues The Essential
Leadbelly Eagle Rock Rag (Hot Piano Rag) Leadbelly Vol. 4 1944
Lonnie Johnson She Don't Know Who She Wants Down On The Levee: The Piano Blues of St. Louis Vol. 2
Lonnie Johnson Blues Is Only A Ghost Lonnie Johnson Vol. 6 1930-1931
Scrapper Blackwell Morning Mail Blues Scrapper Blackwell Vol. 2 1934-1958
Scrapper Blackwell Blues That Make Me Scrapper Blackwell Vol. 2 1934-1958
Tampa Red Stormy Sea Blues The Bluebird Recordings: 1936-1938
Mildred White w/ Pete Franklin Kind Hearted Woman Down Home Blues: Chicago
Pete Franklin w/ Tampa RedDown Behind the Rise Down Behind the Rise
Skip James 22-20 Blues Blues Images Vol. 1
Skip James If You Haven't Any Hay Get On Down The Road Juke Joint Saturday Night
Walter Roland & Sonny Scott Guitar Stomp Walter Roland Vol. 1 1933
Walter Roland & Sonny Scott Railroad Stomp Walter Roland Vol. 1 1933
Pine Bluff Pete Uncle Sam Blues Bloodstains on the Wall
Forrest City Joe Red Cross Store Downhome Blues 1959
Lightnin' Hopkins You're Own Fault BabyLong Way From Texas
Henry Townsend Cairo's My Baby's Home Tired Of Bein’ Mistreated
Henry Townsend Bad Luck Dice Mule
Roosevelt Sykes A Woman is in Demand The Honeydripper's Duke's Mixture
Richard Hacksaw Harney Can Can The Memphis Blues Again Vol. 2
Sleepy John Estes/Yank Rachell/Hammie Nixon Government MoneyNewport Blues
Willie Guy Rainey Willie's Jump Nothing But The Blues
Scrapper Blackwell & Brooks Berry Blues Is a Feeling My Heart Struck Sorrow
Scrapper Blackwell Little Girl Blues Mr. Scrapper's Blues
Pete Franklin My Old Lonesome Blues Guitar Pete´s Blues
Pete Franklin Lowdown Dirty Ways Indianapolis Jump
Pete Franklin The Fives Indianapolis Jump
Bukka White Drunk Man Blues Mississippi Blues
Bukka White Sugar Hill Sky Songs
James “Guitar Slim” Stephens War Service Blues Greensboro Rounder
James “Guitar Slim” Stephens Lula's Back In Town Living Country Blues USA - Introduction

Show Notes:

Pete Franklin & Scrapper Blackwell
Pete Franklin & Scrapper Blackwell in Indianapolis, 1960,
photo by Duncan Schiedt

Today’s show spotlights several artists who were proficient both on guitar and piano and recorded on both instruments. A number of today’s artists are linked, including Scrapper Blackwell, Pete Franklin and Tampa Red. The team of Leroy Carr and Scrapper Blackwell were highly influential, influencing both pianists and guitarists alike. Pete Franklin, whose mother was good friend with Leroy Carr (he roomed at their house shortly before he passed in 1935) was influenced on guitar by the work of Scrapper, whilst on the piano his style was similar to Carr. Both Scrapper and Franklin were captured playing piano on a number of fine recordings. Tampa Red proved himself a capable pianist, first recording on piano in the mid-30s and backed Franklin on piano on some 1949 recordings. Skip James, Bukka White, Lonnie Johnson, Hacksaw Harney and Henry Townsend were known for their guitar playing but all recorded captivating sides on piano. Other artists heard today include Clifford Gibson, Blind Blake, Leadbelly, Lightnin’ Hopkins, James “Guitar Slim” Stephens among others. We also hear from pianists Walter Roland and Peetie Wheatstraw, the only pianists today featured on guitar and harmonica blower Forrest City Joe who also played piano.

Brooks Berry & Scrapper Blackwell c.1960
photo by Art Rosenbaum

From the 20s-40s we spin a grab bag of artists who recorded on multiple instruments. Guitarists Blind Blake and Clifford Gibson backed other artists on piano, recording under their own names strictly as guitarists. Peetie Wheatstraw was a proficient guitarist as heard on “Police Station Blues” which forms the basis for Robert Johnson’s “Terraplane Blues.” Leadbelly recorded a few piano solos including “Eagle Rock Rag”, “The Eagle Rocks”, and “Big Fat Woman” which are all essentially the same piece, featuring some singing and a lot of scat. Lonnie Johnson played piano, guitar, violin and today we hear him playing piano on two numbers from 1930 and 1931. Then there’s Skip James who recorded quite a bit on both instruments. James grew up at the Woodbine Plantation in Bentonia, Mississippi and as a youth learned to play both guitar and piano. In his teens James began working on construction and logging projects across the mid-South, and sharpened his piano skills playing at work camp barrelhouses. James traveled to Grafton, Wisconsin, for his historic 1931 session for Paramount Records, which included thirteen songs on guitar and five on piano. He was sent to Paramount by talent scout H.C. Speir who was impressed by James’ audition.

Recording agent Ralph Lembo of Itta Bena arranged for Bukka White to record his first blues and gospel songs in 1930 in Memphis. Victor only saw fit to release four of the 14 songs Bukka White recorded that day. In 1937 White recorded a minor hit, “Shake ‘Em On Down,” in Chicago, but that year he was also sentenced for a shooting incident to Parchman Penitentiary, where John Lomax of the Library of Congress recorded him. After his release White recorded twelve of his best-known songs at a Chicago session in 1940. Among the songs he recorded on that occasion were “Parchman Farm Blues”, “Good Gin Blues,” “Bukka’s Jitterbug Swing,” “Aberdeen, Mississippi Blues,” and “Fixin’ to Die Blues,” all classic numbers. Two California-based blues enthusiasts, John Fahey and Ed Denson tracked Bukka down and he resumed his recording career for labels like Takoma and Arhoolie. He recorded his first piano pieces for those labels.

Scrapper Blackwell was a self-taught guitarist, building his first guitar out of a cigar box, wood and wire and also learned to play the piano. Blackwell and Carr teamed up in 1928 and t a remarkably consistent body of work of hundreds of sides notable for the impeccable guitar/piano interplay, Carr’s profoundly expressive, melancholy vocals and some terrific songs. Blackwell actually made his solo recording debut three day prior to his debut with Carr, on June 16, 1928, cutting “Kokomo Blues b/w Penal Farm Blues.” Blackwell’s last recording session with Carr was in February 1935, for Bluebird Records. The session ended bitterly, as both musicians left the studio mid-session and on bad terms, stemming from payment disputes. Two months later Blackwell received a phone call informing him of Carr’s death due to heavy drinking and nephritis. Blackwell soon recorded a tribute to his musical partner “My Old Pal Blues” and then shortly retired from the music industry. Blackwell returned to music in the late 1950’s and in 1962 cut the magnificent Mr. Scrapper’s Blues and teamed with Brooks Berry, resulting in the marvelous My Heart Struck Sorrow. Scrapper plays piano on both records.

My Heart Struck Sorrow was the lone album by singer Brooks Berry. As producer Art Rosenbaum wrote: “Brooks met Scrapper shortly after she moved to Indianapolis and thus began a long though at times stormy friendship that was to end suddenly some fifteen months after the last of the present recordings were made. On October 6, 1962. Scrapper was shot to death in a back alley near his home. Brooks has been, during the four years I have known her, reluctant to sing blues without her friend’s sensitive guitar or piano playing behind her; and she will sing less and less now that he is gone.” Some additional sides by Berry and Blackwell appear on the collection Scrapper Blackwell with Brooks Berry 1959 – 1960 on Document which were recorded live at 144 Gallery in Indianapolis in 1959.

If You Haven't Any Hay Get On Down The RoadEdward Lamonte Franklin was born in Indianapolis on January 16, 1927. Despite being billed as Guitar Pete Franklin, he was equally adept on the piano. His guitar work was influenced by the work of Scrapper Blackwell, whilst on the piano his style was similar to his mother’s one time lodger, Leroy Carr. Pete was only eight but remembered the hours Carr spent at the piano in their living room. He started playing guitar at eleven by watching and listening to the guitarists who would stop by the house, not only Scrapper Blackwell but also Jesse Ellery who played on Champion Jack Dupree’s first sessions and the last by Bill Gaither. After getting discharged from the army, Franklin headed to Chicago where his first recording took place in 1947, when he accompanied St. Louis Jimmy Oden on guitar for the latter’s single, “Coming Up Fast”. Franklin’s own work started in 1949 with his single release, “Casey Brown Blues b/w Down Behind The Rise.” Two other sides from that session, “Mr. Charley” and “Naptown Blues” were not issued at the time. Franklin also made recordings backing Jazz Gillum, John Brim and Sunnyland Slim. In 1963, Bluesville Records released The Blues of Pete Franklin: Guitar Pete’s Blues, which was recorded on July 12, 1961, in Indianapolis. A few other sides appeared on the Flyright album Indianapolis Jump. Franklin died in Indiana, in July 1975 from heart disease, aged 47. Regarding his style John Brim offered the following: “Yeah, he’d play his style-and Jesse Ellery’s. Play his style and ideas that he put a little more in it than Scrapper did.”

Tampa Red accompanies Franklin on piano as he sings and plays guitar on three tracks from 1949. At the same session Tampa also played piano behind Mildred White with Franklin again on guitar. Tampa’s piano playing encompasses the sound of another major figure of the Chicago blues scene, Big Maceo Merriweather. Tampa first recorded on piano back in 1936 on “Stormy Sea Blues” which we feature today.

Eagle Rock RagPianist Walter Roland recorded over ninety issued sides for ARC as a soloist and accompanist. Roland partnered Lucille Bogan when they recorded for the ARC labels between 1933 and 1935. In 1933, he was recorded at New York City for the American Record Company, and he had apparently traveled to the session with Lucille Bogan and guitarist Sonny Scott. With Scott, he switched to guitar and the duo knocked out two remarkable guitar pieces.

Henry Townsend recorded in every decade from the 1920s through the 2000s. By the late 1920s he had begun touring and recording with the pianist Walter Davis and plays on numerous records by him through the early 50s. During this time period, he also learned to play the piano. He backed other artists in the 30s including the Sparks Brothers, Big Joe Williams, and Roosevelt Sykes. His recording was sparse in the 40s and 50s. Articulate and self-aware, with an excellent memory, Townsend gave many invaluable interviews to blues enthusiasts and scholars. Paul Oliver recorded him in 1960 and quoted him extensively in his 1967 work Conversations with the Blues. In the 60s he recorded for Bluesville and Adelphi and continued to record for labels like Nighthawk, where he cut Mule in 1980, one of his finest, as well as Arcola, APO, Wolf and others. He also appeared in films such as Blues Like Showers of Rain and The Devil’s Music. In 1999 his autobiography, A Blues Life was published. Townsend died on September 24, 2006, at the age of 96.

Other artists featured today include Pine Bluff Pete, Forrest City, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Roosevelt Sykes, Richard Hacksaw Harney, James “Guitar Slim” Stephens. Art Rupe remembered “Pine Bluff Pete” as a “very black man” who had been running errands during the session. Rupe said “when it was felt the other singers couldn’t perform effectively any more because of alcohol, fatigue, or both, Pine Bluff Pete asked to record. He looked like he could use the recording fee, and everybody was feeling good, so we recorded him. We never actually intended to release the records, so we paid him outright, not even getting his full name.” The name “Pine Bluff Pete” was given to him by Barry Hansen who discovered the tape in the Specialty vaults.

Forrest City Joe
Forrest City Joe, Hughes, AR, 1959
Photo by Alan Lomax

In his The Land Where the Blues Began, Alan Lomax told about meeting Forrest City Joe one September afternoon in Hughes, a small town in Arkansas cotton country, about eighty miles south of Memphis: “Joe was sitting on the front gallery of a tavern, identified in the shaky lettering of a sign, ‘The Old Whiskey Store.’ He was playing the guitar for a group of loungers. …I listened a while, bought him a drink, and we agreed to round up musicians for a recording session that evening. …By nine o’clock that evening Pugh had rounded up his band, Boy Blue and His Two (when backing him they became Forrest City Joe’s Three Aces), and Lomax had set up his recording machine on the bar at Charley Houlin’s juke joint.” Sadly, Joe was killed in a car crash not long after.

While living within the Delta, Richard Hacksaw Harney formed a guitar playing duo with another of his brothers, Maylon. They became known by their family nicknames of Can and Pet. In December 1927, they recorded for Columbia Records, backing vocalist and button accordion player Walter Rhodes, as well as blues singer, Pearl Dickson. Pet and Can’s musical career came to an abrupt halt shortly afterwards when Maylon was stabbed to death in a juke joint. Following his brother’s murder, Harney claimed he attempted to learn to play both parts. Primarily though his income came from his daytime work as a piano tuner and repairman, based in and around Memphis, Tennessee. He recorded an album for Adelphi and began playing again at workshops and music festivals such as the Smithsonian Folklife Festival.

James “Guitar Slim” Stephens began playing pump organ when he was only five years old, singing spirituals he learned from his parents and reels he heard from his older brother pick on the banjo. Within a few years, Slim was playing piano. When he was thirteen, Green began picking guitar, playing songs he heard at local “fling-dings,” house parties, and churches. A few years later he joined the John Henry Davis Medicine Show, playing music to draw crowds to hear the show master’s pitch; this took him throughout the southeastern Piedmont. In 1953 he arrived in Greensboro, North Carolina, where he lived for the remainder of his life playing both guitar and piano–singing the blues at house parties and spirituals at church. Green as first recorded in the early 70’s by Kip Lornell who recorded him on several occasions in 1974 and 1975. His first LP, Greensboro Rounder, was issued in 1979 by the British Flyright label and are comprised of these recordings. Green also appears several anthologies and his final recordings were made in 1980 by Siegfried Christmann and Axel Küstner for the Living Country Blues USA series of albums.

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Big Road Blues Show 8/7/22: Mix Show


ARTISTSONGALBUM
Kansas Joe McCoy Joliet Bound Memphis Minnie & Kansas Joe 1931-1932
Johnny Shines Joliet Blues Drop Down Mama
Willie Love Feed My Body To The FishesGreenville Smokin'
Willie Love Vanity Dresser BoogieGreenville Smokin'
Bukka White Special Steam LineBlues From The Vocalion Vaults
Blind Willie McTell Travelin' BluesBest Of
Rev. Robert Wilkins Streamline Frisco Limited Remember Me
Walter Rhodes The Crowing Rooster Screamin' & Hollerin' The Blues
Charley Patton Banty Rooster Best Of
Johnny Littlejohn Kitty OSlide 'em On Down
Johnny Littlejohn Chips Flying EverywhereSlide 'em On Down
Sam Collins New Salty Dog1927-1931
Bo Carter Be My Salty DogBo Carter & The Mississippi Sheiks
Kokomo Arnold Salty DogThe Essential
Freddie Keppard's Jazz Cardinals & Papa Charlie JacksonSalty Dog #2ThThe Frog Blues & Jazz Annual No. 5
Bobby King Two TelephonesChicago Blues from Federal Records
Little Joe Hinton I Need Love So BadWest Coast Modern Blues 1960's Vol .2
B.B. King SundownThe Soul Of
Gene Campbell Overalls Papa BluesGene Campbell 1929-1931
Gene Campbell Wedding Day BluesGene Campbell 1929-1931
James Tisdom Overhaul BluesJuke Joint Vol. 4
Doctor Clayton Cheating And Lying Blues Doctor Clayton 1935-1942
Pat Hare I'm Gonna Murder My Baby Sun Records: The Blues Years 1950-1958
Robert Nighthawk Cheating And Lying Blues And This is Maxwell Street
Ed Bell My Crime BluesMy Rough And Rowdy Ways Vol. 1
The Mississippi Sheiks The New Stop and Listen BluesThe Mississippi Sheiks Vol. 2 1931-1934
Barbecue Bob Trouble Done Bore Me DownBarbecue Bob Vol. 2 1928-1929
Kokomo ArnoldBack To The Woods The Esential
Unknown Louis CollinsLibrary of Congress
Mississippi John Hurt Louis CollinsAvalon Blues: The Complete 1928 OKeh Recordings
Little Brother Montgomery Leaving Town BluesLittle Brother Montgomery 1930-1935
Charlie Spand Soon This Morning #2Dreaming the Blues: The Best of Charlie Spand
Andy Boy Church Street BluesThe Piano Blues Vol. 8: Texas Seaport 1934-1937
Herve Duerson Avenue StrutMama Don't Allow No Easy Riders Here
Lightnin' Hopkins Corrine, Corrina Treasury of Field Recordings Vol. 1
Joel Hopkins Good Times Here, Better Down The Road Treasury of Field Recordings Vol. 1

Show Notes:

Cheating And Lying Blues A varied mix show today with an emphasis on pre-war blues. We compare and contrast songs about the Joliet State Penitentiary, that “Banty Rooster”, spin a stack of songs revolving around the standard “Salty Dog”, hear songs about poor “Louis Collins” and spin a set of music dealing with cheating woman and murder. Also on tap are twin spins by Willie Love and Johnny Littlejohn , a set of train blues, a set of music spotlighting the enigmatic Gene Campbell, some superb piano blues, a pair of tracks from a long out-of-print album and much more.

We hear two songs about Joliet State Penitentiary: “Joliet Bound” by Kansas Joe McCoy from 1932 and Joliet Blues by Johnny Shines cut for Chess in 1950 but unreleased at the time. Shines spent time in prison around in 1950, not in Joliet but in the Illinois State Penitentiary. Joliet Correctional Center in Joliet, Illinois was active from 1858 to 2002. Kansas Joe sang: “Now and I got all messed up/And I’m Joliet Bound.” Shines is backed by a stellar group consisting of Little Walter, Jimmy Rogers and Ernest ‘Big’ Crawford.

Walter Rhodes musical instrument of choice was the button accordion which he played on four sides for Columbia in 1927, although only two of them were released. The recording session took place on December 10, 1927 in Memphis. The musicians present were listed as Walter Rhodes (vocals, accordion, vocal effects); plus ‘Pet’ and ‘Can’ (Maylon and Richard “Hacksaw” Harney), (guitars, speech). The label billed them as Walter Rhodes with “Pet and “Can.” Charlie Patton recorded a song called “Banty Rooster Blues” in June 1929. Lyrically the track contained many similarities to Rhodes’ “The Crowing Rooster.” Patton may well have known Rhodes, as they resided in the same part of Mississippi, and Patton could have learned the song directly from Rhodes. Rhodes is said to have died in his forties, after being struck by lightning. When I was down in Mississippi last year my buddy DeWayne Moore pointed to the exact spot where it happened although the place eludes me now.

The Crowing Rooster
Banty Rooster

“Salty Dog Blues” is a folk song from the early 1900s. Musicians have recorded it in a number of styles, including blues, jazz, country music, bluegrass. Papa Charlie Jackson recorded a version in 1924. Old-time New Orleans musicians from Buddy Bolden’s era recalled hearing far filthier versions of ‘Salty Dog Blues’ long before Papa Charlie’s recording. Jackson also recorded it with Freddie Keppard and his Jazz Cardinals in 1926. Clara Smith also recorded a version of the song in 1926. In his Library of Congress interviews, Jelly Roll Morton recalled a three-piece string band led by Bill Johnson playing the number to great acclaim. Other versions were recorded by Bo Carter, Kokomo Arnold, Sam Collins, Mississippi John Hurt, Lead Belly, Babe Stovall among others. The song became a bluegrass favorite covered by artists such as Morris Brothers, Allen Brothers, Flatt & Scruggs and others.

Slide guitarist Robert Nighthawk was recorded playing “Cheating And Lying Blues” in 1964 live on Maxwell Street which was a combination of Pat Hare’s 1954 “I’m Gonna Murder My Baby” and Doctor Clayton’s 1941 number “Cheating And Lying Blues” where he sings: I’m gonna murder my baby if she don’t stop cheating and lying/Well I’d rather be in the penitentiary than to be worried out of my mind.” In the life imitates art department Hare shot his girlfriend dead and also shot a policeman who came to investigate in 1963. He spent the last 16 years of his life in prison, passing in 1980.

Mississippi John Hurt recorded  a tale of a killing titled “Louis Collins” in 1928. Hurt apparently heard about the murder second-hand, and Hurt’s biographer, Philip Ratcliffe quoted him explaining that it might have happened in Memphis, Collins “was a great man… and he was killed by two men named Bob and Louis. I got enough of the story to write the song.” Writer Elijah Wald has shed new light on the song: “..I recently found a long article about the murder in the Yazoo, Mississippi, Herald of August 27, 1897. Apparently several fights broke out on a steamboat excursion between Yazoo City and Vicksburg. The specifics were somewhat disputed – a lot of drinking was involved – but at some point Louis Collins got in a fight with someone named Louis Thomas over a woman, the ship’s engineer pulled out a gun and tried to shoot Thomas, and Collins stabbed Thomas in the neck. Collins then attacked Robert Kent—the article doesn’t explain why—and cut him in the hand. Kent knocked Collins down, grabbed a pistol that was lying on a lunch counter—another unexplained detail—and shot Collins, hitting him in the chest. Collins kept coming, Kent shot again, missing him and slightly wounding a bystander, and Collins shortly fell over and died. A witness named Miles Mitchell added that three or four men had subdued Collins and were holding him down when Kent shot him.

Freddie Keppard's Jazz Cardinals: Salty Dog …I happened to ask the Library of Congress for a recording John Lomax made of an unidentified prisoner in the Tennessee State Penitentiary in Nashville in August 1933 singing “Bully of the Town…” and it turns out to have been mislabeled.  The singer starts by singing “Louis Collins was a bully in the town,” and apparently Lomax was familiar with “Bully” and not with “Louis Collins,” so considered it a variant of the former song… but in fact it’s a short version of the song Hurt recorded in 1928.”

We hear twin spins by Willie Love, Johnny Littlejohn and Gene Campbell. During the 30s and 40s, Willie played his piano around the Delta juke-joints and the clubs of Memphis and Helena, before starting on a short-lived solo career in the early 50s. He met harp maestro Rice Miller (Sonny Boy Williamson II) on his travels, and they struck up a solid working partnership so in 1942, Willie relocated to Helena where he played regularly on Sonny Boy’s King Biscuit Time radio show. The pair would play the juke-joints with guitarist Willie Joe Wilkins and drummer Willie Nix, billed as The Four Aces. In 1951, Willie recorded with Sonny Boy II and Elmore James at their recording sessions for Trumpet Records. Trumpet’s owner, Lillian McMurray, had Love return the following month and again in July 1951, when he recorded his best-known song, “Everybody’s Fishing”, which he wrote. Love played piano and sang, with guitar accompaniment by Elmore James and Joe Willie Wilkins. His backing band was known as the Three Aces. A studio session in December 1951 had Love backed by Little Milton (guitar), T.J. Green (fiddle), and Junior Blackman (drums). Under his own name, Love did not return to the studio until March 1953, when he cut “Worried Blues” and “Lonesome World Blues.” In April 1953, Love and Williamson recorded in Houston, Texas, in Love’s final recording session. He died at 46 due to pneumonia.

Johnny Littlejohn left home in 1946, pausing in Jackson, Mississippi; Arkansas; and Rochester, New York before winding up in Gary, Indiana. In 1951, his Elmore James-influenced slide style making him a favorite around Chicago’s south suburbs in addition to Gary. Littlejohn waited a long time to wax his debut singles for Margaret (his trademark treatment of Brook Benton’s “Kiddio”), T-D-S, and Weis in 1968. But before the year was out, Littlejohn had also cut his debut album, John Littlejohn’s Chicago Blues Stars, for Chris Strachwitz’s Arhoolie logo. Unfortunately, a four-song 1969 Chess date remained in the can. After that, another long dry spell preceded Littlejohn’s 1985 album So-Called Friends for Rooster Blues. He passed in 1994. In “Chips Flying Everywhere” Littlejohn uses a line that appeared in Charlie Patton’s “Down the Dirt Road Blues”: “ I feel like chopping/Chips flying everywhere” and later in the songs “Everyday seems like murder here.” Today’s tracks come from a new 2-CD, Slide ’em On Down: Chicago Slide Guitar 1966-1999 featuring tracks by Littlejohn and J.B. Hutto.

The Bully of the Town (Louis Collins)

Virtually nothing is known about vocalist-guitarist Gene Campbell other than the fact he recorded 24 solo selections (two songs are lost). Campbell recorded on five sessions in Dallas and Chicago within a 14-month period between 1929 and 1931. From the book Blues Come to Texas“: One, who came from San Antonio was Gene Campbell. He was well recalled by James Tisdom who learned from him in early years. ‘Willie Campbell, he was from San Antonio. He was one of my teachers but he don’t play any longer. He was born about 1902— he’s about sixty now— and he lived in Bay City working on a big rice farm there. He told me he made some records but I never got to hear them. His whole name was Willie Gene Campbell. I first knew him about 1929 when he came by Goliad. Last I ran into him was in Bay City when I was there for a rodeo a while back. He told me he was farming there. His songs didn’t have no names— just a lot of old levee camp and cotton field blues such as was going around. One thing I got from him was ‘Do you want to mistreat me, this same time tomorrow night?’ and ‘I’m down on my bended knee asking please forgive me’ and ‘You can’t fight two bad women at once.’ ”

Louis Collins

James Tisdom was born in Texas c. 1912. He seemed to live most of his life moving around from Corpus Christi to the Rio Grande valley. Tisdom never saw the inside of a Dallas or Houston recording studio, but he did travel to California to record three 78’s. In 1950 he cut another single in San Benito, TX. for Original. The recordings were believed to be forever lost until a copy turned up four decades later. Tisdom also made recordings for Ideal in South Texas in 1951, but they were shelved since the label specialized in Hispanic music. The acetates were found in the 1990’s by Arhoolie Records. Tisdom was known to have been residing and farming in Goliad, TX. in 1967.

We close our show with two tracks by brothers Lightnin’ Hopkins and Joel Hopkins off the long out-of-print album, Treasury of Field Recordings Vol. 1. Among the earliest recordings folklorist Mack McCormick released were the two volumes that comprise A Treasury of Field Recordings. Treasury Of Field Recordings Vol. 1 & 2 were compiled by McCormick and issued on the British 77 label in 1960. Sponsored by the Houston Folklore Group and the Texas Folklore Society, these field recordings were collected around Houston by McCormick and other collectors like Ed Bradeux, Pete Seeger, John Lomax and others. The 36 selections contained in this set were drawn from over 400 items recorded over a nine year period. The original recordings are housed at the University of Texas and the Library of Congress. As the notes state it portrays “A panorama of the traditions around Houston – the city and its neighboring bayous, beaches, prisons, plantations, plains and piney woods…” And as John Lomax writes about this collection “This is one good, long look at the guts of America – songs sung by those who make them up and pass them along, showing the character of themselves, the flavor and spirit of their lives.”

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Big Road Blues Show 12/5/21: I’m Wild About My Lovin’ – Love, Lust, Infidelity & Those Dirty Blues Pt. 1


ARTISTSONGALBUM
Mississippi Sarah & Daddy Stovepipe If You Want Me Baby Wait For Me: Songs of Love and Lust and Discontentment
Charlie McCoyToo Long Jackson Stomp
Big Joe & His Washboard Band I Love You BabyGood Time Blues
Hattie Hart I Let My Daddy Do That Memphis Masters: Early American Blues Classics
Lucille Bogan Alley Boogie The Essential
Memphis Minnie I'm Selling My Pork Chops (but I'm Giving My Gravy Away)When The Sun Goes Down
Mary Dixon All Around Mama Blue Girls Vol. 2 1925-1930
Tampa Red & The Hokum Jug Band She Can Love So GoodMusic Making In Chicago 1928-1935
Bo CarterAll Around Man The Essential
Jim Jackson I'm Wild About My Lovin' Let Me Tell You About The Blues: Memphis
Ed Bell She's Got A Nice Line Ed Bell 1927-1930
Johnny Temple Lead Pencil Blues (It Just Won't Write) The Essential
The Mississippi SheiksDriving That Thing The Essential
Walter Vincson Rats Been on My CheeseWalter Vincson 1928- 1941
Son Bonds A Hard Pill to Swallow Son Bonds & Charlie Pickett 1934-1941
Doctor Clayton Cheating and Lying Blues Doctor Clayton 1935-1942
Washboard Sam Back DoorThe Essential
Peetie Wheatstraw Mistreated Love BluesPeetie Wheatstraw Vol. 4
Champion Jack Dupree The Woman I LoveThe Early Cuts
Arthur 'Big Boy' Crudup I Love my BabyA Music Man Like Nobody Ever Saw
Louise Johnson On the Wall Juke Joint Saturday Night
Mae Glover Shake It Daddy I Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 1
Trixie Smith My Daddy Rocks MeTrixie Smith Vol. 2 (925-1939
Marilyn Scott I Got What My Daddy LikesDown Home Blue Classics 1943-1953: ew York & The East Coast States
Robert Johnson Love in Vain The Centennial Collection
JT Funny Paper Smith Mama's Quittin' And Leavin' Part 1 The Original Howling Wolf 1930-1931
Rosetta Howard Men Are Like Street Cars Men Are Like Street Cars
Roosevelt Sykes My Baby Is Gone Roosevelt Sykes Vol. 9 1947-1951
Blind Boy Fuller I Crave My PigmeatLegends of the Blues Vol. 1
Curley Weaver Sweet PetuniaThe Great Race Record Labels Vol. 2
St. Louis Bessie Meat Cutter BluesBarrelhouse Mamas
Alex Moore Blue Bloomer BluesDallas Alley Drag
Butterbeans & Susie He Likes It Slow Butterbeans & Susie Vol. 2 1926-1927
Dorothy Baker Steady Grinding BluesTwenty First St. Stomp: The Piano Blues Of St. Louis
Tampa Red The Duck Yas Yas YasFrog Blues & Jazz Annual 4
'Bogus' Ben CovingtonBoodle-de-Bum BlueWhen the Levee Breaks
Billy McKenzie & Jesse Crump Strewin' Your MessVocal Duets 1924-1931

Show Notes:

I'm Wild About My Lovin' Today’s show is the first of two as we examine the myriad blues songs, mainly from the pre-war era, dealing with love, lust, infidelity, and sex. Unlike some of the other topics we’ve covered, this a broad topic with hundreds of songs dealing with these subjects in all manner of imaginative and clever ways. Over the course of these shows we hear numerous songs of romantic love, songs of infidelity, loss and of course a good dose of raunchy blues numbers, many of which are quite eye-opening in their frankness particularly in these politically correct times. Hopefully listeners will take these songs in the context of the times and not set upon me with pitchforks calling for my cancellation. Along the way I’ll navigate through the lyrics, some of which can’t be adequately described on radio, as we play songs about riders, jockey’s, jelly, pig meat, milk cows, coffee grinders, shaving ’em dry, lead pencils, sweet patunia, the dirty dozens, getting your ashes hauled, churning butter, B.D. Woman, sissy men and much, much more.

Navigating the early blues you’ll notice that the music has a unique language, with phrases, double entendres and colloquialisms that are singular to blues. May of these turns of phrase have to do with sex and blues singers were endlessly inventive, slipping these in to the records they made for the “race market” of the 20s and 30s, likely unbeknownst to their white producers. One of the most famous terms that caught on was singing about the “dozens.” “The Dirty Dozens,” was released on Brunswick by Speckled Red and became a hit in late 1929. The dozens is a game of trading insult wordplay, sometimes it rhymes, sometimes it doesn’t, it often involves talking about your opponent’s mama. Six months later Red cut “The Dirty Dozen Part Two.” The recorded version of this song is clearly a cleaned-up version of what Red was singing in the bars and brothels where he played in the twenties. Many artists did their renditions including Kokomo Arnold, Jelly Roll Morton, Leroy Carr, Ben Curry, Lonnie Johnson among many others.

Another curious phrase was “Shave ‘Em Dry.” According to Mayo Williams, the expression “Can I shave ’em dry?” meant “Can I go to bed with you?” and was a black catchphrase at the time of it’s first recordings. It was first recorded by Ma Rainey in August 1924 in Chicago. Big Bill Broonzy stated “Shave ’em dry is what you call makin’ it with a woman; you ain’t doin’ nothin’, just makin’ it.” Papa Charlie Jackson’s version was recorded around February 1925 in Chicago, and released by Paramount Records in April that year. James “Boodle It” Wiggins recorded his version around October 1929. The most famous version was by Lucille Bogan who cut a studio version and an x-rated version. It was recorded by Lucille Bogan, although billed as ‘Bessie Jackson’, on March 5, 1935. As Keith Briggs notes: “The most notorious of all Lucille Bogan’s recordings are the alternate versions of “Shave ‘Em Dry”, which were recorded either for the delectation of the recording engineers or for clandestine distribution as a ‘Party Record.’ During this session her accompanist, pianist Walter Roland, cut the equally dirty “I’m Gonna Shave You Dry”, also a test pressing. In November 1936, Lil Johnson recorded “New Shave ‘Em Dry.”

I'm Selling My Pork ChopsAdmittedly “Mother Fuyer”  isn’t all that clever but it was a way to say mother fucker on record. “Mother Fuyer” was written and recorded by Red Nelson under the name Dirty Red in 1947 and released by Aladdin Records. It’s obvious what the term means. The term had been on record since the 30s including Memphis Minnie’s “Dirty Mother For You” (Decca Records, 1935) and Washboard Sam (1935), plus Roosevelt Sykes in 1936,[3] with the slightly amended title of “Dirty Mother For You (Don’t You Know)”. Johnny “Guitar” Watson had a hit in 1977 with “A Real Mother For Ya”

We hear a whole litany of such songs such as Johnny Temple’s “Lead Pencil Blues”, Memphis Minnie “I’m Selling My Pork Chops (but I’m Giving My Gravy Away)”, Lucille Bogan’s “Alley Boogie”, Walter Vincson’s “Rats Been on My Cheese”, Louise Johnson’s “On the Wall”, Blind Boy Fuller “I Crave My Pigmeat”, Tampa Red’s “The Duck Yas Yas Yas”, Hambone Willie Newbern’s She Could Toodle-oo”, Charlie Pickett’s “Let Me Squeeze Your Lemon” and Willie Baker’s “Sweet Patunia Blues” are just a few example played across these two programs.

Pork chops and pig meat became a staple in the diet of blacks in the South, after the Civil War in 1865. These cuts of meat quite naturally entered into black song. Thomas Dorsey aka Georgia Tom, described the term “pig meat” as a reference to a young attractive woman. Female singers also used it in connection with good-looking young men. Memphis Minnie’s “I’m Selling My Pork Chops (but I’m Giving My Gravy Away)” is related to “Hustlin’ Woman Blues”, both cut in 1935, and both dealing with prostitution:

I met a man the other day, what you reckon he say
Is you the lady givin’ that gravy away, if ya is, I will be back today
You come and get some, but you sure can’t stay long
I got two men I has to be waitin’ on

“Pigmeat” is black term for a young female, or virgin based on the standard English use of pig to signify a young hog, or piglet. The term appears in numerous blues by artists such as Leadbelly, Josh White, Bo Carter, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Willie Baker among others. On these shows we spin versions by Willie Baker and Blind Boy Fuller’s “I Crave My Pigmeat.”

Poor Johnny Temple was decades away from the invention of Viagra when he recorded “Lead Pencil Blues (It Just Won’t Write)” in 1935:

I laid down last night, couldn’t eat a bite
The woman I love don’t treat me right
Lead in my pencil, baby it’s done gone bad
And it’s the worst old feelin’ baby, that I’ve ever had

Of course there’s the protagonist in the  Mississippi Sheiks’ s ‘Driving That Thing” who suffered from a bit too much virility:

Old Uncle Bill, he was a working man
Laid down and died with his hammer in his hand
From driving that thing, whoa, driving that thing
All the lawyers in town talking about him driving that thing

Rats Been On My Cheese Tampa Red’s ‘The Duck Yas Yas Yas” was a “whorehouse tune”, a popular St. Louis party song. The song’s title is explained by quoting the lyrics more fully: “Shake your shoulders, shake ’em fast, if you can’t shake your shoulders, shake your yas-yas-yas”. The song was originally recorded in St. Louis by pianist James “Stump” Johnson in late 1928 or January 1929. Blues singer Tampa Red and Georgia Tom also recorded a version on May 13, 1929. Oliver Cobb recorded the song on August 16, 1929, before he died suddenly the next year. In 1939, Tommy McClennan used some of the lyrics in his song “Bottle It Up and Go”.

Hambone Willie Newbern’s “She Could Toodle-oo” is essentially about a sexual act that’s not heard to decipher once we print out the lyrics. The term shows up in in Bessie Smith’s song we also feature, titled “It Makes My Love Come Down.”

Every time she blow she blow Toodlee-oo
An’ she blow for everybody she meet
She could toodle-oo, she could toodle-oo
That’s all the poor girl do

Blues wasn’t afraid to tackle, then taboo subjects such as homosexuality and lesbianism but it shouldn’t be surprising that these songs are far from politically correct and surely the singers would be canceled in today’s culture. Lucille Bogan sang “B.D. Woman’s Blues” in 1935 with B.D. standing for bull dyke: “Comin’ a time, B.D. women ain’t gonna do need no men.” Ma Rainey “Prove It On Me Blues” cut in 1928 had a similar sentiment: “Went out last night with a crowd of my friends/They must’ve been women, ‘cause I don’t like no men” In 1926 Rainey cut ‘Sissy Blues.” In 1935 Kokomo Arnold cut “Sissy Man Blues” and Josh White and Georg Noble both covered the song later in 1935 which were different songs than Ma’s tune. Connie McLean’s Rhythm Boys released their version in 1936. The common refrain in the mid-30s songs were “Lord, if you can’t send me no woman, please send me some sissy man.” In Pigmeat Pete & Catjuice Charlie’s “In Kentucky” they they mine similar territory:

The boys act queer to me, wear their knickers above their knees
You can’t tell the hes from the shes, in Kentucky

Bertha Idaho only recorded four songs in her professional career that started in 1919 as a traveling act singing and dancing alongside her husband, John. “Down On Pennsylvania Avenue” describes Baltimore’s seedy street:

Let’s take a trip down to that cabaret
Where they turn night into day
Some freakish sights you’ll surely see
You can’t tell he’s from the she’s
You’ll find ’em every night on Pennsylvania Avenue.

Some of these songs were surprisingly frank, leaving little to the imagination such as Louise Johnson’s “On The Wall” about having sex standing up and Mae Glover’s “Shake It Daddy” with her partner John Byrd:

He shakes it in the morning, he shakes it at midnight
Keep on shakin’ it, daddy, ’til you know you’re shakin’ it right
Lord, the way you shake it’ll make me lose my appetite
The way you shake it will make me lose my appetite

There’s plenty of songs of love lost, not reciprocated or “Love In Vain” as Robert Johnson famously recorded. One of the iconic figure in the blues is the back door man as Washboard Sam famously sang in 1937: “Tell me mama, who’s that here awhile ago/Yes, when I come in, who’s that went out that back door.” Several year later Doctor Clayton waxed his frustrations with his woman in “Cheating and Lying Blues” from 1941:

‘Bout three of four nights ago, I had to work kinda late
Somebody broke out my back door, like he was superman’s mate

Next time I come home, ’round three or four
An’ hear some man inside , talkin’ sweet and low
The folks gonna think Hitler, is on the second floor

Others songs of infidelity include Walter Vincson’s imaginatively titled  “Rats Been on My Cheese” from 1936:

I went home late last night, the rat was on his knees
He said, “I ain’t trying to hurt you, just want a piece of cheese.”
Hey old gal, stop your kicking that cat around
I’m going to set my trap for you, the rats been on my cheese

A few years later, in 1941, Son Bond cut “Hard Pillow to Swallow” which was later recorded by John Brim for the J.O.B. label in 1952:

Well, when I was in prison, serving my time
When I came back home, I heard a baby cryin’
That was a hard pillow to swallow, filled my heart with pain

Of course, it’s not all sex and there were certainly plenty of sings about romantic love such as the rollicking ” I Love You Baby” by Big Joe & His Washboard Band, Arthur ‘Big Boy’ Crudup’s heartfelt “I Love my Baby, Little Brother Montgomery’s “The Woman I Love Blues”, Barbecue Bob’s vulnerable  “Beggin’ for Love” and the gorgeous ballad “Love Is the Answer” by Lonnie Johnson:

Love is something great, it’s not to be kicked around (2x)
And once you love please don’t hurt it, because it’s so great to have around
With you in my heart baby, nothing could ever go wrong (2x)
And with you in my arms baby, I’m never left alone

 

 

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Big Road Blues Show 1/10/21: Mix Show


ARTISTSONGALBUM
Model T Slim ChristineIf I Have to Wreck L.A.: Kent & Modern Records Blues Into the 60s vol. 2
Big Mama ThorntonBefore Day (Big Mama's Blues)If I Have to Wreck L.A.: Kent & Modern Records Blues Into the 60s vol. 2
Long Gone Miles Gotta Find My BabyIf I Have to Wreck L.A.: Kent & Modern Records Blues Into the 60s vol. 2
Robert Johnson Kind Hearted Woman BluesKind Hearted Woman Blues
Muddy WatersKind Hearted Woman The Complete Chess Recordings
George Noble The Seminole Blues The Piano Blues Vol. 9: Lofton/Noble 1935-1936
Frank “Springback” James Will My Bad Luck Ever Change?’ The Piano Blues Vol. 12 - Big Four 1933-1941
Lil Johnson Press My Button (Ring My Bell) Lil Johnson Vol. 1 1929-1936
Blind Lemon Jefferson Broke And Hungry Meaning In The Blues
Furry Lewis Falling Down Blues Masters of Memphis Blues
Blind Percy Fourteenth Street Blues Blues Images Vol. 11
Mildred White Kind Hearted Woman Down Home Blues: Chicago
Tony Hollins Wine-O-Woman Chicago Is Just That Way
Roosevelt Sykes Don't Push Me Around Roosevelt Sykes Vol. 8 1945-1947
J.B. Lenoir If I Get Lucky American Folk Blues Festival 1965: Complete Sessions
John Lee HookerKing of the World American Folk Blues Festival 1965: Complete Sessions
Fred Mc Dowell Going down the River American Folk Blues Festival 1965: Complete Sessions
Willie Headen If I Have to Wreck LA (Take 1)If I Have to Wreck L.A.: Kent & Modern Records Blues Into the 60s vol. 2
Willie Headen Mama Said (Take 3)If I Have to Wreck L.A.: Kent & Modern Records Blues Into the 60s vol. 2
Henry Williams & Eddie AnthonyLonesome Blues Violin, Sing The Blues For Me
Sam Montgomery Where The Sweet Old Oranges Grow The Slide Guitar Vol. 2: Bottles, Knives & Steel
Nellie Florence Midnight Weeping Blues The Slide Guitar Vol. 2: Bottles, Knives & Steel
James Crutchfield My Baby Cooks My Breakfast St. Louis Piano
James Crutchfield Piggly Wiggly Blues St. Louis Piano
Luther Stoneman January 11 1949 BluesThe Mercury Blues & Rhythm Story 1945-1955
Tampa Red1950 BluesChicago Is Just That Way
Luther Huff 1951 Blues Down Home Blue Classics 1943-1953
Willie Lane (Little Brother) Too Many Women BluesStar Talent Records Story
Jesse Thomas Mountain Key Blues Jesse Thomas 1948-1958
Herman E. JohnsonI Just Keeps On Wanting You The Roots Of It All: Acoustic Blues, The 1960s
Robert 'Dudlow' Taylor Lonesome The Modern Downhome Blues Sessions Vol. 3
Dan Pickett 99 1/2 Won't Do 1949 Country Blues
Dan Pickett Driving That Thing1949 Country Blues
Kokomo Arnold Back To The Woods The Essential
William Harris Hot Time Blues Mississippi Masters: Early American Blues Classics 1927-35
Ed BellSquabblin' Blues The Best There Ever Was

Show Notes:

If I Have to Wreck L.A.It feels like it’s been a while since we did a mix show. We have a good one for today, spinning a wide variety of forgotten blues sides and also featuring some genuine blues legends. We spotlight several tracks from a terrific new Ace collection of Kent and Modern sides from the 1960s, we compare and contrast a Robert Johnson song covered by his admirer Muddy Waters, spotlight the history of an iconic blues lyric, play a set of blues from the 1965 American Folk Blues Festival, and spin some fine piano blues by a number of little remembered artists like Springback James, George Noble, Black Bob and James Crutchfield. We also play a batch of outstanding pre-war blues folks, some tough post-war downhome number including two by Alabama blues man Dan Pickett who’s been on my mind lately.

Ace has compiled two CDs from the Bihari archives of obscure 1950s and 1960s West Coast blues, based strongly on the four-volume P-Vine series that came out in 1999 (West Coast Modern Blues 1960’s Vols. 1-3 and Funky Blues 1960’s-1970’s). It was a terrific series but certainly not widely available. Today we spotlight If I Have to Wreck L.A.: Kent & Modern Records Blues Into the 60s Vol. 2. The first volume, Dirty Work Going On: Kent & Modern Records Blues Into the 60s Vol. 1, issued a few months ago, reflected the West Coast band blues of the time. This second volume retains the Texas blues base but focuses more on gutbucket, downhome blues. We spin tough tracks by Model T Slim, Big Mama Thornton, Long Gone Miles  and Willie Headen who gets to sings featured today. Headen never made that break through to stardom but he left behind a fine and varied body of work in his five year on-off-on stint with Dootsie Williams’ Dootone and Dooto labels. Singles continued to be issued through 1960, when a bunch of them were compiled into the, now much sought-after Blame It On The Blues LP. Ace issued a CD of his early sides with the same name. Willie quit the music business in 1959 when he married. In ’69 he returned for some excellent sessions on Kent.

Read Liner Notes

I got into a discussion recently on the Real Blues Forum when someone was inquiring about the influence of Robert Johnson. As I said, and still stand by, I don’t feel Johnson was terribly influential, certainly not during his lifetime and not even during the twenty plus years until his work was collected on the LP King of the Delta Blues Singers in 1961. Yes, he did influence some important folks like his running partners Johnny Shines and Clavin Frazier as well as Robert Lockwood and Muddy Waters who swam in similar musical circles as Johnson, although both owed a strong debt to Son House. Fellow Mississippian Tommy Johnson exerted a far greater influence than Robert. That’s no knock Johnson’s playing, just what I can tell from the recorded evidence and interviewed I’ve read. “I loved [Robert Johnson’s] music,” Muddy said. “I first heard him when he came out with ‘Terraplane,’ and I believe ‘Walkin’ Blues’ was on the other side. I always followed his records right down the line.” Muddy had only seen him once, on the street in Friar’s Point, and the experience had been overwhelming. “People were crowdin’ ’round him, and I stopped and peeked over. I got back into the car and left, because he was a dangerous man . . . and he really was using the git-tar. . .. I crawled away and pulled out, because it was too heavy for me.” During the recordings he made for the Library of Congress he recorded “Country Blues,” his personalized adaptation of Robert Johnson’s “Walking Blues.” Today we play Muddy’s “Kind Hearted Blues”, a cover of Johnson’s song that he recorded for Aristocrat in 1948 but went unissued at the time.

We often trace the history of famous blues songs and lyrics and today we look at the memorable line “I feel like jumpin’ through the keyhole in your door.” As far as I can tell the line first shows up in Blind Lemon Jefferson’s song “Broke and Hungry” recorded in 1926. Jefferson reused the line in his 1928 song “Mean Jumper Blues.”

 I feel like jumpin’ through the keyhole in your door
If you jump this time baby, you won’t jump no more

Furry Lewis recorded “Falling Down Blues” in 1927 with these lines:

Mama I feel like jumpin’ through the keyhole of your door
I can jump so easy your man will never know

Blind Percy used the line in his song “Fourteenth Street Blues” from 1927:

I feel like jumping through the keyhole in your door
Told me this mornin’, you didn’t want me no more

The line also shows up in this variation: “I feel like jumpin’ from a treetop to the ground” or ” feel like fallin’, from a treetop to the ground.” Stephen Calt writes about the lyric in Barrelhouse Words: “A term for vagina dating to the 19th century… Jefferson’s protégé Tom Shaw gave the above verse a literal interpretation, casting it in terms of a dialogue between a quarreling couple: ‘She stole his money and he tracks her down. . . . She’s at home, won’t open the door for him. . . . He done told her, he feel like jumpin’ through the keyhole of her door; she told him, if he jump this time, he won’t jump no more, ’cause she’s standin’ there with a yokie-yoke [pistol]. Boom boom! . . . Happens every day.’ Other blues performers evince a figurative sexual understanding of keyhole…” My layman’s interpretation is that this is definitely a sexual metaphor.

Fiynl Vynl

As we usually do, we shine the light on several neglected piano players including George Noble, Frank “Springback” James, Black Bob and James Crutchfield. George Noble cut just six sides at two sessions in 1935. Noble appears to be a mystery man. Our track, “Seminole Blues”, is a train blues referring to a locomotive which ran on the Illinois Central Line which serves Chicago. Chicago blues pianist Frank “Springback” James made records with four different companies during the 1930s, playing and singing in a style that revealed a strong Leroy Carr influence. He cut eighteen sides in total. With Black Bob’s sturdy piano we hear Lil Johnson on the suggestive “Press My Button (Ring My Bell) .” Johnson first recorded in Chicago in 1929, accompanied by the pianists Montana Taylor and Charles Avery on five songs. She did not return to the recording studio until 1935. From her second session onwards, she formed a partnership with the ragtime-influenced pianist Black Bob, who provided ebullient support for her increasingly suggestive lyrics. In 1936 and 1937, she recorded over 40 songs, mostly for Vocalion Records, some featuring Big Bill Broonzy on guitar and Lee Collins on trumpet.

From his only long-playing record, we hear two fine numbers from James Crutchfield. In 1927, working as an underage employee for a local railroad, Crutchfield lost his left leg in an accident. The railroad settled out of court for twenty thousand dollars. Part of the money was used to buy his mother a house in Baton Rouge; the rest, was used to subsidize his fledgling musical career. By the end of the 1920s, Crutchfield had begun traveling through the Louisiana lumber camps, Mississippi levee camps and East Texas juke joints, performing as the M & O Kid. In 1948, Crutchfield moved to St. Louis. In 1955, Crutchfield was appearing with Bat the Hummingbird (drums) at a bar located at Market Street and found there by Bob Koester, on a tip from Charlie O’Brien, and recorded a few days later, along with Speckled Red. Several of the songs were eventually released in the Barrelhouse Blues and Stomps anthology series on the Euphonic label. Six selections are included on the compilation album Biddle Street Barrelhousin’, released in 2000 by Delmark Records. The album Original Barrelhouse Blues (issued on CD as St. Louis Piano) was recorded in the Netherlands in 1983.

We play a whole batch of tough post-war blues by the likes of Tony Hollis, Willie Lane, Luther Huff, Luther Stoneman, Jesse Thomas and two by Dan Pickett. From 1952 we spin Tony Hollis’s superb “Wine-O-Woman” with Sunnyland Slim on piano.  Hollins is thought to have been born in Oktibbeha County, Mississippi, and was raised at Lucky’s Plantation. n the 1920s, he dated John Lee Hooker’s sister Alice. On visits, he impressed Hooker with his skill on the guitar, helped teach him to play, and gave Hooker his first guitar. For the rest of his life, Hooker regarded Hollins as a formative influence on his style of playing and his career as a musician. Among the songs that Hollins reputedly taught Hooker were versions of “Crawlin’ King Snake” and “Catfish Blues”. Hollins primarily worked as a barber in Clarksdale, Mississippi. He made his first recordings for OKeh Records in Chicago in 1941, including “Crosscut Saw Blues”, “Crawlin’ King Snake” and “Traveling Man Blues”, both songs later performed by Hooker, in the latter case renamed as “When My Wife Quit Me”. Hollins failed to maintain a career as a musician and returned to Clarksdale. However, he went back to Chicago in the late 1940s, and recorded for Decca in 1951.

Jacqueline Brooks
Jacqueline Brooks holds the only photo of her father, bluesman Dan Pickett. From Juke Blues #32. Photo by Axel Küstner.

Jesse Thomas was the brother of Texas bluesman Willard “Ramblin’” Thomas and uncle of Lafayette Thomas. Jesse Thomas recorded sporadically from the late 1920’s through the early 1990’s and despite his longevity didn’t achieve much in the way of success or recognition. In 1929, at 18, Thomas cut four excellent sides for Victor most notably “Blues Goose Blues.” By the post-war era Thomas had developed a brilliant, highly individual style unlike anyone else. Document’s Jesse Thomas 1948-1958 collects 28 tracks Thomas cut for nine different West Coast labels over the course of a decade. Our track, “Mountain Key Blues” has some wonderfully poetic lines:

Have you ever been alone, on a rainy night
And the one you love is in the mountain, where the moon is shining bright

A month-and-a-half ago I received some sad news from Axel Küstner that daughter of Dan Pickett, Jacqueline Brooks, has passed away. She was 72. Axel has done a fair bit of research on Pickett, the bulk of it not published. He and Jacqueline remained friends since meeting her on a research trip in 1993. Pickett was an Alabama bluesman who made some spectacular records for Gotham in 1949. His records were collected for the first time by Krazy Kat in the late 80’s. Hearing of her passing brought a wave of nostalgia over me because I remember exactly when I bought that Krazy Kat Record. I read the review by Bez turner in Juke Blues #11 (had to look it up). I was 18. I went down to NYC on one of my record buying trips from the Bronx and stopped in at my favorite record store, Finyl Vinyl, in the East Village on Second Avenue around the corner from St. Marks Street. I wasn’t really looking for that record but I saw it on the wall of featured records and remembered the review. There was something about the white cover with no photo, and liner notes by Chris Smith that had so little information that spoke to me. The whole mystery appealed to me so of course I bought that record and was obsessed with him ever since. I still find it strange that decades later I would become friends with the guy who uncovered the whole story behind Dan Pickett and that guy would live in Germany of all places.

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