Big Road Blues Show 9/17/23: She Run Me Out On The Road – Mix Show

Mix ShowSONGALBUM
Spider Carter Dry Spell BluesSt. Louis 1927-1933
Ell-Zee Floyd Snow Bound and BlueDown On The Levee
Charles Avery Dearborn Street BreakdownShake Your Wicked Knees
Muddy Waters Strange Woman Hollywood Blues Summit 1971
Muddy Waters Walkin' Through the Park Hollywood Blues Summit 1971
Memphis Jug Band Going Back To Memphis Best Of
Peg Leg Howell Monkey Man Blues Peg Leg Howell Vol. 2 1928-1930
Sleepy John Estes Drop Down Mama Blues At Newport 1964
Louis Armstrong Long Long Journey Satchmo In The Forties
Big Joe Turner & Pete Johnson Kansas City Blues Hollywood Rock And Roll Record
Arbee Stidham Standin' In My Window A Time For Blues
Ivy Smith & Cow Cow Davenport Southern High Waters Blues Ivy Smith & Cow Cow Davenport 1927-1930
Annie Turner & Little Brother Montgomery Hard on YouLittle Bother Montgomery: Vocal Accompaniments & Early Post-War Recordings 1930-1954
Lucille Bogan My Georgia GrindLucille Bogan Vol. 1 1923-1929
Walter Horton Now Tell me, Baby Lowdown Memphis Harmonica Jam
Big John Wrencher I'm A Root Man American Blues Legends 1974
Easy Baby Good Morning Mr BluesBarrelhousin' Around Chicago The Legendary George Paulus 1970s Recordings
Kid Wiggins Lonesome Road Playing For The Man At The Door
James Tisdom Steel Guitar Rag Playing For The Man At The Door
Lightnin’ Hopkins Blues Jumped a Rabbit Playing For The Man At The Door
Frank Evans Red River BluesField Recordings Vol. 13 1933-1943
Josh White Lazy Black Snake BluesBlues Singer 1932-1936
Poor Bill Way Up on the MountainEast Coast Blues In The Thirties 1934-1939
Robert Petway Bertha Lee BluesCatfish Blues
Jealous James Stanchell Anything from a Foot Race to a Resting PlacePlaying For The Man At The Door
Lightnin’ Hopkins The Foot Race Is OnAutobiography in Blues
Big Moose Walker & Jump Jackson´s Combo Footrace To A Resting Place Blues Complete
Tom Bell Storm in ArkansasI Can Eagle Rock: Jook Joint Blues Library of Congress Recordings 1940-1941
Sam Chatmon God Don't Like UglyI Have to Paint My Face
Lum Guffin Johnny WilsonOn The Road Again
Joe Cooper She Run Me Out On The RoadLiving Country Blues USA Vol. 2: Blues On Highway 61
Sippie Wallace You Gonna Need My Help Sippie Wallace Vol. 2 1925-1945
Sara Martin Hole In The WallSara Martin Vol. 4 1925-1928
Billie (Willie Mae) McKenzie Woke Up With The Rising SunFemale Chicago Blues 1936-1947
Lizzie Miles Lizzie's Blues Jazzin' The Blues 1943-1952

Show Notes: 

Dearborn Street Breakdown / Dry Spell Blues We tackle a wide gamut of blues from the 20s through the 70s today. On deck today is a set revolving around superb pianists Charles Avery, two live recordings by Muddy Waters, we hear from some excellent women singers and some blues shouters and crooners. In addition we spin some great field recordings captured by Mack McCormick, John Lomax and others, a strong set of harmonica blues, trace the history of an obscure song and much more.

Active in Chicago in the 20’s and 30’s, Charles Avery worked as a session musician backing artists such as Lil Johnson, Freddie ‘Red” Nicholson, Red Nelson, Victoria Spivey and others. He cut one record under his own name, 1929’s “Dearborn Street Breakdown” (the other side of the 78 was Meade Lux Lewis’ “Honky Tonk Train Blues”). It’s been suggested that Avery plays behind Ell-Zee Floyd and Spider Carter who we hear today. Carter cut three sides in 1930 for Brunswick and Floyd cut two sides on Sept. 19, 1930 at the same session Carter recorded.

The eight-song set Hollywood Blues Summit 1971, was recorded at the legendary Ash Grove club in Los Angeles on the Blue Summit weekend (which also featured Freddie King and Lightnin’ Hopkins) from July 27 to Aug. 1, 1971. The band includes: Calvin Fuzz Jones on bass, Pee Wee Madison &  Sammy Lawson on guitars, Paul Oscher & Shakey Horton on harmonica and Pinetop  Perkins on piano.

We spotlight several fine blues ladies today including Ivy Smith, Sippie Wallace, Sara Martin, Lizzie Miles and others. Cow Cow Davenport’s early career revolved around carnivals and vaudeville. Davenport didn’t cut a 78 record until 1927 (two 1925 sides for Gennett were unissued) although prior to that he made a number of piano rolls. Davenport briefly teamed up with singer Ivy Smith in 1927, backing her on some two-dozen sides as well as waxing around thirty sides under his own name through 1938. we hear the duo on the fine flood blues “Southern High Waters Blues.”

Sara Martin was singing on the Vaudeville circuit by 1915 and made her debut for Okeh Records in 1922. She cut close to one hundred sides through 1928.  She recorded four sides with Clarence Williams that included King Oliver on cornet in 1928 of which we spin “Hole In The Wall.”

Last week we delved into the box set, Playing for the Man at the Door: Field Recordings from the Collection of Mack McCormick, 1958–1971, produced by the Smithsonian which collects Mack’s, mostly unreleased, field recordings captured between 1958 and 1971. There were several tracks we didn’t get to on that show and today we hear from pianist Kid Wiggins, James Tisdom and  Lightnin’ Hopkins who Mack recorded extensively.

 Hollywood Blues Summit

In addition we hear a track from Jealous James Stanchell cut in 1959 titled “Anything from a Foot Race to a Resting Place” which always fascinated me for it’s unique title and lyrics. This track first appeared on the album Treasury Of Field Recordings Vol. 2. These albums were compiled by McCormick and issued on the British 77 label in 1960. Regarding the song and it’s performer he wrote: “Evenings he goes from bar to bar along Dowling St. Singing for tips, some songs like “Jambalaya” derive from the jukeboxes, but mostly his own personal observations. The song is Jealous James’ own composition, well known around Houston and Kansas City from his own singing, but not previously recorded or published. The recording came about one afternoon when Lightnin’ Hopkins was scheduled to make some tapes but, as usual, found himself without an acoustical guitar. He went out and found Jealous James inviting him and his guitar to come along. After finishing ‘Corrine, Corrina’ – in Volume I of this set – Lightnin’ turned things over to Jealous James who sang several of his own songs including this. Lightnin’ was so delighted with it that he promptly recorded a boogie which he dubbed ‘The Footrace is On’ which takes its inspiration from Jealous James his song. Lightnin’s song, elaborating on the foot-race idea, is in his Autobiography in Blues, Tradition LP 1040.” In 1960 Big Moose Walker with Jump Jackson’s Combo cut two takes of “Footrace To A Resting Place” for End Records which is essentially the same song. He recorded the song again which appeared on and Elmore James album titled To Know A Man (Blue Horizon, 1969) and credited to an unidentified singer possibly “Bushy Head!” He cut the song several times over the years including a fine version simply titled “Footrace” on the album Rambling Woman for Bluesway in 1969. I wonder where he heard this song? I don’t know of any other versions.

As usual we spin some interesting field recordings, this time out by Tom Bell, Joe Cooper, Lum Guffin, Frank Evans and others. In 1940, recording for the Library of Congress, John Lomax captured some fine recordings in his travels, first in Texas in October then Louisiana, Mississippi, and finally Georgia by November. Many of these tracks can be found on the excellent Travelin’ Man album, I Can Eagle Rock: Jook Joint Blues from Alabama and Louisiana. One of these artists was a fine dance and blues artists named Tom Bell who we hear on his “Storm in Arkansas.” Frank Evans was recorded by Lomax in 1936 in Parchman Farm.

Red River Blues

The title of today’s show is taken from a song by Joe Cooper. Cooper was discovered in the late ‘60s by researcher Bill Ferris and was the uncle of Son Thomas. both are featured in Ferris’s book Blues from The Delta. Cooper played with Henry Stuckey, considered one of the founders of the Bentonia blues style and played at local house parties. He was recorded by Gianni Marcucci in the 70s and by my friends Axel Küstner in 1980 and Michael Hortig in 1981.

We hear some fine blues singing today from Louis Armstrong, Big Joe Turner and Arbee Stidham. Louis Armstrong sings on “Long Long Journey” from 1946 in an all-star band featuring Duke Ellington and Johnny Hodges. Next week I’ll be devoting a show to Big Joe Turner and chatting with Derek Coller who is the author of the new book, Feel So Fine, which is a biography and discography. As the blurb states: “Big Joe Turner was the greatest of the blues shouters. For more than five decades, from Kansas City saloons to Carnegie Hall, through the swing era, rhythm and blues, rock and roll, and soul music, Joe Turner sang, never wavering. Small bands, big bands, trios, pianists, rock groups, choirs, all styles of accompaniment rocked to his rhythm. Joe Turner was like a force of nature, making everyone feel fine.” Today we feature a live track with Big Joe back by his pal Pete Johnson.

We spin a set of tough post-war harmonica today by Walter Horton, Big John Wrencher and Easy Baby. From his first recording session we hear from Walter Horton going under the name Mumbles on “Now Tell Me Baby” waxed in 1951. I first heard this on the great Nighthawk album Lowdown Memphis Harmonica Jam.

Storm in ArkansasSeveral years back I found myself in the segregated black section of Shufordville Cemetery (outside of Clarksdale) which contains the graves of blues fiddler Henry “Son” Simms, who recorded with Muddy Waters and Charley Patton and harmonica man Big John Wrencher. A marker was erected in 2014 for Wrencher. We hear a fine live number by him today when he was touring Europe as part of the 1974 American Blues Legends tour.

Fame and fortune never found Easy Baby who worked as a mechanic by day and the Chicago clubs at nights. We play a track from Sweet Home Chicago Blues, a real gem released on the small Barrelhouse imprint (released on CD on the Japanese P-Vine label). A large part of the record’s success goes to the band: Eddie Taylor’s fleet fingered playing is every bit as inventive as his band leader while Kansas City Red’s drumming is so crisp and in-the-pocket it should be used as a clinic for up and coming blues drummers. Easy cut another good one in for Wolf in 2000 titled If It Ain’t One Thing, It’s Another.

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Big Road Blues Show 4/30/23: Mix Show

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Clarence Jolly w/ Guitar Shorty Changing Love West Florida Rhythm And Blues
Clarence Jolly w/ Charles Brantley & Band Every Man's Blues West Florida Rhythm And Blues
Guitar Shorty You Dont' Treat Me Right West Florida Rhythm And Blues
Lucille Bogan War Time Man BluesWomen Won't Need No Men
Ivy Smith & Cow Cow Davenport Wringin' And Twistin' Papa Ivy Smith & Cow Cow Davenport 1927-1930
Lillian Miller Dead Drunk BluesI Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 1
Mae Glover Pig Meat MamaMae Glover 1927-1931
Jimmy Bell Just About Easter TimeHidden Gems Vol. 4: More Aristocrat Records
Jimmy Bell Stranger In Your Town Stranger In Your Town
Jimmy Bell You Don't Know Stranger In Your Town
Black Boy Shine Dallas Woman Blueseroy Carr & Black Boy Shine: Unissued Test Pressings and Alternate Takes 1934-37
Pinetop Smith Pinetop's BluesPiano Blues Vol. 20: The Barrelhouse Years 1928-1933
Raymond Barrow Walking BluesMama Don't Allow No Easy Riders Here
The Bluejacks Late Hour Blues A Shot in the Dark: Nashville Jumps
Jimmy Grissom Just Got BackMore Mellow Cats and Kittens
Kid TannerGoing To New OrleansThe Fifties: Juke Joint Blues
Lonnie Lyons & His Orchestra Sneaky PeteThe Freedom R&B Story Vol. 2
Hociel Thomas w/ Hersal Thomas Fish Tail Dance The Piano Blues Vol. 4 The Thomas Family 1925-1929
Hociel Thomas Tebo's Texas BoogieHociel Thomas and Chippie Hill
Snooks Eaglin She's A Black Rat The First Decade 1953-62
Snooks Eaglin Mamma, Don't You Tear My Clothes The First Decade 1953-62
Jack Kelly & His South Memphis Jug Band Ko-Ko-Mo Blues Memphis Shakedown
Jackie Boy & Little Walter Selling My Whiskey Sun Records The Blues Years 1950-1958
Joe Hill Louis Dorothy Mae Sun Records The Blues Years 1950-1958
Walter Horton Little Walter's BoogieSun Records The Blues Years 1950-1958
Edwin "Buster" Pickens Mountian Jack1959 to 1961 Sessions
Sonny Boy Davis Rhythm BluesTexas Country Blues 1948-1953
Lee Hunter Lee's Boogie Head Rag Hop: Piano Blues 1925-1960
Moanin' Bernice Edwards Long Tall MamaThe Piano Blues Vol. 4 The Thomas Family 1925-1929
Dan Burley Hersal's Rocks Jazz & Blues Piano Vol. 1 1934-1947
Clarence Jolly w/Charles Brantley & His Band Baby Take A Look At Me West Florida Rhythm And Blues
Guitar Shorty Irma LeeWest Florida Rhythm And Blues
Clarence Jolly w/ Guitar Shorty Don't Leave Me West Florida Rhythm And Blues
Al MillerThirty First And StateAl Miller 1927-1936
Dan Burley 31st Street BluesJazz & Blues Piano Vol. 1 1934-1947
Charles "Cow Cow" Davenport & Ivy Smith State Street JiveBarrelhouse Mamas
Arnold & Irene WileyYou'd Better Not Go to the 35th and State No MoreBlues & Jazz Obscurities

Show Notes: 

State Street JiveWe span several decades of blues today opening with one of two sets devoted to an excellent new collection titled West Florida Rhythm And Blues. In addition we hear from some tough blues ladies, batch of great Texas piano blues, sets devoted to Snooks Eaglin, Jimmy Bell, Jack Kelly, Dan Burley and much more.

A couple of years back I did a show revolving around blues from Florida. This time we add to the story with two sets from a new collection on the Jasmine label titled West Florida Rhythm And Blues. From the notes: “Tampa and St. Petersburg were the focal point from the late 1940s through to the early 1960s for what is nowadays a neglected and obscure center of black R&B music, much of it focused around the saxophonist and bandleader Charles Brantley. Brantley, along with his front man vocalist Clarence Jolly, was recorded in the early 1950s by New York record label owner Bob Shad. Also included are cuts by such acts as Gene Franklin and his Rockin’ Spacemen and harmonica virtuoso Eugene ‘Texas’ Ray, along with the flamboyant Guitar Shorty, although these artists had to migrate to New York City, or in the case of Shorty, Chicago, to make their recording debuts.”

We hear from several fine blues ladies today including Lucille Bogan, Ivy Smith, Lillian Miller, Mae Glover, Moanin’ Bernice Edwards  and Hociel Thomas. Cow Cow Davenport’s early career revolved around carnivals and vaudeville. Davenport didn’t cut a 78 record until 1927 (two 1925 sides for Gennett were unissued) although prior to that he made a number of piano rolls. Davenport briefly teamed up with singer Ivy Smith in 1927, backing her on some two-dozen sides as well as waxing around thirty sides under his own name through 1938. We hear Ivy and Cow Cow team up on “Wringin’ And Twistin’ Papa” and the rollicking piano number “State Street Jive.”

WEST FLORIDA RHYTHM AND BLUES

Little is known of Mae Glover who cut fourteen sides at two sessions; four for Gennet in 1929 and the rest for Champion in 1931. In guitarist John Byrd she found an ideal partner. He provides some fine guitar work and vocals at her first session, including our number “Pig Meat Mama.” Byrd was from rural Jefferson County in south Mississippi and was known to have performed on occasion with Tommy Johnson in Jackson. He reportedly moved from town to town playing for the sawmill workers in that vicinity.  When he recorded his duets with Glover in July 1929 Byrd also cut two religious titles for Gennett which were credited to Rev. George Jones And Congregation. It is possible that the Sister Jones appearing on this record is Glover.

We spin two sides by Hociel Thomas. “Fish Tail Dance” features her brother Hersal on piano. Hersal was among the earliest architects of the boogie-woogie style leaving such a powerful impression that pianists as highly regarded as Jimmy Yancey, Albert Ammons, and Meade “Lux” Lewis claimed him as a prime influence. It was his father George who taught Hersal the fundamentals of the blues, and the youngster gave his first public performances on the streets of Houston with his big sister Beulah, who would come to be known as Sippie Wallace.

When George relocated to New Orleans in 1915, he brought Beulah and Hersal with him. Hersal was soon gigging with the region’s top jazz players, including King Oliver and his promising young protégée Louis Armstrong. On February 22, 1925 he recorded his only two piano solos, “The Suitcase Blues” and “Hersal’s Blues.” Two days later, he and Joe Oliver backed Sippie on three Okeh recordings, and in April and June, he accompanied Hociel on her first records. In August, Hersal and Sippie traveled to New York to cut more records, with alto saxophonist Rudolph “Rudy” Jackson sitting in on the first of Hersal’s only two recording sessions that took place outside of the Chicago area. On November 11, 1925 Hersal, clarinetist Johnny Dodds and banjoist Johnny St. Cyr backed Hociel as members of Louis Armstrong’s Jazz Four. Armstrong and Hersal worked together on two more occasions, accompanying Hociel and Sippie during February and March 1926. Hersal’s last known studio session took place on the fourth of March when he accompanied Lillian Miller on her Okeh recording of “The Kitchen Blues.” The short life of Hersal Thomas came to an abrupt conclusion on July 3, 1926 while he was performing at Penny’s Pleasure Palace in Detroit. The exact cause of his sudden death has never been verified. In 1946, Hociel recorded seven songs as pianist and vocalist with Mutt Carey for the Circle label, which were her last recordings. From that session we spin “Tebo’s Texas Boogie” her version of  the “Ma Grinder”, a song played by the Santa Fe group of pianists. The group had a number of peculiar, technically complex songs that were closely intertwined and formed a unique shared repertoire. First and foremost was “The Ma Grinder” and its related songs “The Cows”, “Dirty Duckins” and “Put Me In The Alley.”

Although Bernice Edwards was not directly related to them, she grew up with the musical Thomas family, which included Beulah Belle, George, Hociel and Hersal Thomas. During her time with them she learned to play the piano. In 1923, she relocated along with George and Hersal Thomas to Chicago. Five years later, at two separate recording sessions in February and November 1928, Edwards recorded twelve songs for Paramount Records, which included “Moaning Blues.” This title may have led to her being sometimes billed as “Moanin’ Bernice (Edwards).” In 1935, Edwards returned to the recording studio, this time in Fort Worth, Texas for American Record Corporation. Alongside Black Boy Shine, she recorded piano duets including one

We hear from several other fine Texas pianists today including Black Boy Shine, Lee Hunter and Buster Pickens. I wrote the liner notes to the Buster Pickens collection on Document several years back titled The 1959 to 1961 Sessions. I was greatly assisted by piano expert Michael Hortig. Michael and are teaming up for a series of Texas piano shows coming up soon so stay tuned.

Blues, Boogie-woogie pianist, and singer Jimmie Bell led one of the many piano trios which were so popular on Chicago’s South Side clubs. After graduating from high school in St. Louis in 1928, he pursued a career in music playing in several bands in the 30s and 40s. During the 1940’s, leading his own bands, he worked out of St. Louis, Detroit, and New York. He was discovered by Leonard Chess working with his trio. He recorded on 78 for Aristocrat and one for Chess in 1947. Bell did a session in Shreveport in 1949 that remained unreleased until British JSP label put out an LP of his work in 1979 titled Stranger In Your Town. In 1950, he recorded two sides for the Texas-based Royalty label and another two for Premium in Chicago. A final session on Chance in 1954 led to one obscure release that the company put in its pop series. Returning to his hometown, Bell worked in Peoria playing piano bar during his last decades. We spin a side apiece from Aristocrat and Premium and a latter day number cut in the late 70s.

I have been keeping an eye out for for the Snooks Eaglin album Message From New Orleans for a long time but it has remained elusive. These were recordings made by Harry Oster in 1959 and issued by the Heritage label in 1960. No I haven’t found a copy, but I did find the 2-CD Acrobat set, The First Decade 1953-62 which contains thirteen of the sixteen cuts. In addition to that album it collects early recordings as Blind Guitar Ferd for the Wonder label, plus most of the titles from his albums as Snooks Eaglin “Possum Up A Simmon Tree” on Folk-Lyric, and “That’s All Right” on Bluesville, plus his A & B sides from these years on Imperial. One curious thing to note – the song “Who Can Your Coloured Man Be” is now listed as “Who Can Your Good Man Be” on the Acrobat set. A minor point I guess, but this whitewashing of history bugs me.

Tebo's Texas BoogieFinally we devote a set of sides to Jack Kelley. Singer/guitarist Jack Kelly was the front man of the South Memphis Jug Band, a popular string band whose music owed a heavy debt to the blues as well as minstrel songs, vaudeville numbers, reels and rags. He led the group in tandem with fiddler Will Batts, and they made their first recordings in 1933, cutting some two-dozen sides between August 1 and 3rd for Banner and ARC. Kelly recorded again in 1939. Kelly may have backed Little Buddy Doyle on sides in 1939. Throughout the forties and fifties Jack Kelly remained playing in Memphis finally teaming up with harmonica player Walter Horton. In 1952 they recorded two numbers for Sun records as Jackie Boy and Little Walter (Sun 174). Sun 174 remained unseen and unheard until Robert Loers found an acetate bearing the label Sun 174 and Steve LaVere later found a fragment of the song on another acetate. Kelly also backed Joe Hill Louis.

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Big Road Blues Show 2/10/19: Pratt City Blues – Alabama Piano Pt. II

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter RolandB.D. Woman's BluesShave 'Em Dry: The Best Of Lucille Bogan
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter RolandBoogan Ways BluesLucille Bogan & Walter Roland: The Essential
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter RolandGroceries On The ShelfLucille Bogan & Walter Roland: The Essential
Cow Cow DavenportBack In The AlleyThe Essential
Cow Cow Davenport & Dora CarrCow Cow Blues Roots 'n' Blues: The Retrospective
Cow Cow DavenportState Street JiveThe Essential
Pinetop SmithBig Boy They Can't Do ThatBoogie Woogie & Barrelhouse Piano Vol. 1
Pinetop SmithJump Steady BluesShake Your Wicked Knees
Walter RolandDice's BluesLucille Bogan & Walter Roland: The Essential
Walter RolandEarly This Morning Lucille Bogan & Walter Roland: The Essential
Walter RolandJookit JookitLucille Bogan & Walter Roland: The Essential
Guitar Slim w/ Robert McCoyKatie May - Katie May Alabama & The East Coast 1933-1937
Robert McCoyBye Bye BabyBye Bye Baby
Cow Cow Davenport Atlanta RagThe Essential
Cow Cow Davenport Jim Crow BluesThe Essential
Cow Cow Davenport & Ivy SmithMistreated Mamma Blues Ivy Smith & Cow Cow Davenport 1927-1930
Pinetop SmithNow Ain't Got Nothin At AllBoogie Woogie & Barrelhouse Piano Vol. 1
Pinetop SmithNobody Knows You When You're Down And OutBoogie Woogie & Barrelhouse Piano Vol. 1
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter Roland Down in Boogie AlleyThe Piano Blues Vol. 6
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter Roland Bo-Easy BluesLucille Bogan & Walter Roland: The Essential
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter Roland That's What My Baby LikesLucille Bogan & Walter Roland: The Essential
Cow Cow DavenportSlow DragThe Essential
Cow Cow DavenportMootch PiddleThe Essential
Cow Cow DavenportMama Don't Allow No Easy RidersThe Essential
Robert McCoy You Got To Reap What You SowBye Bye Baby
Robert McCoy Florida Bound BluesBlues And Boogie Woogie Classics
Robert McCoy McCoy BoogieBlues And Boogie Woogie Classics
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter RolandJump Steady DaddyShave 'Em Dry: The Best Of Lucille Bogan
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter Roland Stew Meat BluesShave 'Em Dry: The Best Of Lucille Bogan
Jabo WilliamsPolock BluesJuke Joint Saturday Night
Jabo WilliamsPratt City BluesJuke Joint Saturday Night
Walter Roland45 Pistol BluesLucille Bogan & Walter Roland: The Essential
Walter RolandBig MamaPiano Blues: The Essential
Walter RolandWhatcha Gonna Do?Walter Roland Vol. 1933

Show Notes:

State Street Jive AdAs Peter Silvester writes in A Left Hand Like God: “One city where boogie-woogie appears to have had a long tradition is Birmingham Alabama and its surrounding districts.The quality of the piano players who went on to make recording careers in the 1920s and 1930s suggests that they were strongly influenced by local players of exceptional talent during their formative years.” Blues writer Chris Smith noted that “…Despite flourishing gospel quartet and piano traditions, the state’s blues are comparatively under-represented on ‘race’ records.” And as Paul Oliver underscored: “…Alabama was largely neglected by the location recording units and even by the talent scouts….” Thankfully several fine pianists based in Birmingham including Cow Cow Davenport, Jabbo Smith, Robert McCoy and Walter Roland all got on record.

Cow Cow’s early career revolved around carnivals and vaudeville. Davenport didn’t cut a 78 record until 1927 (two 1925 sides for Gennett were unissued) although prior to that he made a number of piano rolls. Davenport briefly teamed up with singer Ivy Smith in 1927, backing her on some two-dozen sides as well as waxing around thirty sides under his own name through 1938. Jabo Williams was a highly talented pianist/vocalist hailing from Birmingham, Alabama who cut eight sides for Paramount in 1932. Walter Roland recorded over ninety issued sides for ARC as a soloist and accompanist, backing singer Lucille Bogan on dozens of sides. Robert McCoy was born in 1912 in Aliceville, Alabama but raised on Birmingham’s North Side and by 1927 was a well-known local artist. He backed several local artists in 1937 and in 1963 McCoy recorded two albums. Clarence “Pine Top” Smith first performed in public in Birmingham about the age of fifteen. He worked as a pianist at house parties in Troy, Alabama before moving on to Birmingham, where he sometimes worked with Robert McCoy. Cow Cow Davenport recommended Smith to Mayo Williams of Brunswick/Vocalion records where he cut eight sides between 1928 and 1929.

As Bob Hall and Richard Noblett write in the notes to the Magpie album Piano Blues Vol. 6: “In the annals of the blues there are many artists who have made outstanding contributions to the music, but whose personal lives remain a mystery. Just such a man is Walter Roland, who during the Depression, recorded over ninety issued sides for ARC as a soloist and accompanist.”As for his style and influence, they write: “…There is no doubt that Roland was a major and highly influential figure in his time, and his recorded output contains compositions which have become part of the repertoire of a host of younger musicians. …He was a highly accomplished pianist capable of playing in two distinct styles. The first employed a simple rolling boogie woogie bass, most often in the key of F, played in a variety of tempos. The second, less common barrelhouse style employed a stride piano bass of alternating octaves and chords, usually in the key of E. Throughout Roland’s work certain distinctive treble phrases emerge, and particularly striking is his use of repeated single note staccato triplets, foreshadowing the use of the same device by the post-war Chicago pianists.”

Roland was born at Ralph, Tuscaloosa County, Alabama on 20 December 1902 (according to his Social Security documents) or 4 December 1903 (according to his death certificate). Roland was one of the most technically proficient of all blues pianists, and in addition he displayed considerable feeling in his playing and singing. He was also an able guitarist, and recorded several titles backing his own vocals and those of others, playing guitar. Roland was said to have been based in the 1920’s or 1930’s around Pratt City, near Birmingham, Alabama. Although his recording career began in 1933, it is evident that Walter was already an accomplished musician with a fully formed style. Roland partnered Lucille Bogan when they recorded for the ARC labels between 1933 and 1935, in the course of which, he recorded in his own right. Walter’s first disc, “Red Cross Blues” has since become a blues standard, versions having been recorded by Sonny Scott, Sonny Boy Williamson, Champion Jack Dupree, Robert McCoy, Forest City Joe, and many others. 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. His best-selling recording was “Early This Morning”, a reworking of an earlier Paramount recording by Charlie Spand, “Soon This Morning”, but Walter was successful enough to continue recording until 1935.
Ko Ko Mo Blues Ad
Lucille Bogan got off to a rather shaky start on her two 1923 sessions. The feisty, boisterous singing she became known for came into much better focus when she returned to the studio in 1927. As Tony Russell writes in the Penguin Guide To Blues: “Over the next few years she constructed a persona of a tough-talking narrator – ‘They call me Pig Iron Sally, ’cause I live in Slag Iron Ally, and I’m evil and mean as I can be,’ she sings in ‘Pig Iron Sally’ – who knew the worlds of the lesbian and the prostitute. She reports from the former in ‘Women Don’t Need No Men’ and ‘B.D. Woman’s Blues’, and the latter in ‘Tricks Ain’t Walking no More’ – best heard in the affectingly sombre version titled ‘They Ain’t Walking No More’ …and ‘Barbecue Bess.’ Other notable recordings are ‘Coffee Grindin’ Blues’ …and the first recording of ‘Black Angel Blues,’ which after a great change became a blues standard.” On these recordings she finds strong backing from pianists Will Ezell and Charles Avery. “…Thanks to the generally better sound quality and the ever sympathetic accompaniment of Walter Roland, her mid-30s recordings …are the most approachable. ”

At some later time, possibly as late as 1950, Roland became a farmer. Roland was reputedly playing guitar as a street singer in the 1960’s. As well as Birmingham, he worked around Dolomite and the Interurban Heights, around Brighton and elsewhere. In about the late 1960’s, Walter was trying to be a peacemaker in a domestic argument between a neighboring husband and wife and one of the disputing parties fired a shotgun, with the result that Walter was blinded by buckshot. By 1968, Walter had retired from music because of his blindness, and was cared for by his daughters at Fairfield, near Miles College. In 1968, he applied for an old age pension. He died there of bronchogenic carcinoma on 12 October 1972.

Cow Cow Davenport learned to play piano and organ in his father’s church from his mother who was the organist. Davenport’s early career revolved around carnivals and vaudeville. He toured TOBA with an act called Davenport and Company with blues singer Dora Carr and they recorded together in 1925 and 1926. Davenport didn’t cut a 78 record until 1927 although prior to that he made a number of piano rolls between 1925 and 1927 including three versions of “Cow Cow Blues.” Davenport briefly teamed up with blues singer Ivy Smith in 1928 and worked as a talent scout for Brunswick and Vocalion records in the late 1920’s and played rent parties in Chicago. They formed an act called the Chicago Steppers which lasted for some months and, in 1928, the partnership began to record for the Paramount Company.

Davenport moved to Cleveland, Ohio in 1930 and toured the TOBA vaudeville circuit and recorded with Sam Price. In 1938 Davenport suffered a stroke that left his right hand somewhat paralyzed and affected his piano playing for the rest of his life, but he remained active as a vocalist until he regained enough strength in his hand to play again. In the early 1940’s Cow Cow briefly left the music business and worked as a washroom attendant at the Onyx Club on 52nd Street in New York. In 1942 Freddie Slack’s Orchestra scored a huge hit with “Cow Cow Boogie” with vocals by seventeen year old Ella Mae Morse which sparked the Boogie-Woogie craze of the early 1940s; this led to a revival of interest in Davenport’s music. He tried to make a “comeback” in the forties and fifties but his career was often interrupted by sickness. He died in 1955 of heart problems in Cleveland.

 Barrelhouse Blues And Jook Piano
Blues and Boogie Classics

Robert McCoy was born in 1912 in Aliceville, AL but raised on Birmingham’s North Side and by 1927 was a well-known local artist. Two of McCoy’s six brothers, Johnny an Willie, played piano and used to run around with the great Jabo Williams. Cow Cow Davenport and Pinetop Smith played at McCoy’s house whenever they were in town and had a profound influence on McCoy. In 1963 McCoy was recorded by Pat Cather, a teenaged Birmingham blues fan. Cather issued two albums on his Vulcan label: Barrelhouse Blues And Jook Piano and Blues And Boogie Classics. Both albums were cut in extremely small quantities and are very rare. Delmark has reissued some of this material on the CD Bye Bye Baby including some unreleased material. In 1964 Vulcan issued a couple of singles and the same year a couple of singles were issued on the Soul-O label (Robert McCoy and His Five Sins) with McCoy backed by an R&B band in an attempt to update his sound. In later years McCoy became a church Deacon. He passed in 1978. In 1983, McCoy was posthumously inducted into the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame.

Between March 3rd and April 7th 1937, ARC (The American Record Company) sent a mobile recording unit on a field trip firstly to visit Hot Springs, Arkansas and, then to Birmingham, Alabama in search of new talent that could be recorded on location instead of transporting the artists to their New York studio. Sometime between 18th and 24th March the unit arrived in Birmingham and, over a two week period set about recording a number of gospel and blues musicians. Among those were Charlie Campbell, Guitar Slim (George Bedford) and James Sherrill (Peanut The Kidnapper) all of whom were backed by the lively piano of Robert McCoy who did not record under his own name.

Jabo Williams was a highly talented pianist/vocalist hailing from Birmingham, Alabama. In the early 1930’s, north Alabama, including the mill towns of Birmingham and Huntsville, had a distinctive group of blues pianists including Walter Roland, Robert McCoy and Cow Cow Davenport. It’s not clear if he was discovered there or when he relocated to St. Louis. In St. Louis he may have been recommended to Paramount by local record store owner and talent scout Jesse Johnson. Paramount went out of business in 1932, the same year Williams recorded his eight records which were likely pressed in small quantities which makes them extremely rare. In the only known photograph of Williams he’s seen in a wide-brimmed hat and in the company fellow Birmingham pianist Robert McCoy. In St. Louis he was well remembered by pianist Joe Dean as a slim, medium-brown man who played piano in a pool hall on 15th and Biddle.

As pianist/researcher Bob Hall notes, Williams was a “forthright, two-handed pianist in the barrelhouse tradition, who used mostly eight-to-the bar boogie bass patterns and highly individual treble phrases, including a characteristic coda with which he ended many of his pieces. ‘Ko Ko Mo Blues Parts 1 and 2’ has similarities to the later ‘Sweet Home Chicago’ and is a medium boogie with a lazy, slurred vocal. ‘Pratt City Blues,’ which is a different tune from the Chippie Hill title, refers to a suburb of the Ensley District of Birmingham. Both this boogie and the stride ‘‘Jab Blues’’ are outstanding instrumental compositions with a relentless drive. ‘My Woman Blues’ and ‘Polock Blues’ revert to medium boogie tempo, the latter taking its name from a part of East St. Louis. Williams shared a disregard of bar lengths with his fellow Birmingham pianist Walter Roland, who subsequently recorded another of Williams’ songs, ‘House Lady Blues.’ ‘Fat Mama Blues’ is a bawdy house song having a lyrical piano melody and an unusual bass line, ending with a characteristic Williams coda.” Williams’ records are in such rough shape and extremely rare, like “Ko Ko Mo Blues Parts 1 and 2”, (only two known copies) they are virtually unplayable.

Clarence “Pine Top” Smith first performed in public in Birmingham about the age of fifteen. He worked as a pianist at house parties in Troy, Alabama before moving on to Birmingham, where he sometimes worked with Robert McCoy. From around 1920 Smith was based in Pittsburgh, and the following years he traveled with minstrel and vaudeville shows as a dancer, singer and comedian. He traveled throughout the south where he worked with artists such as Butterbeans & Susie and Ma Rainey. He began to devote more of his energies to playing piano and, at the urging of Charles “Cow Cow.” In in interview with the Chicago Tribune pianist Cow Cow Davenport and Vocalion Records talent scout reported that he first saw Pinetop Smith in Pittsburgh “I happened to hit in Pittsburgh at the Star Theater on Wylie Avenue. … I went with a friend of mine to the Sachem Alley, and there I found Pinetop Smith.”

In an interview with Downbeat magazine in 1939, Smith’s wife Sarah Horton said that her husband first started playing “Pine Top’s Boogie Woogie” in Pittsburgh. Cow Cow Davenport recommended Smith to Mayo Williams of Brunswick/Vocalion records. Smith then moved with his family to Chicago in 1928. On December 29, 1928 Smith recorded his two breakthrough hits: “Pine Top Blues” and “Pine Top’s Boogie Woogie.” This was the first time the phrase “boogie woogie” appeared on record. On January 14 and 15, 1929 Smith recorded six more sides including “I’m Sober Now” and “Jump Steady Blues.” On March 13, 1929 Pine Top made an unissued recording of “Driving Wheel Blues.” Two days later, at age 25, Smith was accidentally shot by a man named David Bell during a fight that broke out in a dancehall.

 

Related Articles
 

-Harriot, Frank. “Cow Cow Davenport.” Ebony, 5, no. 9 (July 1950): 50.

-Cather, Pat. “Robert McCoy at the 27-28 Club” Blues Unlimited no. 19 (February 1965)

-Calt, Stephen; Epstein, Jerome; Stewart, Michael. Bessie Jackson & Walter Roland, 1927–1935. USA: Yazoo L-1017, 1968.

-Smith, Francis Wilford; Hall, Bob; Noblett, Richard. Walter Roland, 1933–1935: Take Your Big Legs Off. UK: Magpie PY 4406, 1978.

-Hall, Bob; Noblett, Richard. “The Birth of the Boogie: I Want All of You to Know – Pine Top’s Boogie Woogie.” Blues Unlimited no. 133 (Jan/Feb 1979): 10–11.

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Big Road Blues Show 2/3/19: Alabama Strut – Alabama Piano Pt. I

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Lucille Bogan w/ Cow Cow DavenportPot Hound BluesLucille Bogan & Walter Roland: The Essential
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter RolandRed Cross ManWoman Don't Need No Men
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter RolandBaking Powder BluesShave 'Em Dry: The Best Of Lucille Bogan
Cow Cow DavenportCow Cow BluesThe Essential
Cow Cow Davenport & Ivy SmithBarrel House Mojo Ivy Smith & Cow Cow Davenport 1927-1930
Walter Roland Red Cross BluesWalter Roland Vol. 1 1933
Walter Roland No Good BiddieWalter Roland Vol. 1 1933
Charlie Campbell w/ Robert McCoyGoin' Away BluesAlabama & The East Coast 1933-1937
James Sherrill w/ Robert McCoyEight Avenue BluesAlabama & The East Coast 1933-1937
Pinetop SmithPine Top BluesShake Your Wicked Knees
Pinetop SmithPine Top's Boogie WoogieThe Piano Blues Vol. 20
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter RolandReckless WomanShave 'Em Dry: The Best Of Lucille Bogan
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter RolandPig Iron SallyShave 'Em Dry: The Best Of Lucille Bogan
Cow Cow DavenportAlabama StrutMama Don't Allow No Easy Riders Here
Cow Cow DavenportChimes BluesThe Essential
Cow Cow Davenport & Sam TheardState Street BluesThe Essential
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter RolandShave 'em DryShave 'Em Dry: The Best Of Lucille Bogan
Lucille Bogan w/ Walter RolandBarbecue BessShave 'Em Dry: The Best Of Lucille Bogan
Cow Cow Davenport & Ivy Smith Doin' That Thing Ivy Smith & Cow Cow Davenport 1927-1930
Cow Cow DavenportSlum Gullion StompThe Essential
Robert McCoyGone Mother BluesBye Bye Baby
Robert McCoyPratt City SpecialBye Bye Baby
Robert McCoyChurch Bell BluesBye Bye Baby
Walter RolandHouse Lady BluesThe Piano Blues Vol. 6
Walter RolandPiano StompLucille Bogan & Walter Roland: The Essential
Jabo Williams Jab's BluesJuke Joint Saturday Night
Jabo Williams Fat Mama BluesJuke Joint Saturday Night
Walter RolandEarly This Morning ('Bout Break Of Day)Lucille Bogan & Walter Roland: The Essential
Walter RolandHungry Man's ScuffleShave 'Em Dry: The Best Of Lucille Bogan
Pinetop SmithI Got More Sense Than ThatBoogie Woogie & Barrelhouse Piano Vol. 1
Pinetop SmithI'm Sober NowShake Your Wicked Knees
Walter RolandEvery Morning BluesMasters of Modern Blues Vol. 4
Walter RolandBad Dream BluesWalter Roland Vol. 2 1934 - 1935
Walter RolandSchool Boy BluesThe Piano Blues Vol. 6

Show Notes:

Robert McCoy & Jabo Williams
Jabo Williams (standing), Robert McCoy & unknown (seated), 1929. Photo courtesy Pat Cather

As Peter Silvester writes in A Left Hand Like God: “One city where boogie-woogie appears to have had a long tradition is Birmingham Alabama and its surrounding districts.The quality of the piano players who went on to make recording careers in the 1920s and 1930s suggests that they were strongly influenced by local players of exceptional talent during their formative years.” Blues writer Chris Smith noted that “…Despite flourishing gospel quartet and piano traditions, the state’s blues are comparatively under-represented on ‘race’ records.” And as Paul Oliver underscored: “…Alabama was largely neglected by the location recording units and even by the talent scouts….” Thankfully several fine pianists based in Birmingham including Cow Cow Davenport, Jabbo Smith, Robert McCoy and Walter Roland all got on record.

Cow Cow’s early career revolved around carnivals and vaudeville. Davenport didn’t cut a 78 record until 1927  (two 1925 sides for Gennett were unissued) although prior to that he made a number of piano rolls. Davenport briefly teamed up with singer Ivy Smith in 1927, backing her on some two-dozen sides as well as waxing around thirty sides under his own name through 1938. Jabo Williams was a highly talented pianist/vocalist hailing from Birmingham, Alabama who cut eight sides for Paramount in 1932. Walter Roland recorded over ninety issued sides for ARC as a soloist and accompanist, backing singer Lucille Bogan on dozens of sides. Robert McCoy was born in 1912 in Aliceville, Alabama but raised on Birmingham’s North Side and by 1927 was a well-known local artist. He backed several local artists in 1937 and in 1963 McCoy recorded  two albums. Clarence “Pine Top” Smith first performed in public in Birmingham about the age of fifteen. He worked as a pianist at house parties in Troy, Alabama before moving on to Birmingham, where he sometimes worked with Robert McCoy. Cow Cow Davenport recommended Smith to Mayo Williams of Brunswick/Vocalion records where he cut eight sides between 1928 and 1929.

As Bob Hall and Richard Noblett write in the notes to the Magpie album Piano Blues Vol. 6: “In the annals of the blues there are many artists who have made outstanding contributions to the music, but whose personal lives remain a mystery. Just such a man is Walter Roland, who during the Depression, recorded over ninety issued sides for ARC as a soloist and accompanist.”As for his style and influence, they write: “…There is no doubt that Roland was a major and highly influential figure in his time, and his recorded output contains compositions which have become part of the repertoire of a host of younger musicians. …He was a highly accomplished pianist capable of playing in two distinct styles. The first employed a simple rolling boogie woogie bass, most often in the key of F, played in a variety of tempos. The second, less common barrelhouse style employed a stride piano bass of alternating octaves and chords, usually in the key of E. Throughout Roland’s work certain distinctive treble phrases emerge, and particularly striking is his use of repeated single note staccato triplets, foreshadowing the use of the same device by the post-war Chicago pianists.”

Early In The Morning No. 2 ('Bout The Break Of Day) Roland was born at Ralph, Tuscaloosa County, Alabama on 20 December 1902 (according to his Social Security documents) or 4 December 1903 (according to his death certificate). Roland was one of the most technically proficient of all blues pianists, and in addition he displayed considerable feeling in his playing and singing. He was also an able guitarist, and recorded several titles backing his own vocals and those of others, playing guitar. Roland was said to have been based in the 1920’s or 1930’s around Pratt City, near Birmingham, Alabama. Although his recording career began in 1933, it is evident that Walter was already an accomplished musician with a fully formed style. Roland partnered Lucille Bogan when they recorded for the ARC labels between 1933 and 1935, in the course of which, he recorded in his own right. Walter’s first disc, “Red Cross Blues” has since become a blues standard, versions having been recorded by Sonny Scott, Sonny Boy Williamson, Champion Jack Dupree, Robert McCoy, Forest City Joe, and many others. 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. His best-selling recording was “Early This Morning”, a reworking of an earlier Paramount recording by Charlie Spand, “Soon This Morning”, but Walter was successful enough to continue recording until 1935.

Lucille Bogan got off to a rather shaky start on her two 1923 sessions. The feisty, boisterous singing she became known for came into much better focus when she returned to the studio in 1927. As Tony Russell writes in the Penguin Guide To Blues: “Over the next few years she constructed a persona of a tough-talking narrator – ‘They call me Pig Iron Sally, ’cause I live in Slag Iron Ally, and I’m evil and mean as I can be,’ she sings in ‘Pig Iron Sally’ – who knew the worlds of the lesbian and the prostitute. She reports from the former in ‘Women Don’t Need No Men’ and ‘B.D. Woman’s Blues’, and the latter in ‘Tricks Ain’t Walking no More’ – best heard in the affectingly sombre version titled ‘They Ain’t Walking No More’ …and ‘Barbecue Bess.’ Other notable recordings are ‘Coffee Grindin’ Blues’ …and the first recording of ‘Black Angel Blues,’ which after a great change became a blues standard.” On these recordings she finds strong backing from pianists Will Ezell and Charles Avery. “…Thanks to the generally better sound quality and the ever sympathetic accompaniment of Walter Roland, her mid-30s recordings …are the most approachable. ”

At some later time, possibly as late as 1950, Roland became a farmer. Roland was reputedly playing guitar as a street singer in the 1960’s. As well as Birmingham, he worked around Dolomite and the Interurban Heights, around Brighton and elsewhere. In about the late 1960’s, Walter was trying to be a peacemaker in a domestic argument between a neighboring husband and wife and one of the disputing parties fired a shotgun, with the result that Walter was blinded by buckshot. By 1968, Walter had retired from music because of his blindness, and was cared for by his daughters at Fairfield, near Miles College. In 1968, he applied for an old age pension. He died there of bronchogenic carcinoma on 12 October 1972.

Cow Cow Davenport learned to play piano and organ in his father’s church from his mother who was the organist. Davenport’s early career revolved around carnivals and vaudeville. He toured TOBA with an act called Davenport and Company with blues singer Dora Carr and they recorded together in 1925 and 1926. Davenport didn’t cut a 78 record until 1927 although prior to that he made a number of piano rolls between 1925 and 1927 including three versions of “Cow Cow Blues.” Davenport briefly teamed up with blues singer Ivy Smith in 1928 and worked as a talent scout for Brunswick and Vocalion records in the late 1920’s and played rent parties in Chicago. They formed an act called the Chicago Steppers which lasted for some months and, in 1928, the partnership began to record for the Paramount Company.

Charlie Campbell: Goin' Away Blues Davenport moved to Cleveland, Ohio in 1930 and toured the TOBA vaudeville circuit and recorded with Sam Price. In 1938 Davenport suffered a stroke that left his right hand somewhat paralyzed and affected his piano playing for the rest of his life, but he remained active as a vocalist until he regained enough strength in his hand to play again. In the early 1940’s Cow Cow briefly left the music business and worked as a washroom attendant at the Onyx Club on 52nd Street in New York. In 1942 Freddie Slack’s Orchestra scored a huge hit with “Cow Cow Boogie” with vocals by seventeen year old Ella Mae Morse which sparked the Boogie-Woogie craze of the early 1940s; this led to a revival of interest in Davenport’s music. He tried to make a “comeback” in the forties and fifties but his career was often interrupted by sickness. He died in 1955 of heart problems in Cleveland.

Robert McCoy was born in 1912 in Aliceville, AL but raised on Birmingham’s North Side and by 1927 was a well-known local artist. Two of McCoy’s six brothers, Johnny an Willie, played piano and used to run around with the great Jabo Williams. Cow Cow Davenport and Pinetop Smith played at McCoy’s house whenever they were in town and had a profound influence on McCoy. In 1963 McCoy was recorded by Pat Cather, a teenaged Birmingham blues fan. Cather issued two albums on his Vulcan label: Barrelhouse Blues And Jook Piano and Blues And Boogie Classics. Both albums were cut in extremely small quantities and are very rare. Delmark has reissued some of this material on the CD Bye Bye Baby including some unreleased material. In 1964 Vulcan issued a couple of singles and the same year a couple of singles were issued on the Soul-O label (Robert McCoy and His Five Sins) with McCoy backed by an R&B band in an attempt to update his sound. In later years McCoy became a church Deacon. He passed in 1978. In 1983, McCoy was posthumously inducted into the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame.

Between March 3rd and April 7th 1937, ARC (The American Record Company) sent a mobile recording unit on a field trip firstly to visit Hot Springs, Arkansas and, then to Birmingham, Alabama in search of new talent that could be recorded on location instead of transporting the artists to their New York studio. Sometime between 18th and 24th March the unit arrived in Birmingham and, over a two week period set about recording a number of gospel and blues musicians. Among those were Charlie Campbell, Guitar Slim (George Bedford) and James Sherrill (Peanut The Kidnapper) all of whom were backed by the lively piano of Robert McCoy who did not record under his own name.

Jabo Williams was a highly talented pianist/vocalist hailing from Birmingham, Alabama. In the early 1930’s, north Alabama, including the mill towns of Birmingham and Huntsville, had a distinctive group of blues pianists including Walter Roland, Robert McCoy and Cow Cow Davenport. It’s not clear if he was discovered there or when he relocated to St. Louis. In St. Louis he may have been recommended to Paramount by local record store owner and talent scout Jesse Johnson. Paramount went out of business in 1932, the same year Williams recorded his eight records which were likely pressed in small quantities which makes them extremely rare. In the only known photograph of Williams he’s seen in a wide-brimmed hat and in the company fellow Birmingham pianist Robert McCoy. In St. Louis he was well remembered by pianist Joe Dean as a slim, medium-brown man who played piano in a pool hall on 15th and Biddle.

Pine Top Smith: Pine Top Blues As pianist/researcher Bob Hall notes, Williams was a “forthright, two-handed pianist in the barrelhouse tradition, who used mostly eight-to-the bar boogie bass patterns and highly individual treble phrases, including a characteristic coda with which he ended many of his pieces. ‘Ko Ko Mo Blues Parts 1 and 2’ has similarities to the later ‘Sweet Home Chicago’ and is a medium boogie with a lazy, slurred vocal. ‘Pratt City Blues,’ which is a different tune from the Chippie Hill title, refers to a suburb of the Ensley District of Birmingham. Both this boogie and the stride ‘‘Jab Blues’’ are outstanding instrumental compositions with a relentless drive. ‘My Woman Blues’ and ‘Polock Blues’ revert to medium boogie tempo, the latter taking its name from a part of East St. Louis. Williams shared a disregard of bar lengths with his fellow Birmingham pianist Walter Roland, who subsequently recorded another of Williams’ songs, ‘House Lady Blues.’ ‘Fat Mama Blues’ is a bawdy house song having a lyrical piano melody and an unusual bass line, ending with a characteristic Williams coda.” Williams’ records are in such rough shape and extremely rare, like “Ko Ko Mo Blues Parts 1 and 2”, (only two known copies) they are virtually unplayable.

Clarence “Pine Top” Smith first performed in public in Birmingham about the age of fifteen. He worked as a pianist at house parties in Troy, Alabama before moving on to Birmingham, where he sometimes worked with Robert McCoy. From around 1920 Smith was based in Pittsburgh, and the following years he traveled with minstrel and vaudeville shows as a dancer, singer and comedian. He traveled throughout the south where he worked with artists such as Butterbeans & Susie and Ma Rainey. He began to devote more of his energies to playing piano and, at the urging of Charles “Cow Cow.” In in interview with the Chicago Tribune pianist Cow Cow Davenport and Vocalion Records talent scout reported that he first saw Pinetop Smith in Pittsburgh “I happened to hit in Pittsburgh at the Star Theater on Wylie Avenue. … I went with a friend of mine to the Sachem Alley, and there I found Pinetop Smith.”

In an interview with Downbeat magazine in 1939, Smith’s wife Sarah Horton said that her husband first started playing “Pine Top’s Boogie Woogie” in Pittsburgh. Cow Cow Davenport recommended Smith to Mayo Williams of Brunswick/Vocalion records. Smith then moved with his family to Chicago in 1928. On December 29, 1928 Smith recorded his two breakthrough hits: “Pine Top Blues” and “Pine Top’s Boogie Woogie.” This was the first time the phrase “boogie woogie” appeared on record. On January 14 and 15, 1929 Smith recorded six more sides including “I’m Sober Now” and “Jump Steady Blues.” On March 13, 1929 Pine Top made an unissued recording of “Driving Wheel Blues.” Two days later, at age 25, Smith was accidentally shot by a man named David Bell during a fight that broke out in a dancehall.

 

Related Articles
-Harriot, Frank. “Cow Cow Davenport.” Ebony, 5, no. 9 (July 1950): 50.

-Cather, Pat. “Robert McCoy at the 27-28 Club.” Blues Unlimited no. 19 (February 1965)

-Calt, Stephen; Epstein, Jerome; Stewart, Michael. Bessie Jackson & Walter Roland, 1927–1935. USA: Yazoo L-1017, 1968.

-Smith, Francis Wilford; Hall, Bob; Noblett, Richard. Walter Roland, 1933–1935: Take Your Big Legs Off. UK: Magpie PY 4406, 1978.

-Hall, Bob; Noblett, Richard. “The Birth of the Boogie: I Want All of You to Know – Pine Top’s Boogie Woogie.” Blues Unlimited no. 133 (Jan/Feb 1979): 10–11.

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