ARTIST | SONG | ALBUM |
---|---|---|
Curley Weaver | Some Cold Rainy Day | Curley Weaver 1933-1935 |
Fred McMullen & Curley Weaver | Poor Stranger Blues | Georgia Blues 1928-1933 |
Blind Willie McTell & Curley Weaver | Wee Midnight Hours | Postwar Recordings 1949-50 |
Henry Williams & Eddie Anthony | Georgia Crawl | Let Me Tell You About The Blues: Atlanta |
Memphis Jug Band | K.C. Moan | The Best Of Memphis Jug Band |
Bo Carter | Corinne Corrina | Bo Carter Vol 1. 1928-1931 |
The Mississippi Sheiks | Baby Keeps Stealin' Lovin' on Me | The Essential |
Long “Cleve” Reed & Papa Harvey Hull | Original Stack o’ Lee Blues | Stuff That Dreams are Made Of |
Two Poor Boys | Two White Horses in a Line | Vintage Mandolin Music |
Blind Willie Johnson | The Rain Don't Fall on Me | The Complete Blind Willie Johnson |
Blind Roosevelt Graves | Woke up This Morning (With My Mind on Jesus) | The Frog Blues & Jazz Annual No. 1 |
Muddy Waters | Wee, Wee Baby | Blues From Big Bill's Copacabana |
Muddy Waters | Rollin' and Tumblin', Part 2 | he Aristocrat Of The Blue |
Smith & Harper | Poor Girl | Great Harp Players 1927-1936 |
Geechie Wiley & Elvie Thomas | Pick Poor Robin Clean | I Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 1 |
Leroy Carr | Memphis Town | How Long Has That Evening Train Been Gone |
Tampa Red | Big Stars Falling Blues | Dynamite! The Unsung King of the Blues |
Little Eddie Kirkland & John Lee Hooker | It's Time For Lovin' To Be Done | Documenting The Sensation Recordings |
Jimmy Lee Robinson | Times Is Hard | Bandera Blues & Gospel |
Charley Patton & Bertha Lee | Oh Death | Blues Images Vol. 16 |
Nugrape Twins | The Road Is Rough & Rocky | Sinners & Saints 1926-1931 |
Eddie Head & His Family | Down on Me | American Primitive Vol. I |
Blind Boy Fuller, Bull City Red, Sonny Terry | I Feel Like Shoutin' | Blues & Gospel From The Eastern States |
Camp Morris | Captain Haney Blues | Lost Train Blues |
Leadbelly & Golden Gate Quartet | Rock Island Line | Alabama Bound |
Butch Cage & Willie B. Thomas | Fourty Four Blues | Yonder Come The Blues |
Rufus & Ben Quillian | Keep It Clean | Hokum, Blues & Rags 1929-1930s |
State Street Boys | Midnight Special | Fiddle Noir: African American Fiddlers On Early Phonograph Records 1925-1949 |
Washboard Sam | Down in the Alley | The Essential |
The Hokum Boys | Keep You Mind On It | The 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 Long | With a Feeling: The Cobra, Chief & Crash Recordings |
Classie Ballou & His Tempo Kings Orch. | D-I-R-T-Y D-E-A-L | Rhythm 'N' Bluesin' By The Bayou: Nights Of Sin, Dirty Deals & Love Sick Souls |
Macon Ed & Tampa Joe | Winging That Thing | Atlanta Blues |
Ed Bell & Pillie Bolling | She's Got A Nice Line | Ed Bell's Mamlish Moan |
Pink Anderson & Simmie Dooley | Papa's 'Bout To Get Mad | Good for What Ails You |
Show Notes:
I’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.
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.”
Rufus 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.
We 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.