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 1/28/24: Don’t Let Your Mouth Start Nothing Your Head Won’t Stand – Vocalion 1000 Series Favorites Pt. 1

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Sammie Lewis & His Bamville Syncopators Hateful Papa Blues Rare 1920s Blues & Jazz 1923-1929
Rosa Henderson Chicago Policeman Blues Rosa Henderson Vol. 4 1926-1931
Viola McCoy South Street Blues Viola McCoy Vol. 2 1924-1926
Teddy Peters Georgia Man Female Blues Singers Vol. 12 1922-1935
Virginia Liston Evil Minded Blues Virginia Liston, Vol. 2 1924-1926
Edmonia Henderson Dead Man Blues Blues From The Vocalion Vaults
Sam Butler Poor Boy Blues Guitar Wizards 1926-1935
Sam Butler Jefferson County Blues The Voice Of The Blues: Bottleneck Guitar Masterpieces
Henry Thomas Cottonfield Blues Texas Blues: Early Masters From the Lone Star State
Henry Thomas John Henry Blues Images Vol. 19
Henry Thomas Red River BluesThe Roots Of Robert Johnson
Florence Lowery Poor Girl Blues Female Blues Singers Vol. 11 1921-1931
Luella Miller Walnut Street BluesLuella Miller 1926-1928
Margaret Whitmire & Arnold Wiley T'Aint A Cow In TexasBarrelhouse Mamas
Furry Lewis Big Chief BluesBlues Images Vol. 9
Henry Thomas Run, Mollie, RunBlues Images Vol. 20
Tampa Red What Is It That Tastes Like Gravy?Bottleneck Guitar 1928-1937
Tampa Red's Hokum Jug Band Come On Mama Do That DanceHow Low Can You Go: Anthology Of The String Bass
Tampa Red's Hokum Jug Band I Wonder Where My Easy Rider's GoneHow Low Can You Go: Anthology Of The String Bass
Jasper Taylor Blues Band w/ Julia Davis Jasper Taylor BluesJohnny Dodds 1927-1928
Punch Miller & Albert Wynn Down By The LeveePunch Miller & Albert Wynn 1925-1930
Lee Green All My Money Gone BluesThe Way I Feel: The Best Of Roosevelt Sykes
Cow Cow Davenport Cow Cow BluesThe Essential
Bert Mays You Can't Come InPiano Blues, Vol. 20: The Barrelhouse Years
Pinetop Smith Pinetop's BluesPiano Blues, Vol. 20: The Barrelhouse Years
Bertha "Chippie” Hill Weary Money BluesBertha 'Chippie' Hill Vol. 1 1925-1929
Georgia Tom Long Ago
Georgia Tom Vol. Vol. 1 1928-1930
Tampa Red & Georgia Tom Jelly Whippin' BluesMusic Making In Chicago 1928-1935
Henry Thomas Texas Worried BluesTexas Worried Blues
Henry Thomas Fishing BluesTexas Worried Blues
Henry Thomas Bull Doze BluesAmerican Epic: The Collection
Scrapper Blackwell Be-Da-Da-BumBlues That Make Me Cry
Leroy CarrStraight Alky Blues (Part 1)Sloppy Drunk
Leroy CarrNaptown Blues Sloppy Drunk
Reverend D.C. Rice & His Sanctified Congregation I'm In The Battlefield For My LordHow Low Can You Go: Anthology Of The String Bass

Show Notes:

Chicago Defender, July 27, 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, June 30, 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, August 10, ,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, April 13, 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 1/16/22: Jazzin’ the Blues Pt. II – Throw Me in The Alley


ARTISTSONGALBUM
Texas Alexander w/ King Oliver 'Frisco Train Texas Alexander & His Circle 1927-1951
Elizabeth Johnson w/ King Oliver Empty Bed Blues, Pt. 2Roots 'n' Blues: the Retrospective 1925-1950
Oliver Cobb The Duck's Yas Yas YasMale Blues of the Twenties Vol. 1
Bessie Smith w/ Louis Armstrong St. Louis BluesThe Complete
Butterbeans & Susie w/ Louis Armstrong He Likes It SlowLouis Armstrong and the Blues Singers: 1924-1930
Harlem Hamfats She's a Mellow Mother for YouMasters Of Jazz & Blues 1936-1944
Albert Wynn w/ Punch Miller & His Gut Bucket Five Down By The Levee Punch Miller & Albert Wynn 1925-1930
Jimmy Wade & His Dixielanders w/ Punch MillerGates Blues Punch Miller & Albert Wynn 1925-1930
Frankie "Half-Pint" Jaxon w/ Punch MillerDown Home in Kentucky Punch Miller & Albert Wynn 1925-1930
Ida Cox Blue Kentucky Blues The Essential
Victoria Spivey Telephoning the BluesWhen the Sun Goes Down
Elzadie Robinson w/ Johnny Dodds & Blake Blake Elzadie's Policy BluesParamount Jazz
Blind Blake w/ Johnny Dodds Hot Potatoes All The Published Sides
Genevieve Davis Haven't Got A Dollar To Pay Your House Rent Man When the Sun Goes Down
Hazel Meyers I'm Every Man's MamaHazel Meyers Vol. 1 1923-1924
Martha CopelandI Ain't Your Hen Mister Fly RoosterMartha Copeland Vol. 2 & Irene Scruggs 1927-1928
Irene Scruggs w/ King Oliver Home Town Blues Vocalion & Brunswick Recordings
Alberta Hunter w/ Louis Armstrong Texas Moaner BluesLouis Armstrong and the Blues Singers: 1924-1930
Edith Wilson & Johnny Dunn He Used To Be Your Man But He's My Man NowJohnny Dunn Vol. 2 1922-1928
Peetie Wheatstraw Gangster's Blues Peetie Wheatstraw Vol. 7 1940-1941
Peetie Wheatstraw & His Blue Blowers Throw Me In The Alley Folks, He Sure Do Pull Some Bow! Vintage Fiddle Music 1927-1935
Alberta Hunter Chirping The Blues Charlie Shavers & The Blues Singers 1938-1939
Grant & WilsonToot It, Brother Armstrong Charlie Shavers & The Blues Singers 1938-1939
Rosetta Howard & The Harlem Blues SerenadersMy Blues Is Like Whiskey Charlie Shavers & The Blues Singers 1938-1939
State Street Swingers w/ Washboard SamOh Red!State Street Swingers 1936-1937
Washboard Sam Market Street SwingWashboard Sam Vo. 7 1942-1949
Big Bill Broonzy Big Bill’s BoogieBig Bill Broonzy Vol. 12 1945-1947
Bertha "Chippie" Hill w/ Louis Armstrong Do Dirty Blues I Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 2
Bertha "Chippie" Hill How Long Blues Jazzin' The Blues 1943-1952
Helen Humes Unlucky Woman BluesSammy Price And The Blues Singers
Hot Lips Page Thirsty Mama Blues Hot Lips Page : On The Blues Side 1940-1950
Lee Brown with his Washboard Band My Little GirlJazzin' The Blues 1936-1946
Anna Bell w Clarence Williams & His Orchestra Kitchen Woman Blues Clarence Williams & The Blues Singers Vol. 1 1923-1928
Rosa Henderson Papa, If You Can't Do Better The Essential
Mamie Smith Goin' Crazy With The BluesThe Essential Mamie Smith

Show Notes:

Throw Me In The AlleyToday show is a belated sequel to a show I aired quite some time ago called Jazzin’ The Blues. As the title suggests, we explore the jazzy side of early blues recordings and the bluesy side of jazz. While listeners may know me as the “blues guy”, friends know that I am a massive jazz fan as well. Not surprisingly we play a number of women blues singers of the 1920’s who were often backed by jazz bands. When Mamie Smith cut “Crazy Blues”, the first recorded blues by a black singer, her band was called the Jazz Hounds. Following in that tradition, singers like Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey and Victoria Spivey were often paired with topflight jazz musicians such as King Oliver, Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet, Johnny Dodds, Coleman Hawkins and others. As the era of the classic woman blues singers faded the men gained the spotlight, first playing and singing solo, then evolving to bigger bands that often included horns and elements of jazz and swing. Many of the jazz outfits of this period incorporated plenty of blues and today we hear the bluesier side of artists such as Louis Armstrong, Hot Lips Page, Charlie Shavers, Punch Miller and others.

Throughout today’s backing band are quite a few jazz luminaries who backed the classic blues ladies of the 1920’s. We spin several sides today featuring King Oliver and Louis Armstrong. King Oliver made his landmark recordings in 1923 with his Creole Jazz Band. 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 in 1924 (“Kiss Me Sweet b/w Construction Gang”), Sippie Wallace in 1925 (“Morning Dove Blues b/w “Every Dog Has His Day” and “Devil Dance Blues”), Teddy Peters (“Georgia Man”), Irene Scruggs (“Home Town Blues b/w Sorrow Valley blues”), Georgia Taylor in 1926 (“Jackass Blues”) plus several others. His two numbers with Texas Alexander, “Tell Me Woman Blues b/w Frisco Train Blues,” work surprising well with Oliver playing some beautiful, sympathetic fills on both numbers offset by the elegant guitar work of Eddie Lang. Among the best recordings from this period are his backing of the terrific Elizabeth Johnson, an obscure singer who waxed only four sides at two session in 1928. “Empty Bed Blues Part 1 & 2” has Johnson’s expressive vocals finding a marvelous counterpoint in Oliver’s earthy responses.

Empty Bed BluesIn the early 1990’s the Affinity label issued Louis Armstrong and The Blues Singers 1924-1930, a six CD set that I believe covers all the sessions Armstrong did backing blues singers. During 1924-26 (and to a lesser extent 1927-30) Armstrong made many recordings other than his own sessions, arranged by an old friend from New Orleans, pianist Clarence Williams Those he backed include some of the era’s best woman blues singers like a Ma Rainey, Sippie Wallace, Bertha “Chippie” Hill, Bessie Smith, Clara Smith and Victoria Spivey.

Coming at the intersection of jazz and blues are sides featuring Albert Wynn, Punch Miller and singer Frankie ‘Half Pint’ Jaxon. Trombonist Albert Wynn first recorded for OKeh in 1926 and again in 1928 with Punch Miller on Cornet. Miller takes the vocal on today’s track we heard, “Down By The Levee”, “Gates Blues” and Miller turns up again on Frankie ‘Half Pint’ Jaxon & Punches Delegates of Pleasure’s “Down Home In Kentucky.” Jaxon, who also worked as a female impersonator, a pianist-singer, and a saxophonist, was mostly in Chicago during 1927-1941, a period when he made many recordings. In 1930 he formed the Quarts of Joy and he often appeared on the radio in the ’30s. Half Pint Jaxon’s recordings as a leader (which date from 1926-1940) include such sidemen as washboardist Jasper Taylor, pianist Georgia Tom Dorsey, banjoist Ikey Robinson, cornetist Punch Miller, the Harlem Hamfats (1937-1938), clarinetist Barney Bigard, pianist Lil Armstrong, and trumpeter Henry “Red” Allen.

Hot Potatoes

Johnny Dodds was one of the greatest clarinetist of the 1920’s who had a very soulful, bluesy style of playing. He worked with most of the major Hot Jazz bands of the era including the bands of Kid Ory, King Oliver and Louis Armstrong. Dodd’s appears on several of today’s recordings including those with Keppard, Armstrong, as a member of Jasper Taylor’s Original Washboard Band, backing Sippie Wallace on the 1929 version of her classic “I’m A Might Tight Women” and backing guitarist Blind Blake.  We hear Dodds backing singer Julia Davis who cut one 78 for Paramount in 1924 and one final terrific record in 1928, “Jasper Taylor Blues b/w Geechie River Blues”, backed by the Original Washboard Band featured washboard player Jasper Taylor.

During the spring of 1928 Blind Blake cut some of his most ambitious records. Jimmy Bertrand manned xylophone for “Doggin’ Me Mama Blues” and played slide whistle on our featured track,  “C.C. Pill Blues” while the great Johnny Dodds soloed on clarinet. Dodds and Bertrand provided more accompaniment on Blake’s “Hot Potatoes” and “South Bound Rag.” Bertrand, Dodds, and Blake were also teamed on “Elzadie’s Policy Blue b/w Pay Day Daddy Blues” with singer Elzadie Robinson.

We hear from several fine blues ladies backed by fine jazz accompaniment such as Hazel Meyers, Bertha “Chippie” Hill , Rosa Henderson, Martha Copeland among others. Hazel Meyers cut 34 sides between 1923 and 1926often back by major jazz singers such as Fletcher Henderson, Bubber Miley, Don Redman, Fats Waller among others. Martha Copeland also waxed 34 sides for OKeh, Columbia and Victor between 1923 and 1928.

Bertha “Chippie” Hill began her career as a dancer in Harlem and by 1919 was working with Ethel Waters. At age 14, during a stint at Leroy’s, a noted New York nightclub, Hill was nicknamed “Chippie” because of her youth he also performed with Ma Rainey as part of the Rabbit Foot Minstrels. She later established her own song and dance act and toured on the TOBA circuit in the early 1920s. About 1925, she settled in Chicago, where she worked at various venues with King Oliver’s Jazz Band. She first recorded in November 1925 for Okeh Records, backed by the cornet player Louis Armstrong and the pianist Richard M. Jones. Be teween 1925 and 1929 she recorded 23 titles. In the 1930s she retired from singing to raise her seven children. Hill staged a comeback in 1946 with Lovie Austin’s Blues Serenaders, and recorded for Rudi Blesh’s Circle label. She began appearing on radio and in clubs and concerts in New York, including in 1948 the Carnegie Hall concert with Kid Ory, and she sang at the Paris Jazz Festival, and worked with Art Hodes in Chicago. She was back again in 1950, when she was run over by a car and killed in New York at the age of 45.

Rosa Henderson is a favorite of mine and was quite popular in her day, cutting some one hundred sides between 1923 and 1931. She began her career about 1913 in her uncle’s carnival show. She played tent and plantation shows all over the South. Her accompanists included the complete Fletcher Henderson band, and such names as Coleman Hawkins, Charlie Green, Louis Metcalf, James P. Johnson, and countless others.

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Big Road Blues Show 10/3/21: Mix Show

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Muddy Waters Nobody Knows Chicago Like I Do Muddy Waters: The Montreux Years
Muddy Waters Trouble No More Muddy Waters: The Montreux Years
Muddy Waters Can't Get No Grindin' Muddy Waters: The Montreux Years
Bessie Smith Black Mountain Blues The Complete Recordings
Rosa Henderson Rough House Blues (A Reckless Woman's Lament) Rosa Henderson Vol. 4 1926-1931
Blind Willie McTellTalkin' to You Wimmen About the Blues Blues Images Vol. 5
Clara Smith & Lonnie Johnson You're Gettin' Old on Your JobThe Essential
Robert Wilkins That's No Way to Get Along Blues Images Vol. 7
Rev. Robert Wilkins Thank You, Jesus Memphis Gospel Singer
Clifford Gibson Jive for Me BluesClifford Gibson 1929-1931
Sleepy John Estes Easin' Back to TennesseeJailhouse Blues
Charley JordanYou Run and Tell Your Daddy The Essential
William Harris Hot TimeAmerican Primitive Vol. II:
Buddy GuyI Got A Strange FeelingComplete Chess Recordings
Andrew ''Big Voice'' Odom Take Me Back to East St LouisFarther Up The Road
Roy Brown Hard Times Hard Times
Muddy Waters Rollin' and Tumblin' Muddy Waters: The Montreux Years
Muddy Waters Electric Man Muddy Waters: The Montreux Years
Charley Patton & Bertha Lee Oh DeathPrimeval Blues, Rags, and Gospel Songs
Brother Son Bonds and Hammie Nixon I Want to Live So God Can Use Me
Blues Images Vol. 12
Dennis Crumpton & Robert Summers Everybody Ought to prayAmerican Primitive Vol. I
B.B. King Why I Sing The Blues Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! (40th Anniversary)
B.B. King That's Wrong Little Mama Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out! (40th Anniversary)
Charlie Booker Rabbit BluesThe Modern Downhown Blues Sessions Vo. 1
Woodrow Adams & The Three B's Last TimeSun Blues Box
Howlin' Wolf Well That's AlrightSun Blues Box
George Carter Ghost Woman BluesBlues Images Vol. 11
Barbecue Bob Black Skunk BluesBefore the Blues Vol. 3
Mae Glover & John Byrd I Ain't Givin' Nobody NoneI Can't Be Satisfied Vol 1
John Dudley Po' Boy Blues Downhome Blues 1959
Mississippi Fred McDowell Fred McDowell's Blues Downhome Blues 1959
T-Bone Walker & Muddy Waters She Says She Loves Me Blues Avalanche
Muddy Waters Feel Like Goin' Home One More Mile

Show Notes:

Muddy Waters: The Montreux YearsOn our last mix show we spotlighted a new live Muddy Waters release and on today’s show we have another one to feature as well as some other related Muddy tracks. In addition we hear a batch of superb blues ladies, a pair of tracks by Robert Wilkins and B.B. King, several sets of fine pre-war blues and gospel, some superb blues singers and some tough down-home blues, plus much more.

On our last mix show we played the entirety of a never-before-heard recording of Muddy Waters captured in 1954 live in Los Angeles. This marked the earliest live recording of Muddy if we’re not counting his first records which were field recordings done in Mississippi in 1941-1942 by Alan Lomax. Today we spotlight several tracks from the new collection Muddy Waters: The Montreux Years. Waters performed three legendary concerts at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1972, 1974 and 1977. Each of these historic concerts were recorded. The Montreux Years bring together all these recordings for the first with many unheard since the original recording. The Montreux Jazz Festival has taken place for two weeks every summer in Switzerland on the shores of Lake Geneva since 1967. In addition we spin a track with Muddy and T-Bone Walker. This track comes from the double album Blues Avalanche which features blues tracks from the 1972 Montreux Jaz Festival. We close the show with “Feel Like Goin’ Home” which comes from a fantastic drummer-less acoustic session recorded at a Swiss radio broadcast from 1972 during the time Muddy and the band performed at the festival.

We hear from several tough blues ladies today including Bessie Smith, Rosa Henderson plus some duets by Mary Willis and Blind Willie McTell and Clara Smith and Lonnie Johnson. “Black Mountain Blues” is a striking song by Bessie from 1930 that’s worth quoting the first two stanzas and the concluding one:

Back in Black Mountain, a child will smack your face
Babies cryin’ for liquor, and all the birds sing bass

Black Mountain people are bad as they can be
They uses gunpowder just to sweeten their tea

 Got the devil in my soul, and I’m full of bad booze
I’m out here for trouble, I’ve got the Black Mountain blues

Blues AvalancheIn 2007 John Tefteller issued what is apparently the only known copy of Blind Willie McTell and Mary Willis’ “Talkin’ To You Wimmen’ About The Blues.” The track and it’s flip side, “Merciful Blues”, was issued on the CD that accompanies Tefteller’s 2008 blues artwork calendar. To quote Tefteller: “the record…[Talkin’ To You Wimmen’ About The Blues] apparently has not been heard by anyone since its release back in the late fall of 1931. I have had this record in my collection for almost ten years. I had no idea that it was potentially a one-of-a-kind record!…Late last year, legendary Blues reissue producer Larry Cohn called me about his upcoming Blind Willie McTell box set. He told me he would like to borrow certain records from my collection…I sent him a list of what I had. To my amazement, he called immediately with the comment, “I’ve never heard the Mary Willis record!” Apparently, there is no master in the Columbia vaults. Cohn is aware of no other copy of the record anywhere. Finding this hard to believe, I started calling “all the usual suspects” and sure enough, none of them had the record or had ever heard it.”

We spin two tracks from Robert Wilkins recorded almost forty years apart. In late September 1929 Wilkins journeyed to the Peabody Hotel in Memphis to record his classic “That’s No Way to Get Along” for Brunswick, as well as “Falling Down Blues,” the ragtimey “Alabama Blues,” and downhome “Long Train Blues.” At his final Brunswick session the following February, he cut “Nashville Stonewall Blues”, Police Sergeant Blues”, “Get Away Blues” and “I’ll Go With Her Blues.” Five years elapsed before, as Tim Wilkins, in the company of Son Joe and “Kid Spoons”, he recorded five titles for Vocalion, including “New Stock Yard Blues” and “Old Jim Canan’s.” The following spring Wilkins gave up playing guitar after witnessing unnerving violence at a house party. Around 1964 Dick Spottswood, who had been instrumental in finding Mississippi John Hurt and Skip James a few before, set out to track down Robert Wilkins. After finding Wilkins he brought him up to Washington D.C. to record the album Memphis Gospel Singer for his Piedmont label.

1929 Brunswick Ad; Source: Blues Images Vol. 7 (2010)

We spin two tracks today from B.B. King. These recordings come from the 40th anniversary deluxe box set of the Rolling Stones’ Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out!. The original album was release in September 1970. In November 2009, the album was reissued with unreleased songs by the Rolling Stones but also by opening acts B.B King and Ike & Tina Turner. One of the tracks, “Why I Sing The Blues”, was brand new, having being released by Bluesway that same year. There’s also a fine version of this in the documentary Summer of Soul captured in the summer of 1969. If you haven’t see the film I highly recommend it.

We play several sets of excellent pre-war blues including a set of twelve-string guitar players such as George Carter, Barbecue Bob and John Byrd who backs Mae Glover. In the he 19th and early 20th century twelve-strings were regarded as “novelty” instruments. It was not till the 1920’s and the 1930’s that 12-string guitars became a major part of blues and folk music, where their sound made them ideal as solo accompaniment for vocalists such as Lead Belly and Blind Willie McTell. The first recording of a male country blues singer seems to have been by a twelve-string guitarist called Ed Andrews who was recorded for Okeh in Atlanta in March or April 1924. However, in the history of the blues, artists who played the 12-string as their primary instrument were relatively few. For some reason Atlanta was the home of several 12-string players including Blind Willie, Barbecue Bob, Charlie Hicks, Julius Daniels, Willie Baker and George Carter. Other 12-string players featured today include Freddie Spruell, Uncle Bud Walker, Too Tight Henry, John Byrd and some exceptional performances by Lonnie Johnson among others.

John Dudley
John Dudley, Parchman Farm, 1959. Photo by Alan Lomax.

 

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

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

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

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

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

We hear some superb down-home blues including a trio who recorded for Sun Records: Charlie Booker, Woodrow Adams  and Howlin’ Wolf. We also spin two numbers in 1959 by John Dudley and Mississippi Fred McDowell. Booker learned to play guitar from his uncle, who had played with Charley Patton. Booker stated that as a child he saw Patton perform near Indianola, Mississippi. I wonder if John Dudley knew Patton? Between October 7, and the 9th of 1959 (the exact date is unclear), Lomax recorded an inmate named John Dudley in the “Dairy Camp” portion of the Mississippi prison camp known as Parchman Farm. At the time of these recordings, he was supposedly 50 years old and serving the last months of his sentence. As Lomax later wrote: “Lastly, in John Dudley’s blues, we meet a country musician of the sophisticated, yet completely folk, tradition of the 1930’s. Dudley and Robert Johnson both come from Tunica County, Mississippi and belong to the same school.” In all six songs were recorded (two songs have two takes) and a short interview. The reel-to-reel box from the original recordings has survived and the note on the box is fascinating and indicates Dudley was interviewed more in-depth: “John Dudley comes from Tunica County, knew Robt. & Son House, Muddy Waters. Played for country dances…” One can assume that the “Robt.” in question is Robert Johnson, given Lomax’s investigations into that artist. In fact Dudley’s version of “Big Road Blues” has lyrics from Johnson’s “Terraplane Blues.”

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