Big Road Blues Show 2/4/24: Rough House Blues – Vocalion 1000 Series Favorites Pt. 2

ARTISTSONGALBUM
King Oliver & His Dixie Syncopators Snag It ew Orleans Blues 1923-1940
Irene Scruggs Home Town Blues Martha Copeland & Irene Scruggs 1927-1928
Edmonia Henderson Who's Gonna Do Your Lovin (When You Good Man's Gone Away) The Frog Blues & Jazz Annual No. 1
Rosa Henderson Rough House Blues (A Reckless Woman's Lament) Rosa Henderson Vol. 4 1926-1931
Kansas City Blues Strummers Broken Bed Blues African-American Fiddlers 1926-1949
Old Pal Smoke Shop Four Surprised Blues String Bands 1926-1929
The Pebbles Pebble Blues Hokum Blues 1924-1929
Blind Joe Taggart Take Your Burden To The Lord Been Listening All Day
Rev. Edward W. Clayborn Your Enemies Cannot Harm Blues Images Vol. 11
Furry Lewis Jelly RollBlues Images Vol. 19
Furry Lewis Good Looking Girl BluesBlues Images Vol. 11
Furry Lewis Billy Lyons and Stack O'LeeBlues Images Vol. 8
Henry Thomas Bob McKinneyTimes Ain't Like They Used To Be: Early American Rural Music. Classic Recordings Of The 1920’s And 30's. Vol. 2
Henry Thomas The Fox And The HoundsBefore The Blues Vol. 3
Henry Thomas Woodhouse BluesTexas Worried Blues
Henry Thomas Run, Mollie, RunBlues Images Vol. 20
Jim Jackson Jim Jackson's Kansas City Blues Pt.1The Roots Of It All Acoustic Blues, Vol 1
Jim Jackson Old Dog BlueAmerican Epic: The Collection
Jim Jackson I'm A Bad Bad ManJim Jackson Vol .1 1927-1928
Leroy Carr How Long, How Long BluesSloppy Drunk
Leroy Carr Low Down Dirty BluesSloppy Drunk
Scrapper Blackwell Kokomo BluesBlues From The Vocalion Vaults
Georgia Tom Grievin' Me BluesThe Essential
Tampa Red & Georgia TomDuck's Yas YasMusic Making In Chicago 1928-1935
Tampa Red & Georgia TomIt's Tight Like ThatMusic Making In Chicago 1928-1935
Pinetop Smith Big Boy They Can't Do ThatBoogie Woogie & Barrelhouse Piano Vol. 1
Lee Green Number 44 BluesThe Way I Feel: The Best Of Roosevelt Sykes And Lee Green
Cow Cow Davenport Chimin'The BluesThe Essential
Montana Taylor Whoop And Holler StompShake Your Wicked Knees
Bertha Chippie Some Cold Rainy DayBaby, How Can It Be?
Jenny Pope Whiskey Drinkin' BluesMaking Music In Chicago 1928-1935
Lil Johnson Rock That ThingLil Johnson Vol. 1 1929-1936
Stovepipe Johnson Don't Let Your Mouth Start Nothing Your Head Won't StandPiano Blues Vol. 4 1923-1928
Scrapper Blackwell Penal Farm BluesBad Liquor Blues
Kid Cole Sixth Street MoanCincinnati Blues
Jed Davenport How Long How Long BluesBlues Images Vol. 14
Jim Jackson Jim Jackson's Jamboree Part IJim Jackson Vol. 2 1928-1930

Show Notes:

Chicago Defender, December 3, 1927

Today’s show is something of a sequel to two shows we aired a couple of months ago: Decca 7000 Favorites Pt. 1 & 2. The background for these shows was taken from the book Vocalion 1000 & Brunswick 7000 Race Series By Helge Thygesen and Russell Shor. The Vocalion label started in late 1917 as Aeolian-Vocalion, a division of the Aeolian company which manufactured player pianos, organs and, later, phonographs. In 1919 they changed their name to Vocalion. Vocalion began recording race material in 1923, recording female singers such as Viola McCoy, Rosa Henderson and Hazel Myers who recorded for many other labels at the same time. Vocalion did not use a specific series for its race (or country) issues. Including them in its general 14000 series. In November 1924, the Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co. acquired Vocalion and merged the two operations.

The Vocalion 1000 race series started in May 1926. Based out of Chicago, it was headed by Jack Kapp who probably had assistance from Melrose Music Publishing and pianist/composer Richard M. Jones. At the beginning the label recorded quite a number of jazz artists including Sonny Clay’s Plantation Orchestra, King Oliver, Russell’s Hot Six, and Jelly Roll Morton. The race series was successful from the start, with hits by King Oliver, Duke Ellington and Fess Williams. In 1928 Vocalion made a turn towards a different style of blues, moving from the usual female stage singers who drifted from label to label to the rural blues and more urban blues, rural gospel singers and small combo South Side jazz. The impetus for the change was J. Mayo Williams, who Kapp brought in to manage the race catalog after he took control of operations for the main Brunswick operation. Williams had built the successful Paramount race catalog and wasted no time in transforming the Vocalion catalog, recording artists such as Furry Lewis, Henry Thomas and popular duos like Leroy Carr & scrapper Blackwell and Tampa Red & George Tom among many others. The changes brought quick success with several best-selling race hits by artists like Rev. Nix, Leroy Carr, Tampa Red & Georgia Tom and Pinetop Smith. The records were often advertised in the Chicago Defender. Brunswick-Balke-Collender sold its record division to Warner Brother Pictures in 1930 and Mayo Williams left soon after. The series ended in 1933.

In the first decade or so of the 20s the blues industry was dominated by female singers and Vocalion recorded some fine singers such as Rosa Henderson, Virginia Liston, Edmonia Henderson, Julia Davis among others. Rosa Henderson is a favorite of mine and was quite popular in her day, cutting some one hundred sides. She began her career about 1913 in her uncle’s carnival show. She played tent and plantation shows all over the South. During this period she married Slim Henderson, a great comedian and showman. She made her final recordings in 1931. Also many of her accompanists were of no mean status, including the complete Fletcher Henderson band, and such names as Coleman Hawkins, Charlie Green, Louis Metcalf, James P. Johnson, and countless others. Proof of her popularity with the record buying public was made clear by the number of titles released, and the only reason her recording career was cut short was the death of her husband. In 1963 Len Kunstadt tracked down Henderson and wrote a feature on her in Record Research magazine.

Chicago Defender, January 21, 1928

In the early 1920s, Viola McCoy moved to New York City, where she worked in cabarets. She toured the Theater Owners Bookers Association vaudeville circuit, and made numerous recordings between 1923–1929 for various labels including Gennett, Vocalion, and Columbia Records. Edmonia Henderson was active as a recording artist in the mid-1920’s, recording over two-dozen songs (some unissued) between 1924 and 1926. A couple of her records were advertised in the Chicago Defender.

Heard behind many of these singers is King Oliver. Oliver’s pungent, bluesy cornet playing can be heard on records by many blues singers. Oliver’s His own recordings including his landmark 1923 recordings with his Creole Jazz Band featuring his protege Louis Armstrong, clarinetist Johnny Dodds, trombonist Honore Dutrey, pianist Lil Harden, and drummer Baby Dodds. Oliver continued to make recordings through 1931 although he seemed to fade from the spotlight not long after his initial recordings. From May to December, 1928, Oliver did some 22 sessions with his old friend, Clarence Williams, who had played with him around Louisiana and who had managed clubs like the Big 25 and Pete Lala’s. Williams had become a music publisher, entrepreneur and early A&R man around New York. Seeing Oliver down on his luck, Williams used him as a backup player for several blues singers. Prior to 1928 Oliver had accompanied artists such as Butterbeans & Susie, Sippie Wallace, Teddy Peters, Irene Scruggs, Georgia Taylor, Texas Alexander, Victoria Spivey, Elizabeth Johnson.

Blind Lemon Jefferson was the first male artist to succeed commercially and his success influenced previously reluctant record companies to actively seek out and record male country blues players in the hope of finding a similar talent. Vocalion built a stable of of artists in this vein including Sam Butler AKA Bo Weavil Jackson, Henry Thomas, Jim Jackson, Furry Lewis and later with more urban blues singers like Tampa Red & Georgia Tom and Leroy Carr & Scrapper Blackwell.

Bo Weavil Jackson was a shadowy figure whose name may have been Sam Butler or James Butler or was it James Jackson?. He was a street singer from Birmingham, AL who was discovered by local talent scout Harry Charles. Jackson cut six sides for Paramount circa August 1926 and six sides for Vocalion in September 1926 where he recorded as Sam Butler. His material was a mix of blues and gospel and he was one of the first slide players to record.

Henry Thomas’ magnificent two-part 78 debut, “John Henry” b/w “Cottonfield Blues” was cut on July 1, 1927. Vocalion seemed to have had faith in this new artist issuing separate ads for both sides. In 1928 Thomas issued six sides with Vocalion placing four ads in the Chicago Defender. Henry Thomas, nicknamed “Ragtime Texas”, was born in 1874 in Big Sandy, Texas by most accounts, a town which lies roughly between Dallas and Shreveport. As Tony Russell wrote: “Flailing his guitar, in now forgotten country dance rhythms, whistling delicate melodies on his panpies, gruffly chanting rag songs and blues, Thomas is a figure of almost legend.”  The portrait Thomas presents on his twenty-three recordings cut for Vocalion between 1927 to 1929 provides, Russell notes, “a wholly absorbing picture of black-country music before it was submerged beneath the tidal wave of the blues.”

Born in Hernando, Mississippi in 1890, Jim Jackson took an interest in music early on, learning the rudiments of guitar from his father. By the age of 15, he was already steadily employed in local medicine shows and by his 20’s was working the country frolic and juke joint circuit, usually in the company of Gus Cannon and Robert Wilkins. After joining up with the Silas Green Minstrel Show, he settled in Memphis, working clubs with Furry Lewis, Gus Cannon, and Will Shade. The 1920s found him regularly working with his Memphis cronies, finally recording his best-known tune, “Kansas City Blues” and a batch of other classics by the end of the decade. He also appeared in one of the early talkies, Hallelujah!, in 1929.

Chicago Defender, September 14, 1929

Furry Lewis started performing on Beale Street in the late teens, where he began his career. Lewis’s recording career began in April 1927, with a trip to Chicago to record for the Vocalion label, which resulted in five songs. In October of 1927 Lewis was back in Chicago to cut six more songs. Lewis gave up music as a profession during the mid-’30s, when the Depression reduced the market for country blues. At the end of the 1950’s blues scholar Sam Charters discovered Lewis and persuaded him to resume his music career. Gradually, as the 1960s and the ensuing blues boom wore on, Lewis emerged as one of the favorite rediscovered stars of the 1930s, playing festivals, appearing on talk shows, and recording.

Between 1928 and 1935 the Leroy Carr & Scrapper Blackwell cut a remarkably consistent body of work of hundreds of sides notable for the impeccable guitar/piano interplay, Carr’s profoundly expressive, melancholy vocals and some terrific songs. Carr became one of the biggest blues stars of his day, composing and recording almost 200 sides during his short lifetime. Blackwell cut just over two-dozen sides under his own name between 1928 and 1935. He backed several other artists on record including Georgia Tom, Bumble Bee Slim, Black Bottom McPhail and Josh White among several others.

During his heyday in the 1920’s and 30’s, Tampa Red was billed as “The Guitar Wizard,” and his stunning slide work on steel National or electric guitar shows why he earned the title. His 25 year recording career produced hundreds of sides: hokum, pop, and jive, but mostly blues. n the 1920’s, having already perfected his slide technique, he moved to Chicago, Illinois, and began his career as a musician. His big break was being hired to accompany Ma Rainey and he began recording in 1928. In 1928 Whittaker, through the intercession of J. Mayo “Ink” Williams, teamed up with pianist Thomas Dorsey a. k. a. Georgia Tom and recorded the Paramount label hit “Tight Like That.” The success of “Tight Like That” prompted several other record other versions for Paramount, and initiated the blues genre known as hokum Early recordings were mostly collaborations with Thomas A. Dorsey, known at the time as Georgia Tom. Tampa Red and Georgia Tom recorded almost 60 sides, sometimes as “The Hokum Boys” or, with Frankie Jaxon, as “Tampa Red’s Hokum Jug Band”.

Scrapper Blackwell actually made his solo recording debut three day prior to his debut with Leroy Carr, on June June 16, 1928, cutting “Kokomo Blues b/w Penal Farm Blues.” “Kokomo Blues”, was transformed into “Old Kokomo Blues” by Kokomo Arnold and later reworked as “Sweet Home Chicago” by Robert Johnson. Blackwell cut more sides for Vocalion including two 78’s under his own name in 1928, the second pairing was “Trouble Blues – Pt. 1 b/w Trouble Blues – Pt. 2.” Several sessions from 1928 went unissued. In 1929 he cut “Mr. Scrapper’s Blues b/w Down And Out Blues” as well as playing with singer Bertha “Chippie” Hill.

Chicago Defender, January 19, 1928

Vocalion also dipped its toes in gospel, recordings notable artists such as Blind Joe Taggart, Rev. Edward W. Clayborn and Reverend D.C. Rice. Taggart made his first recordings in 1926, for the Vocalion label as Blind Joe Taggart. More sessions followed in 1927, 1928 and 1929. Taggart’s last commercial recordings were issued in 1934. He remarried in Chicago in 1943, and made a acetate for the Presto label in 1948 which has been reissued by John Tefteller. Practically nothing is known about Rev. Edward Clayborn who was the earliest guitar evangelist on record. He cut over two dozen numbers for Vocalion between 1926 and 1929, scoring a major hit in 1926 with “Your Enemies Cannot Harm You (But Watch Your Close Friends).” In March 1928 Rice made his first recordings for the Vocalion label in Chicago, and over the period until July 1930 he recorded a total of 28 sides.

There was plenty of piano blues on the label as well including many great records by Cow Cow Davenport, Pinetop Smith, Montana Taylor and Lee Green among others. Green was closely associated with Roosevelt Sykes and Little Brother Montgomery. He cut over forty sides between 1929 and 1937. Cow Cow and Smith have been featured often on the show and you can find background by doing a search.

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Big Road Blues Show 9/24/23: Hello Memphis, How Do You Do? – Memphis Piano Blues

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Judson Brown You Don't Know My Mind Blues Piano Blues Vol. 1 1927-1936
Mozelle Anderson & Judson Brown Tight In Chicago Barrelhouse Mamas
Charlie "Bozo" Nickerson & Judson Brown What's the Matter Now?, Pt. 3 Piano Discoveries: Newly Found Titles & Alternate Takes 1928-1943
Mose Vinson Mistreatin' Boogie The Sun Blues Box
Mose Vinson Worry You Off My Mind The Sun Blues Box
Mose Vinson 44 Blues The Sun Blues Box
Memphis Piano Red Standing At The Crossroads Blues at Home 4
Memphis Piano Red Memphis Blues Blues at Home 4
Memphis Piano Red Blues Like Showers of Rain Memphis Blues Caravan Volume II
Booker T. Laury DB Blues Nothin' But The Blues
Booker T. Laury Booker's Boogie Nothin' But The Blues
Sleepy John Estes & Jab Jones Broken Hearted, Ragged And Dirty Too Ivy Smith & Cow Cow Davenport 1927-1930
Sleepy John Estes & Jab Jones Poor John Blues Little Bother Montgomery: Vocal Accompaniments & Early Post-War Recordings 1930-1954
Mose Vinson Reap What You Sow The Sun Blues Box
Mose Vinson Bullfrog Blues The Memphis Blues Again Vol. 1
Van Hunt & Mose Vinson Jelly Selling Woman The Memphis Blues Again Vol. 2
Blind Clyde Church Number Nine Blues Piano Blues Vol. 1 1927- 936
Blind Clyde Church Pneumatic Blues Piano Blues Vol. 1 1927- 936
Memphis Piano Red Good Patuni Living Country Blues Vol. 4 Tennessee Blues
Memphis Piano Red Mr Freddy Living Country Blues Vol. 4 Tennessee Blues
Memphis Piano Red The Train Is Comnin' Living Country Blues USA - Introduction
Madelyn James & Judson Brown Long Time Blues Memphis Blues 1927-1938
Jenny Pope & Judson Brown Bull Frog BluesMemphis Jug Band Associates & Alternate Takes 1927-1930
Mose Vinson When You Got Rid Of My Mule The Devil's Music
Booker T. Laury Booker T.'s Memphis Blues Memphis Piano Blues Today
Hattie Hart w/ Johnny HodgesYou Wouldn't, Would You, Papa? Memphis Jug Band Vol. 2
Will Shade & Jab Jones Better Leave That Suff Alone Memphis Blues Vol. 3 1927-1930
Memphis Slim Caught The Old Coon At Last The Bluebird Recordings 1940-1941
Walter Miller, Willie Morris & Mose Vinson I Don't Care What You Do The Memphis Blues Again Vol. 2
Dewey Corley & Mose Vinson Rains All Night Tennessee Blues Vol. 2
Mose Vinson Hello Memphis, How Do You Do? Mr. Boogie Woogie
Memphis Piano Red Mobile Blues Mississippi Delta Blues Jam In Memphis, Vol. 1
Memphis Piano Red Goin' To St. Louis Tennessee Blues Vol. 1
Booker T. Laury Big Legged Woman Memphis Piano Blues Today
Mose Vinson How Long Blues Michael Hortig Field Recordings
Mose Vinson Mr. Freddie Blues (Santa Fe) Mr. Boogie Woogie

Show Notes: 

Mose Vinson, 1980

Today’s show is part of a recent installment of piano shows put together in conjunction with Austrian piano expert Michael Hortig. The first three shows were devoted to Texas and this time out we head to Memphis whose piano tradition is not as well documented on record. Unlike Texas, recordings of pre-war Memphis pianists are slim. From that period, we hear from Blind Clyde Church who waxed one 78 for Victor, Jab Jones who recorded with the Memphis Jug band and Yank Rachell and Sleepy John Estes, Johnny Hodges or Hardge who recorded behind Hattie Hart, Irene Scruggs and Sleepy John Estes and Judson Brown who cut one title under his own name and backed several fine blues ladies. From the post war era we hear from Mose Vinson who cut sides for Sun in the early 50s, a handful of sides in the 60s and more prolifically in the 70s through the 90s. John Williams AKA Memphis Piano Red cut some scattered sides in the late 60s and some field recordings in the 70s and 80s. Booker T. Laury was born in Memphis and grew up with his lifelong friend Memphis Slim. In the early 1930s, in the company of the younger Mose Vinson, Slim and Laury began playing in local clubs. Laury didn’t start recording until the 80s, cutting several albums through the 90s.

Judson Brown made one solo recording (“You Don’t Know My Mind Blues”), sharing the B-side of his only 78 with Freddie “Redd” Nicholson. He also backed several singers including Mozelle Anderson, Madelyn James, Charlie “Bozo” Nickerson, Jenny Pope and Mary Johnson. Bob Eagle notes that “Brown was from Georgia and merely passed through Memphis, ending up in Chicago, where he died in 1933. …He was presumably based at Chicago, Illinois, although his accompaniments to Jenny Pope and Charlie Nickerson may suggest affiliation with The Memphis Jug Band.” It’s been suggested he was the pianist behind Dan Stewart who cut “New Orleans Blues” in 1929 for Vocalion.

Memphis Piano Red, 1981

Jab Jones, on jug, piano and vocals, was a key member of the Memphis Jug Band. He played and sang on more than half of their recordings from 1928 to 1934, including lead vocals on several numbers. Jones made a few solo records as Jab Jones and His Jug Band and Poor Jab, and was a third of the Three J’s Jug Band with John Estes and James “Yank” Rachell, playing piano on classic records like “Diving Duck Blues” and “Milk Cow Blues.”

Blind Clyde Church recorded two titles for Victor in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1929. Bob Eagle states that Church was from Obion, TN and was living at New Madrid, MO, when he recorded in 1929. He died in St. Louis and is not known to have been in Memphis at any time apart from his recording session. Although he died in St. Louis, Piano Red told Michael Hortig that his widow was still around in 1980. Another shadowy pianist from Memphis is Johnny Hodges or Hardge who recorded behind Hattie Hart, Irene Scruggs and Sleepy John Estes.

Memphis Slim was born John Len Chatman, in Memphis, Tennessee. For his first recordings, for Okeh Records in 1940, he used the name of his father, Peter Chatman (who sang, played piano and guitar, and operated juke joints). Slim spent most of the 1930s performing in honky-tonks, dance halls, and gambling joints in West Memphis, Arkansas, and southeast Missouri. He settled in Chicago in 1939 and began teaming with the guitarist and singer Big Bill Broonzy in clubs soon afterwards. In 1940 and 1941, he recorded for Bluebird Records.

From the post-war era we hear from Mose Vinson, Memphis Piano Red and Booker T. Laury. Mose Vinson was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi. He taught himself to play the piano as a child. In his teenage years, he started playing his own style of barrelhouse boogie-woogie in juke joints in Mississippi and Tennessee. In the 1930s and 1940s, Vinson continued to play at local juke house and rural community parties. By the early 1950s, he was working as a custodian at the Taylor Boarding Home, where artists often stayed while recording next door at the Sun Records studio. Sun’s founder and producer, Sam Phillips, occasionally asked Vinson to accompany musicians in the studio. Vinson played there with James Cotton on “Cotton Crop Blues” (1954) and with Jimmy DeBerry on “Take a Little Chance”. Phillips also allowed Vinson to record some tracks of his own, but they were not released until the 1980s. After a period of lessened musical activity, by the early 1980s the Center for Southern Folklore had enlisted Vinson to perform at cultural events and at local schools. He became a regular at the Center, where he played and taught for twenty years. In 1990, his contribution to the album Memphis Piano Blues Today was recorded at his home. In 1997, his first full-length CD compilation album was released via the Center. Declining health stopped him playing not long before his death. Vinson died of diabetes in November 2002 in Memphis, at the age of 85.

The following on Memphis Piano Red comes from Begnt Olsson’s Memphis Blues and Jug Bands: “Born on 16 April 1905, in Germantown, Tennessee, on the border with Mississippi, John Williams grew up in a family of ten children; his parents were Josh and Anna Williams. Like most members of his race who are born albino, John was nicknamed ‘Red’. There was a piano in the Williams home, which his sister Louise could play, and he learned some tunes from her; the first was a ragtime piece, Strut Miss Lizzie. Among the pianists active in Germantown during John’s early years were Lillie Cornelius and Robert Watson, both of whom were blues players. The first blues ‘Red’ learned was Dupree Special. About 1920, he moved to Memphis, where he played at dances and parties; he also worked in other parts of the state, even up in the northeast. Using freight trains, he travelled all over the south, playing in hotels and scraping a living. …Red’ met many bluesmen on his travels. In Tunica, for instance, in the late ‘twenties, he saw Louise Johnson; then about twenty years old, a small girl, she used to play at a rough joint in the cotton-oil mill quarters. It’s been repotted that she went to Memphis, married and turned to church. One of her pieces was Four O’ Clock Blues.” He became acquainted with many outstanding pianist sin his travels and they each helped shape his style. After he was refused induction during World War II because of his eyesight he settled down to a job and wife but continued his weekend gigging with Barber Parker’s band from Tunica Ms., the Joy Jumpers, Woodrow Adams and his own trio that included Dewey Corley and Thomas “Beale Street” Coleman. His first recordings appeared on the anthology Memphis Swamp Jam recorded in 1969 and the same year he appeared on the Adelphi collection The Memphis Blues Again Vol. 2. In the 70s he was recorded extensively by Gianni Marcucci and in the 80s by Axel Küstner and Michael Hortig.

Booker T. Laury
Photo by Hans Maitner, Vienna, 1987

When blues pianist Eddie Boyd was interviewed in 1977, he was asked which piano players he had known in Memphis. Boyd had been there in the 1930s. He named Roosevelt Sykes, P. R. Gibson, “Hatcher”, Van Hook and “Struction”, and added: “And there was another cat named Booker T. they called Slop Jar. He was a heck of a piano player in those days.” Booker T. Laury was born in Memphis in 1914 and grew up with his lifelong friend Memphis Slim. At the age of six, after helping his mother play the family’s pump organ, Laury learned to play the keyboards. In the early 1930s, and in the company of the younger Mose Vinson, Slim and Laury began playing in local clubs. As he recalled: “When I become around 18 years old, my mother had passed, and I went to Beale Street. I went to Beale Street, that’s where I began my public appearance in – they called ’em then – road houses. Well these were crap houses. They had a policy number game there in Memphis then, you know, had a number game there just like the lotto game, and Italians run that town. It sold – up in the front, it was a café up in the front and in the back, ‘fore you get in the last section of it, they had a dance hall for the ladies and a piano and a bandstand in there. Sometimes the piano would be sitting down on the floor. We’d have sometimes a drum, maybe a saxophone or what you know you’d have to have with it we’d play there. … At my beginning I played all around all over the section, all down in Arkansas. I didn’t play too much in the city. They had guitars down there. They didn’t have too many piano houses in the city; they had them boys playing them guitars, different things, and I cornered up there where they had the piano joints in Missouri, Arkansas, that was famous for the piano playing and that’s where I’d stay then.”

In 1935, Roosevelt Sykes suggested to Laury and Slim that they relocate to Chicago, with a view to obtaining a recording contract. Slim took the advice, but Laury decided to remain in Memphis, where he played in gambling houses and clubs for decades. Laury recorded his debut album in his late sixties, entitled Booker T. Laury and Friends: Nothing but the Blues, released on the France-based record label, Blue Silver, in 1981. A 1980 Paris concert was released by Indigo Records in France in 1982. In 1994, Bullseye Blues Records issued Nothin’ but the Blues.  The same year, the Austrian label Wolf Records released a live album (Blues On the Prowl), containing concert recordings made in 1987. Laury died of cancer in September 1995, at the age of 81, in Memphis.

 

Related Articles
-Olsson, Bengt. “‘Red’ Williams: I Rode the Freights,” in Memphis Blues and Jug Bands, pp. 79–81. London: Studio Vista, 1970.

-Lornell, Christopher. “Mose Vinson.” Blues World no. 46/49 (1973): 14–15.

-Whiteis, David. “Back on Beale: Mose Vinson and the Kids are All Right.” Juke Blues no. 32 (Winter/Spring 1995): 32–34.

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Big Road Blues Show 9/6/20: 4th Street Mess Around – The Memphis Blues Pt. III


ARTISTSONGALBUM
Beale Street Sheiks You Shall The Best of Frank Stokes
Beale Street Sheiks It's A Good Thing American Epic: The Collection
Furry Lewis I Will Turn Your Money Green Furry Lewis 1927-1929
Furry Lewis Mistreatin' Mama Furry Lewis 1927-1929
Jim Jackson I Heard The Voice Of A Pork ChopSongsters & Saints Vol. 1
Jim Jackson This Morning She Was GoneWhen The Sun Goes Down
Jim Jackson What A TimeJim Jackson Vol. 2 1928-1930
Robert Wilkins Police Sergeant BluesMasters of the Memphis Blues
Robert Wilkins I'll Go With Her BluesMasters of the Memphis Blues
Robert Wilkins Get Away BluesMasters of the Memphis Blues
Will Shade Better Leave That Stuff AloneMemphis Masters:
Memphis Sanctified Singers He's Got The Whole World In His HandsMemphis Sanctified Jug Bands Vol. 1 1928-1939
Frank Stokes How Long The Best of Frank Stokes
Frank Stokes Take Me Back The Best of Frank Stokes
Frank StokesWhat's the Matter Blues The Best of Frank Stokes
Furry Lewis Furry's Blues Furry Lewis 1927-1929
Furry Lewis Cannon Ball Blues Furry Lewis 1927-1929
Memphis Jug Band K.C. MoanThe Best Of Memphis Jug Band
Memphis Jug BandCocaine Habit BluesThe Best Of Memphis Jug Band
Cannon's Jug Stompers Feather BedThe Best of Cannon's Jug Stomp
Cannon's Jug Stompers Viola Lee BluesThe Best of Cannon's Jug Stomp
Jenny Pope Tennessee Workhouse BluesMemphis Jug Band: Associates & Alternate Takes 1927-1930
Ollie Rupert I Raised my Window and Looked at the Rising SunMemphis Blues 1927-1938
Jack Kelly & His South Memphis Jug Band Red Ripe TomatoesMemphis Masters
Jack Kelly & His South Memphis Jug Band R.F.C. BluesRuckus Juice & Chitlins, Vol. 2: The Great Jug Bands
Hattie Hart Coldest Stuff In TownMemphis Blues 1927-1938
Hattie Hart I Let My Daddy Do ThatMemphis Masters
Memphis Jug Band Fourth Street MessAmerican Epic: The Best Of Memphis Jug Band
Memphis Jug Band Bumble Bee BluesMemphis Jug Band and Cannon's Jug Stompers
Memphis Jug Band Aunt Caroline Dyer BluesThe Best Of Memphis Jug Band
Memphis Minnie & Kansas Joe I’m Talking About You Memphis Minnie & Kansas Joe Vol. 2 1929- 1930
Memphis Minnie & Kansas Joe I’m Going Back Home Memphis Minnie & Kansas Joe Vol. 1 1929- 1930
Cannon's Jug Stompers Last Chance BluesThe Best of Cannon's Jug Stomp
Cannon's Jug Stompers Going To GermanyThe Best of Cannon's Jug Stomp

Show Notes:

4th Street MessFor today’s show we head to Memphis circa the 1920’s and 30’s. Memphis was was loaded with talented musicians, many of whom got the opportunity to make records. Way back in 2008 we did a show devoted to Memphis blues of the 20’s and 30’s but one show is not enough to capture the abundance of talent that got on record. Today’s show digs considerably deeper, as we investigate the Memphis blues over four programs.

In the notes to Yazoo’s Memphis Masters, Don Kent writes: “Of all the Southern cities that flourished with traditional blues in the period between the world Wars, none offered more dazzling diversity and top-drawer quality musicians than Memphis. …The size of Memphis, and the pool of talent on which it was able to draw, attracted record companies who sought salable talent to offer their customers. Beale Street, with it’s wide-open vice, gambling and barrelhouses, was an attraction in itself to the rural out-of-towner intent on a good time and, since the early 1900’s, a gathering place for musicians looking for work. There is a pronounced ragtime and country-dance flavor to Memphis blues, in addition to vaudeville, medicine show, jazz and pop influence as well as the different regional styles brought by musicians from other areas. Most of the musicians who established roots in Memphis knew each other, played together.”

Writing at the end of the 1960’s, researcher Begnt Olsson wrote: “Some years ago Beale Street was a rough, tough, gambling, whoring, cutting, musical, living street. Money was spent on cards, woman and whiskey. The liqueur and the music flowed in the many dives along Beale; ambulances howled; men and women were killed. Expensive cars were parked outside the gambling houses.” And as Will Shade recalled: “Beale Street, Memphis-there used to be a red light district, so forth like that. Used to be wide open houses in them days. You could used to walk down the street in days of 1900 and like that you and you could find a man wit’ throat cut from y’ear to ear. Also you could finds people lyin’ dead wit’ not their throat cut, money took and everything in their pockets, took out of their pockets and thrown outside the house. Sometime you find them with no clothes on and such as that. Sometimes you find them throwed out of winders and so forth, here on Beale Street. Sportin’ class o’ women runnin’ up and down the street all night long…git knocked in the head with bricks and hatchets and hammers. Git cut with pocket knives and razors and so forth.”

Memphis Jug Band AdBeale Street was created in 1841 by entrepreneur and developer Robertson Topp. In the 1870’s Robert Church purchased land around Beale Street that would eventually lead to his becoming the first black millionaire from the south. In 1890, Beale Street underwent renovation with the addition of the Grand Opera House, later known as the Orpheum. In 1899, Church paid the city to create Church Park at the corner of 4th and Beale. In the early 1900’s, Beale Street was filled with many clubs, restaurants and shops, many of them owned by African-Americans. In 1903, Mayor Thornton was looking for a music teacher for his Knights of Pythias Band and called Tuskegee Institute to talk to his friend, Booker T. Washington, who recommended a trumpet player in Clarksdale, Mississippi named W. C. Handy. Mayor Thornton contacted Handy, and Memphis became the home of the musician who created the “Blues on Beale Street.” In 1909, W. C. Handy wrote “Mr. Crump” as a campaign song for political machine leader E. H. Crump. The song was later renamed “The Memphis Blues” (we open our series of program’s with the Victor Military Band’s “The Memphis Blues” recorded on July 15, 1914). Handy also wrote a song called “Beale Street Blues” in 1916 which influenced the change of the street’s name from Beale Avenue to Beale Street.

Over the course of these show we dig deep into the music of several Memphis artists/bands who recorded prolifically including Frank Stokes, Furry Lewis, Jim Jackson, Robert Wilkins, Memphis Jug Band, Jack Kelly & His South Memphis, Cannon’s Jug Stompers and Memphis Minnie & Kansas Joe. According to researcher T. DeWayne Moore: “In the 1910s, Stokes often toured with Garfield Akers (as blackface songsters, buck dancers, and comedians) in the Doc Watts Medicine Show, which toured the South during the Great War. …While Stokes sometimes performed in the larger touring companies, such as the Ringling Brother’s Circus, informants more often associated him with the medicine shows that toured around the southern states. …In 1920, after almost a decade on intermittent tours with various medicine shows, Stokes came back to the Memphis area and started working in a blacksmith shop on the corner of Democrat Lane in the small hamlet of Oakville. …On Saturdays in Oakville, he’d play outside the J. J. Arnold Grocery Store, located in the heart of Oakville, where everyone was hanging out. According to his wife Lula: ‘If you was there on Saturday night you just couldn’t get through in no way! The place was crowded as could be…white folks too; they was crazy ‘bout Frank – called him lotsa times ‘cause they wanted him to play fer ‘em. [He] played all those foxtrots and waltzes for ‘em.'”

As Don Kent notes: “If there was any one person who epitomized Memphis blues, it would have to be Frank Stokes, whose diversified repertoire seemed to embody black rural music up to the point of his recording.” 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, either solo, with Dan Sane (as The Beale Street Sheiks) and sometimes fiddler Will Batts, Stokes recorded 38 sides for Paramount and Victor between 1927 and 1929.

Furry Lewis Better Leave That Stuff Alonestarted performing on Beale Street in the late teens, where he began his career. Lewis’s recording career began in April 1927, with a trip to Chicago to record for the Vocalion label, which resulted in five songs. In October of 1927 Lewis was back in Chicago to cut six more songs. Lewis gave up music as a profession during the mid-’30s, when the Depression reduced the market for country blues. At the end of the 1950’s blues scholar Sam Charters discovered Lewis and persuaded him to resume his music career. Gradually, as the 1960s and the ensuing blues boom wore on, Lewis emerged as one of the favorite rediscovered stars of the 1930s, playing festivals, appearing on talk shows, and recording.

Born in Hernando, Mississippi in 1890, Jim Jackson took an interest in music early on, learning the rudiments of guitar from his father. By the age of 15, he was already steadily employed in local medicine shows and by his 20’s was working the country frolic and juke joint circuit, usually in the company of Gus Cannon and Robert Wilkins. After joining up with the Silas Green Minstrel Show, he settled in Memphis, working clubs with Furry Lewis, Gus Cannon, and Will Shade. The 1920s found him regularly working with his Memphis cronies, finally recording his best-known tune, “Kansas City Blues” and a batch of other classics by the end of the decade. He also appeared in one of the early talkies, Hallelujah!, in 1929.

Robert Wilkins was another prominent Memphis bluesman who, like Lewis, was originally born in Mississippi but made his fame in Memphis. Wilkins’ early performing life included touring with small vaudeville and minstrel shows. In 1928, he met Ralph Peer of the Victor label and was invited to cut four songs. Vocalion recorded eight new songs the following year. In 1935 he cut four more sides for Vocalion and shortly afterwards joined the Church of God in Christ and became a minister. Wilkins was rediscovered in the 1960’s and performed and recorded gospel material along with the blues. In 1964 he recorded the wonderful Memphis Gospel Singer for the Piedmont label as well as a handful of other recordings.

The Memphis Jug Band was one of the most popular musical groups of the late 1920’s and early 1930’s and arguably the most important jug band in the history of the blues. Born in Memphis in 1894, Will Shade (also known as Son Brimmer) was the founder of the Memphis Jug Band. After performing around Memphis and touring with medicine shows for a few years, Shade formed the group in the mid-1920’s after being inspired by the records of the influential Louisville jug band, the Dixieland Jug Blowers. Between 1927 and 1934, the Memphis Jug Band made over some 80-odd sides for Victor, Champion, and OKeh, achieving considerable fame and commercial success. In addition to the sides cut under the Memphis Jug Band name, we also play sides by those who worked with the band, cutting sides under their own name but usually backed by members of the band. The group also worked with several female singers including Shade’s wife, Jennie Clayton, Minnie Wallace, Memphis Minnie and the magnificent Hattie Hart.

I Let My Daddy Do ThatSinger/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. 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.

Gus Cannon learned early repertoire in the 1890’s from older musicians, notably Mississippian Alec Lee. The early 1900’s found him playing around Memphis with songster Jim Jackson and forming a partnership with Noah Lewis, whose harmonica wizardry would be basic to the Jug Stompers’ sound. In 1914, Cannon began work with a succession of medicine shows that would continue into the 1940’s. His recording career began with Paramount sessions in 1927 cut under the name Banjo Joe and also made sides with Blind Blake. In 1928 he began recording as Cannon’s Jug Stompers, cutting over two-dozen sides with the group through 1930 for Victor. He returned in 1956 to make a few recordings for Folkways Records and made some college and coffee house appearances with Furry Lewis and Bukka White. In 1963 the Rooftop Singers had a hit with “Walk Right In” and in the wake of that recorded an album for Stax Records in 1963. He cut a few other scattered sides before his death in 1979.

For nearly 30 years Memphis Minnie was, along with Big Bill Broonzy and Tampa Red, was one of the giants of the Chicago blues scene. Between 1929 and 1953 she recorded some 200 sides for a variety of labels. When she was seven years old, the Douglas family moved to Wall, Mississippi, just south of Memphis. She began to run away to Memphis’ Beale Street with some regularity. Guitarists Frank Stokes and Furry Lewis…both provided advice and inspiration to Minnie in her early days in Memphis. Minnie’s duets with Kansas Joe drew as much inspiration from the guitar teamwork of Frank Stokes and Dan Sane, who recorded as the Beale Street Sheiks, as from her own early ‘partnership’ with Willie Brown.” Robert Wilkins also recalled Minnie from these days and recalls teaching her a few things. On Beale Street she played with local musicians such as Jed Davenport, the Memphis Jug Band and Jack Kelly. Her marriage and recording debut came in 1929, to and with Kansas Joe McCoy, when a Columbia Records talent scout heard them playing in a Beale Street barbershop. The duo’s relationship with Vocalion began in February 1930 and would last nearly a decade with a few interruptions waxing dates for Okeh, Decca and Bluebird.

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Big Road Blues Show 4/14/19: Come On Mama Do That Dance – Georgia Tom & Pals Pt. II

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Frankie Jaxon w/ Tampa Red & Georgia TomLong AgoGeorgia Tom Vol.1 1928-1930
Frankie Jaxon w/ Tampa Red & Georgia TomSelling That StuffMusic Making In Chicago 1928-1935
Frankie Jaxon w/ Tampa Red & Georgia TomIt's Tight Like That No.2Music Making In Chicago 1928-1935
Georgia TomLevee Bound BluesThe Essential
Georgia TomSix Shooter BluesGeorgia Tom Vol. 2 1930-1934
Georgia TomGee, But It's HardGeorgia Tom Vol. 2 1930-1934
Tampa Red & Georgia TomWhat You Gonna DoMusic Making In Chicago 1928-1935
Tampa Red & Georgia TomThe Duck's Yas-Yas-YasMusic Making In Chicago 1928-1935
Frankie Jaxon w/ Tampa Red & Georgia TomPat That BreadMusic Making In Chicago 1928-1935
Jenny Pope w/ Tampa Red & Georgia TomDoggin' Me Around BluesMusic Making In Chicago 1928-1935
Bertha "Chippie" Hill & Georgia TomSome Cold Rainy DayBaby, How Can It Be?
Tampa Red & Georgia TomWhat Is That Tastes Like Gravy?Music Making In Chicago 1928-1935
Tampa Red & Georgia TomBut They Got It Fixed Right OnYou Can't Get that Stuff No More
The Hokum BoysEagle Ridin' PapaGeorgia Tom Vol.1 1928-1930
The Hokum BoysRollin' Mill StompThe Essential
Frankie Jaxon w/ Tampa Red & Georgia TomI Wonder Where My Easy Rider's GoneMusic Making In Chicago 1928-1935
Frankie Jaxon w/ Tampa Red & Georgia TomCome On Mama Do That DanceHow Low Can You Go: Anthology Of The String Bass
Papa Too Sweet(Honey) It's Tight Like ThatRoots 'n' Blues: the Retrospective 1925-1950
Frankie Jaxon w/ Tampa Red & Georgia Tom Jive Man BluesMaking Music In Chicago 1928-1935
Frankie Jaxon w/ Tampa Red & Georgia TomSaturday Night ScrontchMaking Music In Chicago 1928-1935
Tampa Red & Georgia TomDon't Let Your Mouth Start Nothing Your Head Won't Stand The Essential
Tampa Red & Georgia TomFriendless BluesMaking Music In Chicago 1928-1935
Tampa Red & Georgia TomBlack Hearted BluesMaking Music In Chicago 1928-1935
Ma Rainey Black Eye BluesMother of the Blues
Ma Rainey Leaving This MorningMother of the Blues
Paramount All Stars Home Town Skiffle Pt.1, 2Blues Images Presents Vol. 6
Jim JacksonJim Jackson's Jamboree-Part IJim Jackson Vol. 2 1928-1930
Tampa Red & Georgia TomDead Cats On The LineMaking Music In Chicago 1928-1935
Tampa Red & Georgia Tom You Can't Get That Stuff No MoreMaking Music In Chicago 1928-1935
Tampa Red & Georgia Tom They Call It Boogie WoogieMaking Music In Chicago 1928-1935
Georgia Tom Talking Georgia Tom Vol. 2 1930-1934
Georgia Tom How About YouGeorgia Tom Vol. 2 1930-1934
Georgia Tom If You See My SaviourGeorgia Tom Vol. 2 1930-1934

Show Notes:

Read Liner Notes

As researcher Howard Rye wrote: “Notoriously, there are two Thomas A. Dorsey’s, one of them a profoundly religious man who after 1932 abandoned secular music completely for a career writing and performing gospel music. The other graduated from parties and dance halls in Atlanta, Georgia, in his mid-teens to a lengthy series of bawdy hokum recordings for the ‘Race’ labels of the late 1920s. Systematic presentation reveals that he had also a third persona, a gentle and introverted blues singer and pianist whose nostalgic tones bridge the gap between the other two. Dorsey himself denied any spiritual conflict. ‘When I was singing blues, I sang ’em, and l sang ’em with the spirit,’ he said.”

Thomas Dorsey is perhaps best known today as “the father of black gospel music.” Dorsey’s best-known composition, “Take My Hand, Precious Lord”, was performed by Mahalia Jackson and was a favorite of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr, while another composition, “Peace in the Valley has been performed by countless artists. Prior to devoting his life to gospel music, Dorsey was a major player on the early Chicago blues scene as a pianist, composer, arranger and singer on dozens of sessions when he was better known as Georgia Tom or Barrelhouse Tom. Stephen Calt wrote, in the liner notes to Georgia Tom Dorsey: Come On Mama Do That Dance, that Dorsey “probably ranked as the most self-conscious, serious and accomplished blues lyricist of his time. Far from debasing the medium, he raised the blues to new levels of inventiveness, and brought a degree of wit and sophistication that had never previously been known to blues lyrics.”

Thomas Andrew Dorsey was born the son of Reverend Thomas M. Dorsey and Etta Plant Spencer on July 1, 1899, in Villa Rica, Georgia. Apart from listening to his mother play the organ, Dorsey heard the blues guitar playing of Etta’s brother, Phil Plant. In 1908 the Dorsey family moved to Atlanta. Demoted several grades in school, Dorsey lost interest in his studies and directed his attention to learning the styles of local pianists who performed in the thriving theater scene along Atlanta’s Decatur Street. By age 12 he left school to become a professional pianist. At Decatur Street’s Eighty-One Theater-home to such visiting performers as Gertrude “Ma” Rainey and Bessie Smith-he sold soft drinks and popcorn during intermission and studied the talents of the establishment’s main pianist, Ed Butler. He also learned from pianists James Hennen-way (or Hemingway) and Lark Lee. Proficient at the keyboard at an early age, Dorsey began playing house parties throughout Atlanta’s black districts, including bordellos where he earned the nickname “Barrelhouse Tom.” Working in theaters and playing a variety of styles, Dorsey later explained to Michael Harris in The Rise of the Gospel Blues that at this “time I didn’t understand blues or nothing …. All of the music sounded just about alike to me…. I had become very popular with the younger set, or now you would say teenagers, and I lucked up on a few good-looking clothes.”

After settling in Chicago in 1916, Dorsey played the local house party circuit and by 1922 joined The Whispering Syncopators led by Will Walker. Around this time, while studying at the Chicago School of Composition and Arranging, Dorsey engaged in the lucrative trade of scoring and arranging music for syncopated society bands. Influenced by the commercial blues compositions of W. C. Handy, Dorsey found success in the song writing field in 1923 with his number “I Want a Daddy I Call My Own.” The number was recorded by singer Monette Moore, who subsequently recorded Dorsey’s “Muddy Water Blues.” In the same year, New Orleans trumpeter King Oliver recorded Dorsey’s “Riverside Blues.” As Michael Harris noted, in The Rise of Gospel Blues, “With one piece published by a large popular music company, and three recorded by two of the most famous artists of the time, Dorsey had become at last one of the major blues composers in Chicago. In little more than a year, Dorsey had risen from relative obscurity to a position of prominence.”

Hired by the Chicago Music Publishing Company, owned by Mayo Williams, Dorsey worked as composer, arranger, and studio pianist. In 1924, he was recruited as the accompanying pianist with Ma Rainey. The job also included the duty of assembling and leading the Wild Cats Jazz Band, Rainey’s back-up musicians. “I traveled with her almost four years.About 1922 or 23, up to 1927, ’28. And she was a natural drawing card, and she’s the ma of ’em all. …I wrote quite a few songs. There were several of ’em we wrote together, I can’t remember ’em all.” Dorsey was also on the road with singers Bertha “Chippie” Hill (the two made some recordings together) and Sara Martin. After attending church he experienced a spiritual healing that renewed his conviction in his worldly pursuits. Soon after, the sudden death of a neighbor inspired him to write one his most famous religious compositions, “If You See My Savior, Tell Him That You Saw Me.”

In need of a more reliable source of steady income, Dorsey ventured back into the composition and performance of blues. Shortly after Tampa Red’s 1928 debut he teamed up with Dorsey and had a massive hit with “It’s Tight Like That.” They were back in the studio cutting another version with Tampa Red’s Hokum Jug Band featuring Frankie Jaxon, cut another version with Papa Too Sweet and by the middle of January 1929 cut “It’s Tight Like That” No.2 & No. 3 as well as a solo instrumental version by Tampa. In November 1929 the Chicago Defender noted that “Everybody has heard ‘Tight Like That’ and everybody has danced to it. And lately a symphonic arrangement of the naughty blues number has been mad by Mel Stetzel, and the new arrangement is heard over the radio with increasing frequency. …The song…has already sold over 5000,000 records with Mr,. Dorsey’s original arrangements and words. Other record companies have used the theme with a totally different set of words, which almost cause the popular number to be banned because the words the other companies used were called ‘suggestive.'”

Red and Tom recorded throughout 1929, often employing Frankie Jaxon on vocals. Dorsey cut sides under his own name starting in September 1928, cutting close to fifty sides through 1932. Tampa played behind Tom on several of the numbers as did Scrapper Blackwell and Big Bill Broonzy. Dorsey was also the leader of a studio group who recorded as the Hokum Boys and the Famous Hokum Boys and cut some risque sides with singer Jane Lucas who recorded under various pseudonyms.

In the early 1960’s and again in the mid-1970’s, Dorsey, who should have known, if anyone still did, whose identity was concealed by “Kansas City Kitty”, told interviewers she was Mozelle Alderson. He also stated that Jane Lucas, who made a number of similar records in 1930 for Gennett’s Champion Iabel, was the same singer. As it is generally conceded that the singer who recorded in the same idiom earlier in 1930 for the American Record Company’s labels as “Hannah May” is the same person as Gennett’s Jane Lucas, these would also be by Mozelle Alderson. It was as Hannah May that she also did some songs with a studio group called the Famous Hokum Boys which consisted of Georgia Tom, Frank Braswell and Big Bill Broonzy. The group count over a few dozen sides together between 1930-1931.

In the 1920’s, having already perfected his slide technique, Tampa Red moved to Chicago and began his career as a musician. His big break was being hired to accompany Ma Rainey and he began recording in 1928. In 1928 Tampa, through the intercession of J. Mayo “Ink” Williams, teamed up with Georgia Tom and recorded the Paramount label hit “Tight Like That” a bawdy and humorous style that quickly caught on. The success of “Tight Like That” prompted several other record other versions for Paramount, and initiated the blues genre known as hokum. Early recordings were mostly collaborations with Georgia Tom. Tampa Red and Georgia Tom recorded almost 60 sides, sometimes as “The Hokum Boys” or, with Frankie Jaxon, as “Tampa Red’s Hokum Jug Band”. Tampa had actually met Georgia Tom several years earlier and Tom recalled those early years: “We played Memphis, I think Louisville, down to Nashville; we was down in Tennessee, or in Mississippi just across he line. We recorded in Memphis at the Peabody Hotel in 1929, and I left him down in Memphis and he got another week’s at the Palace Theater there. They liked him so well they hired him with just he and his guitar. …We played just anywhere. Party, theater, dance hall, juke joint. All black. See we wasn’t high-powered enough. Other fellows who were in the high music echelon got those jobs with the whites. The money was bigger up there.” Outside the studio Tom and Tampa worked together or separately joined sometime by their frequent studio partner, Frankie “Half Pint” Jaxon who primarily played the night clubs.

“It’s Tight Like That” was so successful, the pair took a promotional tour down south. “We went on the circuit,” Tom recalled, “went on down to Tennessee and Georgia. But I wasn’t much for traveling, I’d dome my traveling. My wife was gonna become a mother and that time and I didn’t want to be away.” Before Red recruited him as his partner, he’d been on the road with Ma Rainey, Chippie Hill and Sara Martin but had given up blues playing to write gospel songs. Unfortunately that didn’t pay the bills and ge was forced back into the blues business. His reluctance to travel found them playing around Chicago. “We played just anywhere, party, theater, dance hall, juke joint. All black. See, we wasn’t high-powered enough. Other fellows who were in the high music echelon go those jobs with the whites. The money was bigger there.” Dorsey took whatever session were offered. “You had to do that to get your money. We used to bootleg, go from record company to record company, change your name. It was the only way you could make any money, they didn’t pay much for ’em, so I dropped ’em.”

The pace of recording slowed down during 1930. Dorsey was increasingly involved with the Morning Star Baptist Church and then the Pilgrim Baptist Church, songwriting and directing choirs. “Tampa cried like a baby” when Dorsey announced he would play the blues no longer. ” I said, ‘Tampa, you go with me or I ain’t going no further. I’m losing money and I can’t live. I can’t eat and live with that.'” Their last session together took place in February 1932 but it was his wife’s death in childbirth in August that brought about his final decision to turn his back on the blues. Right after her death, he wrote Precious Lord. “A friend drove me (from St. Louis) to Chicago. When I got there the body was still there but they wouldn’t let me see. (But) there was a fine bouncing baby. And night the bay died. Precious Lord came out of that incident.”

He formed his own Thomas A. Dorsey Gospel Songs Publishing, and in 1932 became choir director at the Pilgrim Baptist Church in Chicago. He hung on with the blues a bit longer before breaking with completely. In 1932 he cut his first gospel numbers: “How About You b/w If You See My Saviour” followed by another gospel record in 1934. He recorded little after this, devoting his energies mainly to the publishing side of the business.He did cut one MGM 78 in March 1953. Dorsey founded the first black gospel music publishing company, Dorsey House of Music. He also founded a gospel choir and was a founder and the first president of the National Convention of Gospel Choirs and Choruses. He continued to preach and sing well into the 1980’s.He was featured in the 1982 documentary Say Amen, Somebody. He passed in 1993.

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-Anon. “King of the Gospel Song Writers.” Ebony 17 (Nov 1962): 122–127.

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