Big Road Blues Show 3/9/25: Big Stars Falling – Classic Blues Vocal Harmony

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Curley WeaverSome Cold Rainy DayCurley Weaver 1933-1935
Fred McMullen & Curley WeaverPoor Stranger BluesGeorgia Blues 1928-1933
Blind Willie McTell & Curley WeaverWee Midnight Hours Postwar Recordings 1949-50
Henry Williams & Eddie AnthonyGeorgia Crawl Let Me Tell You About The Blues: Atlanta
Memphis Jug BandK.C. MoanThe Best Of Memphis Jug Band
Bo CarterCorinne Corrina Bo Carter Vol 1. 1928-1931
The Mississippi SheiksBaby Keeps Stealin' Lovin' on MeThe Essential
Long “Cleve” Reed & Papa Harvey HullOriginal Stack o’ Lee BluesStuff That Dreams are Made Of
Two Poor BoysTwo White Horses in a LineVintage Mandolin Music
Blind Willie JohnsonThe Rain Don't Fall on MeThe Complete Blind Willie Johnson
Blind Roosevelt GravesWoke up This Morning (With My Mind on Jesus)The Frog Blues & Jazz Annual No. 1
Muddy WatersWee, Wee BabyBlues From Big Bill's Copacabana
Muddy WatersRollin' and Tumblin', Part 2he Aristocrat Of The Blue
Smith & HarperPoor Girl Great Harp Players 1927-1936
Geechie Wiley & Elvie ThomasPick Poor Robin CleanI Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 1
Leroy CarrMemphis TownHow Long Has That Evening Train Been Gone
Tampa RedBig Stars Falling BluesDynamite! The Unsung King of the Blues
Little Eddie Kirkland & John Lee HookerIt's Time For Lovin' To Be DoneDocumenting The Sensation Recordings
Jimmy Lee RobinsonTimes Is Hard Bandera Blues & Gospel
Charley Patton & Bertha LeeOh DeathBlues Images Vol. 16
Nugrape TwinsThe Road Is Rough & RockySinners & Saints 1926-1931
Eddie Head & His Family Down on MeAmerican Primitive Vol. I
Blind Boy Fuller, Bull City Red, Sonny TerryI Feel Like Shoutin'Blues & Gospel From The Eastern States
Camp MorrisCaptain Haney BluesLost Train Blues
Leadbelly & Golden Gate QuartetRock Island LineAlabama Bound
Butch Cage & Willie B. ThomasFourty Four BluesYonder Come The Blues
Rufus & Ben QuillianKeep It CleanHokum, Blues & Rags 1929-1930s
State Street BoysMidnight SpecialFiddle Noir: African American Fiddlers On Early Phonograph Records 1925-1949
Washboard SamDown in the AlleyThe Essential
The Hokum BoysKeep You Mind On ItThe Hokum Boys Vol. 2
Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee I (Believe You Got a Sidekick)Sittin In With Harlem Jade & Jax Vol. 1
Magic Sam All Night LongWith a Feeling: The Cobra, Chief & Crash Recordings
Classie Ballou & His Tempo Kings Orch.D-I-R-T-Y D-E-A-LRhythm 'N' Bluesin' By The Bayou: Nights Of Sin, Dirty Deals & Love Sick Souls
Macon Ed & Tampa JoeWinging That ThingAtlanta Blues
Ed Bell & Pillie Bolling She's Got A Nice LineEd Bell's Mamlish Moan
Pink Anderson & Simmie Dooley Papa's 'Bout To Get Mad Good for What Ails You

Show Notes: 

Big Stars FallingI’ve always been drawn to songs with great vocal harmonies, basically multiple vocalists singing simultaneously. This type of harmony was prevalent in numerous bluesy bands and combos like the Big Three Trio, The Treniers, The Du-Droppers, The Larks among numerous others. We have spotlighted these groups previously in a series of shows so we will be mostly omitting them from this survey. Vocal harmony was widely used in gospel music and we hear several examples today by Blind Willie Johnson, Blind Roosevelt Graves, Charley Patton & Bertha Lee among others. It was also quite prevalent in hokum music as heard today by Rufus & Ben Quillian, The Hokum Boys, Tampa Red & Georgia Tom among many other examples. Another place these harmonies were common was in field recordings, especially in prison works songs which were documented fairly well, particularly by John and Alan Lomax. Vocal harmonies aren’t quite as common in the post-war era but we do hear some fine performances by Muddy Waters, Magic Sam and Classie Ballou among others.

We open the show with several artists from Atlanta, with three numbers featuring Curley Weaver. Weaver was born in Covington, Georgia, and raised on a farm near Porterdale. His mother, Savannah “Dip” Shepard Weaver, was a well-respected pianist and guitarist, who taught Curley and her friend’s sons, “Barbecue Bob” and Charlie Hicks, He first recorded in 1928, for Columbia Records, and subsequently released records on several different labels. In 1933 Blind Willie McTell did sessions for the American Record Company. In the course of eight days, he recorded twenty-three sides alongside thirteen sides by Buddy Moss and seven by Curley Weaver. Weaver recorded a session for Sittin’ in With in late 1949 or early 1950 and Weaver and McTell recorded a session for Regal in 1950. As David Evans wrote: “Weaver’s Sittin’ in With tracks appear to represent the core of his repertoire and show him deeply embedded in the Georgia blues tradition, with a particular debt to McTell. …Contrary to some published reports, McTell and Weaver both play guitars on all of the Regal recordings except two takes of a slow gospel song.” Weaver never recorded again but McTell also recorded for Atlantic in 1949 and made some final sides in 1956.

Poor Stranger Blues We spin a bunch of jug band artists including Bo Carter, Memphis Jug Band and The Mississippi Sheiks. We hear some fine vocal harmony in Bo Carter’s “Corinne Corrina” between him Walter Vincson and possibly Lonnie Chatmon. The Mississippi Sheiks, as the Jackson Blue Boys with Papa Charlie McCoy on vocals, recorded the song in 1930 under the title “Sweet Alberta” (Columbia 14397-D), substituting the words Sweet Alberta for Corrine, Corrina. “Corrine, Corrina” may have traditional roots, however, earlier songs are different musically and lyrically. One of the earliest is the commercial sheet music song “Has Anybody Seen My Corrine?” published by Roger Graham in 1918. “Corrina, Corrina” was first recorded by Bo Carter in 1928.

We hear some fine team-ups today by Long “Cleve” Reed and Papa Harvey Hull, Two Poor Boys,  Smith & Harper, Geechie Wiley and Elvie Thomas, Little Eddie Kirkland and John Lee Hooker, Leadbelly & Golden Gate Quartet, Butch Cage and Willie B. Thomas, Rufus & Ben Quillian, Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee, Ed Bell and Pillie Bolling, Macon Ed & Tampa.  Long “Cleve” Reed & Little Harvey Hull cut six sides in 1927 for Black Patti.

The Two Poor Boys were Joe Evans and Arthur McLain, based in Tennessee. They recorded 20 sides between 1927 and 1931. Evans also recorded under the pseudonym Billy Bird (four songs for Columbia 1928).

Geeshie Wiley recorded six songs for Paramount Records, issued on three records in 1930 and 1931. Wiley recorded “Last Kind Words Blues” and “Skinny Leg Blues”, singing and accompanying herself on guitar, with Thomas providing additional guitar accompaniment. Thomas also recorded two songs, “Motherless Child Blues” and “Over to My House,” with Wiley playing guitar and singing harmony. In 1931 Wiley and Thomas returned to Grafton and recorded “Pick Poor Robin Clean” and “Eagles on a Half.”

Blues From "Big Bill's" Copa CabanaRufus and Ben Quillian were born in Gainesville, northeast of Atlanta, on February 2, 1900, and June 23, 1907, respectively. Between 1929 and 1931 they recorded first for Paramount as the Blue Harmony Boys and later for Columbia under their own names.

Ed Bell’s debut recording, of his own songs “Mamlish Blues” and “The Hambone Blues,” was part of a four-song session for Paramount Records in Chicago in 1927. He next recorded in April 1929, cutting eight songs for QRS Records, billed on the releases as Sluefoot Joe, with Clifford Gibson playing guitar and piano. The rest of his recordings were made in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1929 and 1930, and released by Columbia Records; on these records, he was billed as Barefoot Bill from Alabama. Bell and Pillie Bolling played together on two tracks, “I Don’t Like That” and “She’s Got a Nice Line”.

Fiddler James “Butch” Cage was one of the last artists in the black string band tradition. He moved to southwest Louisiana following the devastating Mississippi floods of 1927, eventually settling in Zachary, where he worked a succession of menial jobs while playing string band music at house parties and church functions, often in conjunction with guitarist Willie B. Thomas. Musicologist Harry Oster heard Butch Cage and Willie Thomas playing in Zachary in 1959 and recorded them extensively. The duo was also a huge hit at the 1960 Newport Folk Festival. The duo can be heard on several fine anthologies including Country Negro Jam Sessions (Arhoolie), I Have To Paint My Face (Arhoolie), The Folk Music Of The Newport Folk Festival 1959-60 Vol. 1 (Folkways), Country Spirituals (Storyville), Country Blues (Storyville), Raise A Rukus Tonight (Flyright) and Old Time Black Southern String Band Music (Arhoolie).

Vocal harmony can be heard today with several bands such as The Hokum Boys and  State Street Boys as well as gospel numbers by Blind Willie Johnson & Willis B. Harris, Blind Roosevelt Graves  and his Brother, Charley Patton and Bertha Lee, Eddie Head & His Family and a group consisting of  Blind Boy Fuller, Bull City Red, Sonny Terry. Bertha Lee met Patton in 1930 and remained his partner until his death in 1934. During this time, she sang on twelve of Patton’s recordings, which resulted in the recording of three of her own songs, “Yellow Bee”, “Dog Train Blues” (unissued), and “Mind Reader Blues”. Patton accompanied her on guitar on these records. She also duetted with Patton on “Oh Death b/w Troubled ’bout My Mother” for Patton’s final session in 1934.

Bull City Red, whose real name was George Washington, is best known as a sometimes sideman on washboard to the likes of Blind Boy Fuller, Sonny Terry, and Blind Gary Davis. Red led an otherwise blind group that included Fuller, Sonny Terry and, for a time, Blind Gary Davis as well, and with help from their manager, department store owner J.B. Long, landed a contract with Vocalion. At one point in their history, Red, Fuller, Terry, and guitarist Sonny Jones performed together as “Brother George and His Sanctified Singers,” and made several recordings of gospel-themed material. Red was later responsible for hooking Terry up with Brownie McGhee, whom he met while on a trip to Burlington.

The State Street Boys were a studio group that cut eight sides for the American Record Corporation in January of 1935. There is some dispute over the lineup but members consisted of Black Bob on piano, and possibly Bill Settles on string bass. Out track features has Big Bill Broonzy on fiddle and singing and Bill “Jazz” Gillum on harmonica.

Down on MeWe feature some fine postwar blues by Muddy Waters, Tampa Red, Magic Sam, Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee and Classie Ballou. “Wee, Wee Baby” was Originally released as Folk Festival of the Blues on Chess’s Argo subsidiary, then reissued as Blues from Big Bill’s Copacabana, this is a live document of a steamy night on July 26, 1963 at a Chicago blues club. Chicago blues disc jockey Big Bill Hill intros the band and the assembled stars (one of whom, Little Walter, is nowhere to be found on this disc), then Buddy Guy’s band rips into “Wee Wee Baby,” and sung in three-part harmony by Buddy, Muddy Waters and Willie Dixon. Some of the tracks here are ringers; Sonny Boy Williamson’s “Bring It On Home” and a stray Buddy Guy track are actually studio takes with fake applause dubbed on. But the two from Howlin’ Wolf and everything here from Muddy are live. We also hear Muddy on “Rollin’ And Tumblin’, Pt. 2” with Little Walter and Baby Face Leroy. This is a fine update of Hambone Willie Newbern tune. Part 2 has no verses at all—just a mélange of the trio’s moans, hums and yelps.

Tampa Red did his share of vocal harmony in several hokum number he did with Georgia Tom but our selection by him comes from the end of his commercial career in 1953. I first heard “Big Stars Falling Blues” om the wonderful 2-LP set, Guitar Wizard that finds Tampa backed by a great band; Johnny Jones, piano, Walter Horton, harmonica, Willie Lacy, guitar, Ransom Knowling, bass and Odie Payne, drums.

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Big Road Blues Show 2/12/23: Mix Show

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Mack Rhinehart & Brownie Stubblefield Uptown BluesUptown Blues: A Decade Of Guitar-Piano Duets 1927-1937
Little Brother Montgomery Out West Blues Farro Street Jive
Little Johnny Jones Chicago Blues Blues Piano: Chicago Plus
Otis Rush This Is A Mean Old World Unissued
Johnny Fuller Mean Old World
Johnny Fullers California Blues: Mercy Mercy!! 1954-1962
Pee Wee Crayton But on the Other HandThings I Used to Do
The Four BlazesDone Got OverMary Jo
Big Walter Horton Baby I Need Your Love Solo Harp
Baby Face Leroy and His TrioMy Head Can't Rest Anymore Leroy Foster 1948-1952
Lazy Lester I'm LeavingBluesin' By The Bayou
Peetie Wheatstraw Police Station Blues The Essential
Johnnie Temple The Evil Devil BluesBlues Images Vol. 15
Robert Johnson Hell Hound on My TrailThe Centennial Collection
Sonny Boy Williamson The Loneliest ManSolo Harp
Sonny Boy Williamson No Nights By Myself Cool, Cool Blues: The Classic Sides 1951-1954
Alec Johnson Sundown BluesMississippi Strings Bands & Associates 1928-1931
Hi Henry Brown Preacher Blues Times Ain't Like They Used To Be Vol. 4
Jim Jackson When I Woke Up This Morning She Was Gone When The Sun Goes Down
Little Boy Fuller (Richard Trice) Blood Red River BluesAcoustic Blues: The Roots of it all Vol. 2
Nat Terry Take It Easy Baby Acoustic Blues: The Roots of it all Vol. 2
John DudleyPo' Boy Blues Southern Journey Vol.3: 61 Highway Mississippi
Henry Williams & Eddie Anthony Lonesome Blues Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow! Vintage Fiddle Music 1927-1935
Tommy Bradley Four Day Blues Times Ain't Like They Used To Be Vol. 2
Willie B. Thomas & Butch Cage Brown Skin WomanCountry Negro Jam Session
Peg Leg Howell Beaver Slide Rag African-American Fiddlers 1925-1949
Lightnin' HopkinsCalifornia Mudslide Los Angeles Blues
Jesse Thomas Gonna Move To California Down Behind the Rise
Howlin' WolfCalifornia Boogie Smokestack Lightning: The Complete Chess Masters 1951-1960
King PerryGoing To California Blues King Perry 1945 - 1949
George Carter Ghost Woman Blues Blues Images Vol. 11
Charlie McFadden Lonesome Ghost BluesCharlie McFadden 1929-1937
Lonnie Johnson Blue Ghost Blues Lonnie Johnson , Vol. 1 1937-1940
Jimmy Yancey Tell 'Em About Me Jimmy Yancey Vol. 1 1939-1950
'Crippple' Clarence Lofton Strut That Thing The Piano Blues Vol. 9: Lofton/Noble 1935-1936
Montana Taylor Whoop and Holler Stomp Shake Your Wicked Knees
Blind Lemon Jefferson Prison Cell Blues The Best Of
Blind Lemon Jefferson Hot Dogs The Best Of

Show Notes:

Cripple Clarence Lofton – Strut That ThingToday’s mix show spans from the 20s through the late 60s. On deck today are some fine piano blues sets from some big names and lesser knowns, we hear from some superb guitarists and sets featuring some excellent harp blowers, In addition we hear songs revolving around “Hell Hound on My Trail”, songs about California, songs about ghosts, a set focusing on blues fiddlers, two from the great Blind Lemon Jefferson and much more.

We spotlight the piano blues with sets featuring Little Brother Montgomery, Little Johnny Jones, Mack Rhinehart and Brownie Stubblefield, Jimmy Yancey, ‘Crippple’ Clarence Lofton and Montana Taylor. Mack Rhinehart and Brownie Stubblefield were a piano/guitar team that cut a dozen sides in 1936 and 1937. Rhinehart also recorded solo as Blind Mack in 1935 but only two of his ten sides were ever released.  According to Blues & Gospel Records some twenty-two sides by the duo remain unissued. Nothing is known about the duo although noted researcher David Evans called Rhinehart “a major artist” with “an outstanding recorded legacy.”

Montana Taylor was born in Butte, Montana, where his father owned a club. The family moved to Chicago and then, around 1910, to Indianapolis, where Taylor learned piano. By 1929 he was back in Chicago, where he recorded a few tracks for Vocalion Records, including “Indiana Avenue Stomp” and “Detroit Rocks”. He then disappeared from the public record for some years, during which he may have given up playing piano. However, in 1946 he was rediscovered by jazz fan Rudi Blesh, and was recorded both solo and as the accompanist to Bertha “Chippie” Hill. Taylor’s final recordings were from a 1946 radio broadcast and after that he was reported working as a chauffeur.

Robert Johnson recorded “Hell Hound On My Trail” on June 20, 1937, Dallas. It was released on A.R.C. labels (Banner, Melotone, Oriole, Perfect, and Romeo) and also on Vocalion. First reissued on the alum King of the Delta Blues Singers, in 1961, with spelling changed to “Hellhound on My Trail.” In Chasin’ That Devil Music, co-author Ed Komara cites these songs as “melodic precedents” to the song:

“Evil Devil Blues”— Johnnie Temple (1935)
“Evil Devil Woman Blues’ — The Mississippi Mudder (Joe McCoy) (1934)
’Devil Got My Woman’ — Skip James (1931)
“Yola My Blues Away’— Skip James (1931)

Peetie Wheatstraw - Police Station Blues

Heel Hound on My Trail

In addition, the lyrics “If today was Christmas eve and tomorrow was Christmas day” are adapted from a 1932 record, ‘Police Station Blues,’ by one of Johnson’s main influences, Peetie Wheatstraw, who billed himself as ‘The Devil’s Son-in-Law’ or ‘The High Sheriff From Hell.’

We spin a stack of great fiddle records today by Henry Williams & Eddie Anthony, Tommy Bradley, Willie B. Thomas & Butch Cage and Peg Leg Howell. The violin once played a significant role in the early history of recorded blues. As collector Marshall Wyatt points out, “the violin once held center stage in the rich pageant of vernacular music that evolved in the American South… and the fiddle held sway as the dominant folk instrument of both races until the dawn of the 20th century.”

One of the earliest recorded Atlanta bluesmen, Peg Leg Howell who was born in 1888. He acquired his nickname after a 1916 run-in with an irate brother-in-law which ended in a shotgun wound to the leg and, ultimately, amputation. Unable to continue working as a farmhand, he migrated to Atlanta, where he began pursuing music full-time; in addition to playing street corners for passing change, Howell supplemented his income by bootlegging liquor, an offense which led to a one-year prison sentence in 1925. He recorded four songs at the end of 1926, eight sides in 1927 with guitarist Henry Williams and Eddie Anthony which were billed as Peg Leg Howell and his gang. Ten final sides were recorded in 1929. In 1963 three high school students – George Mitchell, Roger Brown, and Jack Boozer tracked Howell down. Mitchell coaxed him into recording again. After a month of practicing on the guitar, Howell made the field recordings that were issued by Testament Records as The Legendary Peg Leg Howell.

One spin some great guitarists today including Otis Rush’s searing version of “This Is A Mean Old World” which was somehow unissued by Duke when it was cut in 1962, a late period number from Pee Wee Crayton from his 1971 Vanguard album, Things I Used To Do and a track featuring the lesser known Floyd McDaniel. One of the top R&B records of 1952, “Mary Jo” provided a moment in the national spotlight for one of Chicago’s hottest vocal combos, The Four Blazes. The single moved rapidly to the top, displacing Lloyd Price’s “Lawdy Miss Clawdy” as the #1 R&B song in the nation at the end of August. Bassist Tommy Braden was the main lead singer while all members provided backup harmony vocals. “Jelly” Holt was the founder and drummer in the group, while Floyd McDaniel and “Shorty” Hill played guitars. The Four Blazes formed in 1940 and made their recording debut with a few sides for Aristocrat in 1947 before landing at United in 1952.

Ghost Woman Blues

Harp blowers featured today include tracks by Sonny Boy Williamson II and Big Walter Horton. These tracks were recorded in West Germany in 1963 and 1965 at private parties when both men were touring Europe as part of the American Folk Blues Festival. We also hear from the great Baby Face Leroy. Between 1948 and 1952 Foster waxed a handful absolutely terrific sides under his own name for a number of fledgling Chicago labels aided by some of the windy city’s best blues musicians. In addition, his vocals, drumming, and guitar playing can be found backing some of the greatest Chicago blues records of the era. His death in 1958, at the age of 38, robbed the blues world of a singular, memorable talent and likely did much to hasten his unwarranted obscurity. Foster made his debut for Aristocrat at the end of 1948 with “Locked Out Boogie” b/w “Shady Grove Blues” with the record billed as Leroy Foster and Muddy Waters. Foster’s next entry was a lone outing in 1949 record for J.O.B and in 1950 he cut eight remarkable sides for the small Parkway label. Foster returned to JOB after Parkway failed in the middle of 1950.

We spin plenty of pre-war blues today, and several songs about ghosts, but one of the most haunting songs is by the obscure George Carter. Nothing is known of Carter other then he cut four sides for Paramount in 1929. Bruce Bastin related that when Edward “Snap” Hill, a boyhood friend of Curley Weaver and the Hicks brothers was played a tape of one of Georg Carter’s songs it prompted him to say: “He’s from Atlanta” although he knew nothing about him. His “Ghost Woman Blues” is eerie number with haunting lyrics:

On my way home by that lonesome graveyard,
A ghost jumped out (yeah, man) she was young

Wasn’t no ghost at all, some girl asking for a ride
She said boy come here, take me to your room

My ghost woman, man, she sure do keep me thin
She spend all my money I make at L & N

I ain’t no lamp, but my wick is burning low
Come and trim my wick, before it refuse to glow

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Big Road Blues Show 5/31/15: Peg Leg Stomp – Peg Leg Howell & Friends


ARTISTSONGALBUM
Peg Leg HowellNew Prison BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 1 1926-1928
Peg Leg HowellFo' Day BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 1 1926-1928
Peg Leg HowellCoal Man Blues Peg Leg Howell Vol. 1 1926-1928
Peg Leg HowellTishamingo Blues Peg Leg Howell Vol. 1 1926-1928
Peg Leg HowellNew Jelly Roll BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 1 1926-1928
Peg Leg HowellBeaver Slide RagViolin, Sing The Blues For Me
Macon Ed & Tampa Joe Mean Florida BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Macon Ed & Tampa Joe Worrying Blues Peg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Peg Leg Howell & His GangMoanin' & Groanin' BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 1 1926-1928
Peg Leg Howell & His GangPeg Leg StompPeg Leg Howell Vol. 1 1926-1928
Peg Leg Howell & His GangPapa Stobb BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 1 1926-1928
Peg Leg Howell & His GangHobo Blues Peg Leg Howell Vol. 1 1926-1928
Peg Leg Howell Skin Game Blues Before The Blues Vol. 2
Peg Leg Howell & His Gang Too Tight BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 1 1926-1928
Sloppy Henry Long, Tall, Disconnected Mama Peg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Sloppy Henry Say I Do ItPeg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Peg Leg HowellRock & Gravel BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 1 1926-1928
Peg Leg Howell & Eddie Anthony Banjo Blues Peg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Peg Leg Howell & Eddie Anthony Turkey Buzzard BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Henry Williams & Eddie Anthony Lonesome Blues Peg Leg Howell Vol. 1 1926-1928
Henry Williams & Eddie Anthony Georgia Crawl Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow!
Peg Leg HowellTurtle Dove BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Peg Leg HowellWalkin' BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Peg Leg HowellAway From home Hard Times Come Again No More Vol. 2
Macon Ed & Tampa JoeEverything's Coming My WayPeg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Macon Ed & Tampa JoeWinging That ThingPeg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Brothers Wright And WilliamsI've Got A Home In Beulah LandPeg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Sloppy HenryCaned Heat BluesMy Rough And Rowdy Ways Vol. 2
Sloppy HenryRoyal Palm Special BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Peg Leg HowellBroke & Hungry Blues Peg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Peg Leg Howell & Jim Hill Monkey Man BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Peg Leg Howell & Jim Hill Chittlin' Supper Peg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930

Show Notes:

Peg Leg Howell and His Gang
Henry Williams, Eddie Anthony, Peg Leg Howell

Like Memphis, Atlanta was a staging post for musicians on their way to all points. It’s not surprising then that the first country blues musician, Ed Andrews, was recorded there in 1924. The company that recorded him, Okeh, was one of many to send their engineers to Southern cities to record local talent. Companies like Victor, Columbia, Vocalion and Brunswick made at least yearly visits until the depression. One of the earliest recorded Atlanta bluesmen, Peg Leg Howell, bridged the gap between the era of pre-blues and the period when the blues eventually became the popular music of the day. Born Joshua Barnes Howell in Eatonton, Georgia on March 5, 1888, he was a self-taught guitarist who acquired his nickname after a 1916 run-in with an irate brother-in-law which ended in a shotgun wound to the leg and, ultimately, amputation. Unable to continue working as a farmhand, he migrated to Atlanta, where he began pursuing music full-time; in addition to playing street corners for passing change, Howell supplemented his income by bootlegging liquor, an offense which led to a one-year prison sentence in 1925. He recorded four songs at the end of 1926, eight sides in 1927 with guitarist Henry Williams and Eddie Anthony which were billed as Peg Leg Howel and his gang. Ten final sides were recorded in 1929. Tony Russell described the music as “rugged and without artifice. Howell’s early recordings like ‘Coal Man Blues’ do no lack appeal but are rather overshadowed by his trio sides with Anthony and Williams, which give us a stringband music both less suave and more diverse than that of their near-contemporaries the Mississippi Sheiks.” Howell backed singer Sloppy Henry on a few sides and his pals Eddie Anthony and Henry Williams also recorded on their own.

1927 columbia Catalog
Peg Leg Howell featured on a 1927 Columbia catalog

In 1963 three high school students – George Mitchell, Roger Brown, and Jack Boozer tracked Howell down. Mitchell coaxed him into recording again. After a month of practicing on the guitar, Howell made the field recordings that were issued by Testament Records as The Legendary Peg Leg Howell. Howell was also interviewed by Mitchell the results of which were published in Blues Unlimited (the full article is provided below) which is where the below quotes come from.

“My friends call me Peg, …Peg Leg Howell. I was born on the fifth of March. in 1888. I was born in Eatonton, Putnom. County, Georgia. …My father was a farmer. when I was a child I went to school in Putnam County; I went as far as the ninth grade before I stopped. After that I worked on my father’s farm with him…plowed. Worked on the farm until 1916, when I was about 28. …I had lost my leg in 1916 and had to quit farm work. I got shot by my brother-in-law; he got mad at me and shot me. …I came to Atlanta when I was about 35 years old. …I learned how to play the guitar about 1909. I learnt myself – didn’t take long to learn. I just stayed up one night and learnt myself.”

He began performing music in parks and on the streets of Atlanta, sometimes working alongside mandolinist Eugene Pedin, guitarist Henry Williams, and violinist Eddie Anthony, his closest friend. “The men from Columbia Records found me there in Atlanta. A Mr. Brown – he worked for Columbia – he asked me to make a record for them. I was out serenading, playing on Decatur Street, and he heard me playing and taken me up to his office and I played there. …My first record. was “New Prison Blues” (coupled with “Fo Day Blues” on Columbia 14177D). In 1925 I had been in prison for s selling whiskey and I heard the song there. I don’t know who made it up. As for selling the whiskey, I would sell it to anybody who came to the house. I bought the moonshine from people who ran it and I sold it. I don’t know how they caught me; they just ran down on me one day.”

Howell was back before the microphone five months after his debut this time with Henry Williams and Eddie Anthony. His “New Jelly Roll Blues” from this session was his bestselling number and advertised in the Chicago Defender newspaper (Columbia ran eight ads for Howell between 1927 and 1929). The record was listed as Peg Leg Howell and His Gang. The label promoted Peg Leg Howell by putting his photo on the cover of its 1927 catalog. In November 1927, Peg Leg Howell and His Gang recorded three more 78’s. “Eddie Anthony recorded with me. He played violin. And Henry Williams; he played guitar. We called the group Peg Leg Howell and His Gang. Made quite a few records with them two.”At the November 1st session “Too Tight Blues,” “Moanin’ and Groanin’ Blues,” “Hobo Blues,” and “Peg Leg Stomp” were recorded. Howell made three final Columbia 78’s in April 1929. Ollie Griffin was probably the violinist. Three days later, Howell fronted four songs that came out credited to Peg Leg Howell and Jim Hill.

Peg Leg Howell - New Jelly Roll BluesDuring the spring of 1929 Eddie Anthony recorded eight sides for OKeh Records as part of a duo called Macon Ed and Tampa Joe (the identity of Tampa Joe has never been established). On April 19, 1928, Henry Williams and Eddie Anthony recorded a Columbia 78 on their own, the raucous “Georgia Crawl” backed with “Lonesome Blues.” Howell and Anthony were probably the accompanists on a four song session by Sloppy Henry recorded on August 13, 1928. Henry cut sixteen sides between 1924 and 1929 for Okeh. It’s been speculated that Anthony plays on on the record “I’ve Got A Home In Beulah Land” by the Brothers Wright And Williams recorded in 1930.

Henry Williams perished in jail in 1930, and Peg Leg Howell was soon back serving time for bootlegging. After Eddie Anthony died in 1934, Howell told Mitchell, “I just didn’t feel like playing anymore. I went back to selling liquor. Then I ran a woodyard for about two years around 1940. I lost my other leg in 1952, through sugar diabetes.” Howell’s final recordings issued on the Testament label captured him in sad shape so those songs will not be featured. Better to remember Howell and his pals in their prime.

Related Reading:

-Welding, Pete; Mitchell, George. “I’m Peg Leg Howell.” Blues Unlimited no. 10 (Mar 1964) [PDF]

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Big Road Blues Show 1/10/10: Violin, Sing The Blues For Me – String Band Blues


ARTISTSONGALBUM
Alabama SheiksTravelin' Railroad Man BluesViolin, Sing The Blues For Me
Andrew & Jim BaxterK. C. Railroad BluesViolin, Sing The Blues For Me
Bo CarterEast Jackson BluesViolin, Sing The Blues For Me
Bo CarterTellin' You ‘Bout ItBo Carter Vol. 2 1931-1934
Frank StokesRight NowViolin, Sing The Blues For Me
Frank StokesI'm Going Away BluesBest Of Frank Stokes
Jack KellyWorld Wandering BluesMemphis Shakedown
Mobile StrugglersMemphis BluesViolin, Sing The Blues For Me
Peg Leg HowellNew Jelly Roll BluesAtlanta Blues
Peg Leg HowellBeaver Slide RagViolin, Sing The Blues For Me
Johnson BoysViolin BluesViolin, Sing The Blues For Me
Tom NelsonBlue Coat BluesViolin, Sing The Blues For Me
Tommie Bradley & James ColeAdam And EveViolin, Sing The Blues For Me
Alec JohnsonSister Maude MuleFolks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow!
Charlie McCoyYour Valves Need GrindingCharlie McCoy 1928-1932
Joe McCoyLook Who's Coming Down The RoadCharlie & Joe McCoy Vol. 1
Henry Williams & Eddie AnthonyLonesome BluesViolin, Sing The Blues For Me
Henry Williams & Eddie AnthonyGeorgia CrawlFolks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow!
Mississippi SheiksBed Spring PokerMississippi Sheiks Vol. 3 1931
Mississippi SheiksBootlegger's BluesMississippi Sheiks Vol. 1 1930
Big Joe WilliamsWorried Man BluesFolks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow!
State Street BoysRustlin' ManFolks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow!
Kansas City Blues StompersString Band BluesFolks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow!
Peetie WheatstrawThrow Me In The AlleyFolks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow!
Tennessee Chocolate DropsKnox County StompFolks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow!
Sloppy HenryLong Tall, Disconnected MamaAtlanta Blues
Macon Ed & Tampa JoeWringing That ThingPeg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Macon Ed & Tampa JoeWorrying BluesPeg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Henry "Son" SimsTell Me Man BluesViolin, Sing The Blues For Me
Charlie PattonRunnin' Wild BluesScreamin' & Hollerin' The Blues
Mississippi SheiksLazy Lazy RiverFolks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow!
Texas AlexanderFrost Texas Tornado BluesTexas Alexander Vol. 3
Wilson Jones (Stavin' Chain)Can't Put My Shoes OnField Recordings Vol. 16 1934-1940

Show Notes:

It was Lonnie Johnson who gave the title to today’s program when exclaimed, “Violin, sing the blues for me!” during a recording session for Okeh Records in 1928, released under the name the Johnson Boys. The title was also used for a collection of violin blues on the Old Hat label which we feature extensively on today’s show. We also feature a number of tracks from Old Hat’s companion CD, Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow! The violin once played a significant role in the early history of recorded blues. As collector Marshall Wyatt points out, “the violin once held center stage in the rich pageant of vernacular music that evolved in the American South… and the fiddle held sway as the dominant folk instrument of both races until the dawn of the 20th century.” Today, outside of a few exceptions, African-American music has mostly abandoned the violin to white country fiddlers. Many black musicians active during the 1920s and ’30s came from a string-band tradition rooted in the 19th century, an era predating the blues when fiddles and banjos were the predominant instruments, and guitars a rarity. Black fiddlers and string bands were still common in the South throughout the 1920s, were not entirely ignored by the record industry, but were they were certainly under-represented. Some black string bands incorporated blues into their repertoires in order to keep abreast of trends. As the record business began to rebound in the mid-1930s, musical trends became rapidly modernized due to the spreading influence of mass media, and black fiddlers found even fewer recording opportunities. Below you will find some background on some of today’s featured artists.

Bo Carter, who played guitar and violin, was one of the most popular bluesmen of the ’30’s, cutting over a hundred sides between 1928 and 1940. He also worked with his brothers, Lonnie and Sam Chatmon, in the popular Mississippi Sheiks band. The Mississippi Sheiks were one of the most popular string bands of the late ’20s and early ’30s with a repertoire that drew upon all facets of black and white rural music: blues, pop music, hokum, white country and traditional songs. Their rendition of “Sitting on Top of the World” has become an enduring standard. The group consisted of guitarist Walter Vinson and fiddler Lonnie Chatmon, with frequent appearances by guitarists Bo Carter and Sam Chatmon, who were also busy with their own solo careers.In addition to featuring several tracks by Bo Carter and Mississippi Sheiks, we also hear the Sheiks backing Texas Alexander on the topical “Frost Texas Tornado Blues.” On April 9th 1934 the group backed Alexander on eight numbers.

Beginning in 1926, Peg Leg Howell performed a number of guitar blues for Columbia Records in Atlanta, but he also joined with his “Gang” to record rollicking stomps and rags, led by Eddie Anthony’s wailing fiddle. Our selection, both sides of a 78, “New Jelly Roll Blues” b/w “Beaver Slide Rag” were recorded on April 8, 1927 and advertised in the Chicago Defender. He arrived in the city in 1923 and was recorded by Columbia in November 1926. Howell’s first session featured him solo and are certainly appealing but it’s the rough, exciting stringband music he recorded with His Gang that really grabs attention. The gang consisted of Henry Williams on guitar and the infectious alley fiddle of Eddie Anthony. The duo backed Howell on two dozen sides. Williams apparently died in jail in January 1930 while serving time for vagrancy and Anthony passed in 1934, after which Howell gave up music. Henry Williams & Eddie Anthony cut one 78 together in 1928, the stupendous “Lonesome Blues” b/w/ “Georgia Crawl.” Singer Sloppy Henry cut sixteen sides between 1924 and 1929. At a 1928 session he was backed by Peg Leg Howell and Eddie Anthony, heard to good effect on the colorfully titled “Long Tall, Disconnected Mama” in which Anthony exclaims “I got good chicken and this vio-leen.” Eddie Anthony also recorded as Macon Ed with the mysterious Tampa Joe, cutting eight sides in 1930.

Will Batts was a fine fiddler based in Memphis who worked with Frank Stokes and Jack Kelly. Frank Stokes and partner Dan Sane recorded as The Beale Street Shieks, a Memphis answer to the musical Chatmon family string band, the Mississippi Shieks. Stokes was already playing the streets of Memphis by the turn of the century, about the same time the blues began to flourish. A medicine show and house party favorite, Stokes was remembered as a consummate entertainer who drew on songs from the 19th and 20th centuries. Solo or with Sane and sometimes fiddler Will Batts, Stokes recorded 38 sides for Paramount and Victor. Jack Kelly is believed to be from North Mississippi but spent most of his life in Memphis where he sang on the streets and worked with musicians like Frank Stokes, Dan Sane, Will Batts and later Little Buddy Doyle and Walter Horton. In 1933 he cut 14 sides by the South Memphis Jug Band which included Will Batts on violin, Dan Sane on guitar and D.M. Higgs on jug. He cut ten more sides in 1939 with Batts, and Little Son Joe. Kelly’s last known sides were made in 1952 with Walter Horton for the Sun.

Both Lonnie Johnson and Big Bill Broonzy are best remembered for their guitar playing but both also played violin and luckily recorded with the instrument. By the time Lonnie Johnson recorded his “Violin Blues”, he was already one of the most prolific and influential musicians in blues. Johnson himself led a long and illustrious career as a guitarist, and is primarily remembered for his dazzling guitar work. But it was the violin that first captured his imagination, and his early career in New Orleans was spent honing his skills as a fiddler, first in his father’s string band, then as a young professional performing on excursion boats along the Mississippi. Johnson signed with Okeh in 1925, and played violin on nearly two-dozen early recordings. The State Street Boys were a studio group who cut eight sides in 1935. The group consisted of Big Bill Broonzy (who plays violin on our selection “Rustlin’ Man” plus four others), Jazz Gillum, Carl Martin and others. Martin was also a member of the The Tennessee Chocolate Drops, a group consisting of Howard Armstrong, Ted Bogan and Carl Martin.

Charlie McCoy ranked among the great blues accompanists of his era and his accomplished mandolin and guitar work can be heard on numerous recordings in a wide variety of settings from the late 1920’s through the early 40’s. His brother Joe McCoy was well known for his association with his wife Memphis Minnie where he played the part of Kansas Joe. Between 1929 and 1934 (they divorced in early 1935) they cut around one hundred sides together. After Joe and Minnie separated Joe occupied himself in small bands, singing with the Harlem Hamfats, working as a songwriter and working with his brother Charlie. Charlie McCoy’s “Your Valves Need Grinding” features the violin of Bo Carter while Joe McCoy’s “Look Who’s Coming Down The Road”, a version of Tommy Johnson’s “Maggie Campbell”, features a rousing unknown violinist.

Andrew & Jim Baxter

We play several fine, little known, rural string bands on today’s program. The fiddle-guitar duo known as the Alabama Sheiks cut two records for Victor, which were released in 1931, a time when industry sales were crippled by the Great Depression. Another duo was the father and son team Andrew and Jim Baxter, of Calhoun, Georgia. The duo cut sides for Victor between 1927-29, and even waxed one tune with a white string band, The Georgia Yellow Hammers. Rural string band the Mobile Strugglers got started just as the major record companies began to lose interest in string bands. The group featured two fiddlers, Charles Jones and James Fields, and included guitarist Paul Johnson, banjo picker Lee Warren and Wesley Williams on double bass. The Mobile Strugglers recorded seven songs for the American Music label in 1949. Wilson Jones, who wnet by the moniker Stavin’ Chain, led a fine stingband judging by the group’s six recordings. The group was recorded in Louisiana by John Lomax for the Library of Congress in 1934.

You don’t expect to hear the violin in the context of Delta blues but there are some recorded example. At his second recording session on Oct. 31, 1935 Big Joe Williams was backed by fiddle player Chasey Collins. Collins in turn was backed by Williams on two numbers. Delta bluesman Henry “Son” Sims is best known as the fiddler who played with Charley Patton. Although he led a rural string band called the Mississippi Corn Shuckers for several years, the first recording that Sims did was with Patton, who asked him to come along to Wisconsin for a 1929 Paramount session. Sims also recorded under his own name on two separate occasions; during the Patton session when he cut four songs, including our selection “Tell Me Man Blues,” and several years later with guitarist and singer McKinley Morganfield, (who later became known as Muddy Waters).

Our survey of blues violin players end about mid-century when that kind of music on commercial records became virtually extinct. Eventually, a few black fiddle players returned to the studio, most often for small specialist labels. Among those include Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown who first recorded on fiddle in 1959 for the Peacock label in Houston, Butch Cage of Mississippi who worked with Willie Thomas and recorded extensively by folklorist Harry Oster, L.C. Robinson who made records for Bluesway and Arhoolie in the 1970’s and Howard Armstrong who renewed his career in the 1970s playing mandolin and fiddle with old pals Carl Martin and Ted Bogan on albums for Rounder and Flying Fish.

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