Big Road Blues Show 10/22/23: Raggedy But Right – Decca 7000 Favorites Pt. 1

Blues Box 1SONGALBUM
Kokomo Arnold Old Original Kokomo Blues Back To The Crossroads
Walter Coleman I'm Going to CincinnatiCincinnati Blues
Charley Jordan It Ain't Clean (That Thing Ain't Clean) It Ain't Clean
Mary Johnson Peepin' at the Risin' Sun Blues Box 1
Joe McCoy Baltimore Blues Blues Box 1
Willie ' Poor Boy' LoftonIt's Killing Me Big Joe Williams and the Stars of Mississippi Blues
Roosevelt Sykes Dirty Mother for YouThe Essential
'Crippple' Clarence Lofton w/ Red NelsonCrying Mother Blues Broadcasting the Blues
Jesse James Southern Casey JonesCincinnati Blues
Oscar ''Buddy'' Woods Lone Wolf BluesSteel Guitar Blues 1934-1937
Black Ace Black Ace I'm The Boss Card In Your Hand
Tampa Kid Keep On TryingThe Voice Of The Blues: Bottleneck Guitar Masterpieces
Alice Moore Riverside Blues St. Louis Women. Vol. 2: Alice Moore 1934-1937, St. Louis Bessie 1941
Victoria Spivey Black Snake Swing Men Are Like Street Cars...Women Blues Singers 1928-1969
Georgia White I'm So Glad I'm 21 TodayShake Your Wicked Knees
Sleepy John Estes Someday Baby BluesI Ain't Gonna Be Worried No More 1929-1941
Son Bonds & Hammie Nixon Trouble Trouble BluesLegendary Country Blues
Teddy Darby The Girl I Left BehindBlues Box 1
Lonnie Johnson Hard Times Ain't Gone No WhereA Life in Music Selected Sides 1925-1953
Walter Coleman Mama Let Me Lay It On YouCincinnati Blues
Sloke And Ike Raggedy But RightBanjo Ikey Robinson 1929-1937
Peetie Wheatstraw Peetie Wheatstraw Stomp No. 2The Essential
Harlem Hamfats What You Gonna Do?Harlem Hamfats Vol. 1 1936
Lonnie Johnson Got the Blues for the West EndA Life in Music Selected Sides 1925-1953
Blind Willie McTell Bell Street BluesThe Classic Years 1927-1940
Georgia Tom Levee Bound BluesThe Essential
Victoria Spivey T B's Got MeBlues Box 2
Trixie Smith My Daddy Rocks MeTrixie Smith Vol. 2 1925-1939
Georgia White Alley BoogieGeorgia White Vol. 3 1937-1939
Black Ivory King Working For The PWAThe Piano Blues Vol. 11: Texas Santa Fe 1934-1937
Roosevelt Sykes Mistake In LifeRoosevelt Sykes Vol. 6 1939-1941
Lonnie Johnson Friendless and BlueLonnie Johnson Vol. 1 1937-1940
Bill GaitherPains in My HeartThe Essential
Peetie WheatstrawWorking on the ProjectPeetie Wheatstraw Vol. 5 1938-1939
Dot Rice Texas StompBlues Box 1
Bumble Bee Slim Hey Lawdy MamaThe Essential

Show Notes: 

Photos from the Axel Küstner collection
 

Today’s spotlights records put out by Decca between 1934 and 1938 in their 7000 series which was dedicated to “race records” as the labels designated their catalogs.  The following comes from Recording the Blues by Robert Dixon and John Godrich: “By the beginning of 1934 there were, besides the ailing and barely active Gennett and Columbia concerns, only two companies competing for the race market: ARC and Victor. But that year there emerged a strong new competitor. In the middle of that year, English Decca financed an American company of the same name and put in charge Jack Kapp, who had run Brunswick- Balke-Collender’s race series. Even more important, Jack Kapp brought with him Mayo Williams, as race talent scout. They began recording in New York and Chicago in August and before the end of the year had issued two or three dozen items in their new race series, the Decca 7000s. Whereas the other two companies still maintain 75 cent labels, Victor and Brunswick respectively, in addition to the cheap Bluebird and Vocalion, Decca priced all their records at 35 cents; to cut overhead they began by making just one take of each title. Decca intended to grab as large a share as it could of the once more expanding record market.” Today is the first of two shows devoted to some great records from the series.

Old Original Kokomo Blues Ad

One of the most prolific artists to record for Decca’s 7000 series was Kokomo Arnold. Arnold made his first recordings in May 1930 for Victor in Memphis under the name of “Gitfiddle Jim.” Arnold moved to Chicago and made his first Decca session of September 10, 1934 until he finally called it quits after his session of May 12, 1938, Kokomo Arnold made 88 sides. Some of Kokomo Arnold’s songs proved highly influential on other musicians. His first issued coupling on Decca 7026 paired “Old Original Kokomo Blues” with “Milk Cow Blues.” Delta Blues legend Robert Johnson must’ve known this record, as he re-invented both sides of it into songs for his own use — “Old Original Kokomo Blues” became “Sweet Home Chicago,” and “Milk Cow Blues” became “Milkcow’s Calf Blues.” Arnold also did session work backing Peetie Wheatstraw, Roosevelt Sykes, Alice Moore, Mary Johnson and others. The bulk of his recordings were made in the 7000 series.

Peetie Wheatstraw recorded over 160 songs, usually accompanied by his own piano and provided accompaniment on records to numerous others. Between 1930 and his death in 1941 he remained immensely popular for buyers of race records and was a fixture on the vibrant St. Louis blues scene of the 30’s. He cut over fifty sides in the Decca 7000 series.

Crying Mother Blues

Guitarist Bill Gaither cut well over a hundred sides for Decca and OKeh between 1931 and 1941 with some forty sides in the Decca 7000 catalog. Gaither was close to the blues pianist Leroy Carr, and following Carr’s death in 1935, he recorded under the moniker Leroy’s Buddy for a time. A fine guitarist who possessed a warm, expressive voice, Gaither was also at times a gifted and inventive lyricist. He was often partnered with pianist Honey Hill. We also hear from Frank Busby, a sensitive singer who cut one 78 (“‘Leven Light City b/w Prisoner Bound”) in 1937 for Decca backed by Bill Gaither.

Sleepy John Estes waxed twenty sides in the Decca 700 series. Around 1915, the Estes family moved to Brownsville, Tennessee, which served as Sleepy John’s base residence periodically for the rest of his life. Brownsville was also home to “Hambone” Willie Newbern, an important early influence, as well as Yank Rachell and Hammie Nixon–musicians with whom Estes partnered at local venues and on professional recordings. Other Brownsville musicians who Estes worked with were pianist Lee Brown and guitarists Son Bonds and Charlie Pickett, all who recorded in the 30’s and all who backed Estes on record. Son Bonds played very much in the same rural Brownsville style that the Estes-Nixon team popularized in the ’20s and ’30s. Bonds cut a total of fifteen sides over five sessions in 1934, 1938 and 1941. Hammie Nixon backs Bonds on the two 1934 sessions while Estes backs Bonds on his last two sessions in 1938 and 1941.On his Decca and Champion sides Bonds was called Brownsville Son Bonds and Brother Son Bonds at his second Decca session which was religious.

We hear from several fine blues ladies who recorded for Decca including Mary Johns, Alice Moore, Trixie Smith and Georgia White among others. Mary Johnson of St. Louis (sometimes billed as “Signifying Mary”) made her debut in 1929, cut just shy of two dozen songs. After these recordings Mary Johnson abandoned the blues for religion. She recorded some religious sides that were issued posthumously. Paul Oliver interviewed her in 1960 for his book Conversation with the Blues.

Riverside BluesAlice Moore, or Little Alice, as she was known, achieved a measure of success with her first record, “Black And Evil Blues” cut at her first session 1929 with three subsequent versions cut during the 1930’s. In all she cut thirty-six sides: Two sessions for Paramount in 1929 and nine sessions (the final one went unissued) for Decca between 1934 and 1937. She had the good fortune to record with the city’s best musicians including pianists Henry Brown, Peetie Wheatstraw, Jimmie Gordon, possibly Roosevelt Sykes as well as guitarists Lonnie Johnson, Kokomo Arnold and trombonist Ike Rodgers.

Trixie Smith was born in Atlanta and around 1915 moved north to New York to work in show business. At first, she worked in minstrel shows and on the TOBA vaudeville circuit. In 1922 Smith made her first recordings for the Black Swan label and later that year she won a blues singing contest in New York beating out Lucille Hegamin and others with her song “Trixie’s Blues.” In 1924 Smith made her debut for Paramount, cutting twenty sides for the label through 1926. Trixie recorded a fine session for Decca in 1938 that featured Sidney Bechet and an additional song in 1939.

As usual, we hear from several superb pianists including Lee Green, Henry Brown and the shadowy Jesse James. Lee Green worked as a clothes presser in Vicksburg while perfecting his piano technique. Soon he was traveling and earning a living by playing piano. Little Brother Montgomery knew him in Vicksburg and claimed to have taught him the “44 Blues” in Sondheimer, LA, back in 1922. Sykes first heard Green in 1925. Green taught Sykes how to really play the blues and is usually credited with teaching the “44 Blues” to Sykes. All three men recorded the number;  Sykes and  Montgomery chose to record their versions of “44 blues” at their debut sessions, Sykes cutting it first in June 1929 as “Forty- Four Blues”, Green as “number Forty-Four Blues” in August at his second session the same year and the following year by Montgomery as “Vicksburg Blues.”

Peetie Wheatstraw Stomp No. 2Henry Brown worked clubs such as the Blue Flame Club, the 9-0-5 Club, Jim’s Place and Katy Red’s, from the twenties into the 30’s. He recorded for Brunswick with Ike Rogers and Mary Johnson in 1929, for Paramount in Richmond and Grafton in ‘29 and ‘30.

Jesse James was probably Cincinnati-based, as he accompanied titles by Walter Coleman on the same date as his own session, June 3, 1936. James was a rough, two-fisted barrelhouse pianist, with a hoarse, declamatory vocal delivery, equally suited to the anguished “Lonesome Day Blues”, a robust version of “Casey Jones” as “Southern Casey Jones”, “Highway 61” and the ribald “Sweet Patuni”, which was issued much later on a bootleg party single under the title “Ramrod.” There’s conflicting information regarding James; Karl Gert zur Heide collected information that James lived in Memphis in the postwar years and worked and even broadcast out of Little Rock, Arkansas while Pigmeat Jarrett claims he stayed in Cincinnati on Fourth Street, moving to Kentucky around 1955.

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Big Road Blues Show 12/5/21: Until My Love Comes Down -Love, Lust, Infidelity & Those Dirty Blues Pt. 2


ARTISTSONGALBUM
Hambone Willie Newbern She Could Toodle-ooWait For Me: Songs of Love and Lust and Discontentment
Bessie Smith It Makes My Love Come DownThe Complete
Merline Johnson Love Shows WeaknessMessed Up In Love... And Other Tales Of Woe
Little Brother Montgomery The Woman I Love BluesLittle Brother Montgomery 1930-1936
Big Bill Broonzy Messed Up in Love Messed Up In Love... And Other Tales Of Woe
Lonnie Johnson Love Is the Answer The Original Guitar Wizard
Speckled Red The Dirty Dozen Piano Blues, Vol. 20: The Barrelhouse Years
Sam Theard Can You Imagine ThatLovin' Sam Theard 1929-1936
James ''Boodle It'' Wiggins Gotta Shave 'Em DryThe Paramount Masters
Red NelsonMother Fuyer Red Nelson: 1935-1947
Teddy Darby The Girl I Left BehindBlind Teddy Darby 1929- 1937
Carolina SlimYour Picture Done FadedRub a Little Boogie: New York Blues 1945-56
Blu Lu Barker Don't You Feel My Leg Don't You Feel My Leg
Mary Dixon You Can't Sleep in My BedMean Mothers: Independent Women's Blues Vol. 1
Josh White Sissy Man Roots 'n' Blues: the Retrospective 1925-1950
Pigmeat Pete & Catjuice CharlieIn KentuckyWait For Me: Songs of Love and Lust and Discontentment
Lucille Bogan B.D. Woman Shave 'Em Dry: The Best of Lucille Bogan
Bertha Idaho Down on Pennsylvania Avenue Female Blues Singers Vol. 10 1923-1929
Blind Willie McTell Love Makin' Mama #2Frog Blues & Jazz Annual No. 4
Leadbelly Don't You Love Your Daddy No MoreLeadbelly Vol. 2 1940-1943
(John Lee) Sonny Boy Williamson Until My Love Comes DownSonny Boy Williamson Vol. 1 1937-1938
Charlie Pickett Let Me Squeeze Your Lemon Son Bonds & Charlie Pickett 1934-1941
Oscar ''Buddy'' Woods Don't Sell It (Don't Give It Away)The Frog Blues & Jazz Annual No. 5
Jim Jackson Hesitation BluesJim Jackson Vol. 2 1928-1930
Georgia White I'll Keep Sittin' on ItMen Are Like Street Cars
Rosetta Howard Men Are Like Street Cars Men Are Like Street Cars
Clara Smith Jelly Look What You Done DoneThe Essential
Sippie Wallace I'm A Mighty Tight WomanWhen The Sun Goes Down
Lizzie Miles The Man I Got Ain't The Man I WantLizzie Miles Vol. 3 1928-1929
Victoria Spivey & Lonnie Johnson I Got Men All Over This TownWoman Blues
Bo Carter The Ins And Outs Of My GirlBo Carter Vol. 4 1936- 1938
Willie Baker Sweet Patunia Blues Memphis Harp & Jug Blowers 1927-1939
Famous Hokum Boys You Can't Get Enough of That StuffThe Hokum Boys Vol. 1 1929
Robert Johnson Terraplane Blues The Centennial Collection
Cleo Gibson I've Got Ford Movements In My Hips Territory Singers Vol. 2

Show Notes:

It Make My Love Come DownToday’s show is the first of two as we examine the myriad blues songs, mainly form the pre-war era, dealing with love, lust, infidelity, and sex. Unlike some of the other topics we’ve covered, this a broad topic with hundreds of songs dealing with these subjects in all manner of imaginative and clever ways. Over the course of these shows we hear numerous songs of romantic love, songs of infidelity, loss and of course a good dose of raunchy blues numbers, many of which are quite eye-opening in their frankness particularly in these politically correct times. Hopefully listeners will take these songs in the context of the times and not set upon me with pitchforks calling for my cancellation. Along the way I’ll navigate through the lyrics, some of which can’t be adequately described on radio, as we play songs about riders, jockey’s, jelly, pig meat, milk cows, coffee grinders, shaving ’em dry, lead pencils, sweet patunia, the dirty dozens, getting your ashes hauled, churning butter, B.D. Woman, sissy men and much, much more.

Navigating the early blues you’ll notice that the music has a unique language, with phrases, double entendres and colloquialisms that are singular to blues. May of these turns of phrase have to do with sex and blues singers were endlessly inventive, slipping these in to the records they made for the “race market” of the 20s and 30s, likely unbeknownst to their white producers. One of the most famous terms that caught on was singing about the “dozens.” “The Dirty Dozens,” was released on Brunswick by Speckled Red and became a hit in late 1929. The dozens is a game of trading insult wordplay, sometimes it rhymes, sometimes it doesn’t, it often involves talking about your opponent’s mama. Six months later Red cut “The Dirty Dozen Part Two.” The recorded version of this song is clearly a cleaned-up version of what Red was singing in the bars and brothels where he played in the twenties. Many artists did their renditions including Kokomo Arnold, Jelly Roll Morton, Leroy Carr, Ben Curry, Lonnie Johnson among many others.

Another curious phrase was “Shave ‘Em Dry.” According to Mayo Williams, the expression “Can I shave ’em dry?” meant “Can I go to bed with you?” and was a black catchphrase at the time of it’s first recordings. It was first recorded by Ma Rainey in August 1924 in Chicago. Big Bill Broonzy stated “Shave ’em dry is what you call makin’ it with a woman; you ain’t doin’ nothin’, just makin’ it.” Papa Charlie Jackson’s version was recorded around February 1925 in Chicago, and released by Paramount Records in April that year. James “Boodle It” Wiggins recorded his version around October 1929. The most famous version was by Lucille Bogan who cut a studio version and an x-rated version. It was recorded by Lucille Bogan, although billed as ‘Bessie Jackson’, on March 5, 1935. As Keith Briggs notes: “The most notorious of all Lucille Bogan’s recordings are the alternate versions of “Shave ‘Em Dry”, which were recorded either for the delectation of the recording engineers or for clandestine distribution as a ‘Party Record.’ During this session her accompanist, pianist Walter Roland, cut the equally dirty “I’m Gonna Shave You Dry”, also a test pressing. In November 1936, Lil Johnson recorded “New Shave ‘Em Dry.”

Messed Up In LoveAdmittedly “Mother Fuyer”  isn’t all that clever but it was a way to say mother fucker on record. “Mother Fuyer” was written and recorded by Red Nelson under the name Dirty Red in 1947 and released by Aladdin Records. It’s obvious what the term means. The term had been on record since the 30s including Memphis Minnie’s “Dirty Mother For You” (Decca Records, 1935) and Washboard Sam (1935), plus Roosevelt Sykes in 1936,[3] with the slightly amended title of “Dirty Mother For You (Don’t You Know)”. Johnny “Guitar” Watson had a hit in 1977 with “A Real Mother For Ya”

We hear a whole litany of such songs such as Johnny Temple’s “Lead Pencil Blues”, Memphis Minnie “I’m Selling My Pork Chops (but I’m Giving My Gravy Away)”, Lucille Bogan’s “Alley Boogie”, Walter Vincson’s “Rats Been on My Cheese”, Louise Johnson’s “On the Wall”, Blind Boy Fuller “I Crave My Pigmeat”, Tampa Red’s “The Duck Yas Yas Yas”, Hambone Willie Newbern’s She Could Toodle-oo”, Charlie Pickett’s “Let Me Squeeze Your Lemon” and Willie Baker’s “Sweet Patunia Blues” are just a few example played across these two programs.

Pork chops and pig meat became a staple in the diet of blacks in the South, after the Civil War in 1865. These cuts of meat quite naturally entered into black song. Thomas Dorsey aka Georgia Tom, described the term “pig meat” as a reference to a young attractive woman. Female singers also used it in connection with good-looking young men. Memphis Minnie’s “I’m Selling My Pork Chops (but I’m Giving My Gravy Away)” is related to “Hustlin’ Woman Blues”, both cut in 1935, and both dealing with prostitution:

I met a man the other day, what you reckon he say
Is you the lady givin’ that gravy away, if ya is, I will be back today
You come and get some, but you sure can’t stay long
I got two men I has to be waitin’ on

“Pigmeat” is black term for a young female, or virgin based on the standard English use of pig to signify a young hog, or piglet. The term appears in numerous blues by artists such as Leadbelly, Josh White, Bo Carter, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Willie Baker among others. On these shows we spin versions by Willie Baker and Blind Boy Fuller’s “I Crave My Pigmeat.”

Poor Johnny Temple was decades away from the invention of Viagra when he recorded “Lead Pencil Blues (It Just Won’t Write)” in 1935:

I laid down last night, couldn’t eat a bite
The woman I love don’t treat me right
Lead in my pencil, baby it’s done gone bad
And it’s the worst old feelin’ baby, that I’ve ever had

Of course there’s the protagonist in the  Mississippi Sheiks’ s ‘Driving That Thing” who suffered from a bit too much virility:

Old Uncle Bill, he was a working man
Laid down and died with his hammer in his hand
From driving that thing, whoa, driving that thing
All the lawyers in town talking about him driving that thing

Men are Like Street CarsTampa Red’s ‘The Duck Yas Yas Yas” was a “whorehouse tune”, a popular St. Louis party song. The song’s title is explained by quoting the lyrics more fully: “Shake your shoulders, shake ’em fast, if you can’t shake your shoulders, shake your yas-yas-yas”. The song was originally recorded in St. Louis by pianist James “Stump” Johnson in late 1928 or January 1929. Blues singer Tampa Red and Georgia Tom also recorded a version on May 13, 1929. Oliver Cobb recorded the song on August 16, 1929, before he died suddenly the next year. In 1939, Tommy McClennan used some of the lyrics in his song “Bottle It Up and Go”.

Hambone Willie Newbern’s “She Could Toodle-oo” is essentially about a sexual act that’s not heard to decipher once we print out the lyrics. The term shows up in in Bessie Smith’s song we also feature, titled “It Makes My Love Come Down.”

Every time she blow she blow Toodlee-oo
An’ she blow for everybody she meet
She could toodle-oo, she could toodle-oo
That’s all the poor girl do

Blues wasn’t afraid to tackle, then taboo subjects such as homosexuality and lesbianism but it shouldn’t be surprising that these songs are far from politically correct and surely the singers would be canceled in today’s culture. Lucille Bogan sang “B.D. Woman’s Blues” in 1935 with B.D. standing for bull dyke: “Comin’ a time, B.D. women ain’t gonna do need no men.” Ma Rainey “Prove It On Me Blues” cut in 1928 had a similar sentiment: “Went out last night with a crowd of my friends/They must’ve been women, ‘cause I don’t like no men” In 1926 Rainey cut ‘Sissy Blues.” In 1935 Kokomo Arnold cut “Sissy Man Blues” and Josh White and Georg Noble both covered the song later in 1935 which were different songs than Ma’s tune. Connie McLean’s Rhythm Boys released their version in 1936. The common refrain in the mid-30s songs were “Lord, if you can’t send me no woman, please send me some sissy man.” In Pigmeat Pete & Catjuice Charlie’s “In Kentucky” they they mine similar territory:

The boys act queer to me, wear their knickers above their knees
You can’t tell the hes from the shes, in Kentucky

Bertha Idaho only recorded four songs in her professional career that started in 1919 as a traveling act singing and dancing alongside her husband, John. “Down On Pennsylvania Avenue” describes Baltimore’s seedy street:

Let’s take a trip down to that cabaret
Where they turn night into day
Some freakish sights you’ll surely see
You can’t tell he’s from the she’s
You’ll find ’em every night on Pennsylvania Avenue.

Some of these songs were surprisingly frank, leaving little to the imagination such as Louise Johnson’s “On The Wall” about having sex standing up and Mae Glover’s “Shake It Daddy” with her partner John Byrd:

He shakes it in the morning, he shakes it at midnight
Keep on shakin’ it, daddy, ’til you know you’re shakin’ it right
Lord, the way you shake it’ll make me lose my appetite
The way you shake it will make me lose my appetite

There’s plenty of songs of love lost, not reciprocated or “Love In Vain” as Robert Johnson famously recorded. One of the iconic figure in the blues is the back door man as Washboard Sam famously sang in 1937: “Tell me mama, who’s that here awhile ago/Yes, when I come in, who’s that went out that back door.” Several year later Doctor Clayton waxed his frustrations with his woman in “Cheating and Lying Blues” from 1941:

‘Bout three of four nights ago, I had to work kinda late
Somebody broke out my back door, like he was superman’s mate

Next time I come home, ’round three or four
An’ hear some man inside , talkin’ sweet and low
The folks gonna think Hitler, is on the second floor

Others songs of infidelity include Walter Vincson’s imaginatively titled  “Rats Been on My Cheese” from 1936:

I went home late last night, the rat was on his knees
He said, “I ain’t trying to hurt you, just want a piece of cheese.”
Hey old gal, stop your kicking that cat around
I’m going to set my trap for you, the rats been on my cheese

A few years later, in 1941, Son Bond cut “Hard Pillow to Swallow” which was later recorded by John Brim for the J.O.B. label in 1952:

Well, when I was in prison, serving my time
When I came back home, I heard a baby cryin’
That was a hard pillow to swallow, filled my heart with pain

Of course, it’s not all sex and there were certainly plenty of sings about romantic love such as the rollicking ” I Love You Baby” by Big Joe & His Washboard Band, Arthur ‘Big Boy’ Crudup’s heartfelt “I Love my Baby, Little Brother Montgomery’s “The Woman I Love Blues”, Barbecue Bob’s vulnerable  “Beggin’ for Love” and the gorgeous ballad “Love Is the Answer” by Lonnie Johnson:

Love is something great, it’s not to be kicked around (2x)
And once you love please don’t hurt it, because it’s so great to have around
With you in my heart baby, nothing could ever go wrong (2x)
And with you in my arms baby, I’m never left alone

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Big Road Blues Show 6/18/17: Still I’m Travelling On – Blues & Travel


ARTISTSONGALBUM
Black Ivory King The Flying Crow Let Me Tell You About The Blues - Texas
Blind Willie McTellTravelin' BluesBest Of
Bukka White Panama LimitedWhen The Sun Goes Down
Henry ThomasRailroadin' SomeThe Frog Blues & Jazz Annual No. 1
Gus Cannon Poor Boy, Long Ways From Home Broadcasting the Blues
Coley Jones Traveling ManTexas Blues: Early Masters From the Lone Star State
Pete Harris He RambledBlack Texicans
Tommy McClennanTravelin' Highway ManComplete Bluebird Recordings
John Lee Hooker Walkin' This HighwayThe Complete John Lee Hooker Vol. 4
Howlin' Wolf Highway Man The Sun Blues Box
T-Bone Walker Travelin' BluesThe Complete Recordings of T-Bone Walker 1940-1954
Pee Wee Crayton Tired Of Travelin'Blues Guitar Magic
Freddie Spruell4A Highway When the Levee Breaks
Big Joe Williams Highway 49 Big Joe Williams and the Stars of Mississippi Blues
Robert Johnson Traveling Riverside BluesThe Centennial Collection
Little Brother Montgomery Out West BluesLittle Brother Montgomery 1930-1936
Soldier Boy Houston Going to the West CoastLightnin' Special Vol. 2
Guitar Slim And Jelly BellyTravelin' Boy's BluesCarolina Blues
Lonnie Johnson Lonnie's Traveling Light
Spivey's Blues Parade
Charlie Spand Back To the Woods Blues Blues Images Vol. 4
Eddie Miller Freight Train Blues The Piano Blues Vol. 2
Merline JohnsonGot A Mind To RambleMerline Johnson Vol. 2 1938-1939
Trixe SmithRailroad Blues Trixie Smith Vol. 2 1925-1939
LeadbellyAlabama BoundAlabama Bound
Sunnyland Slim Hit the Road AgainSunnyland Slim 1949-1951
Tampa Red Rambler's BluesDynamite! The Unsung King Of The Blues
Big Boy KnoxEleven Light City BluesSan Antonio Blues 1937
Charles Brown w/ Johnny Moore's Three Blazers Drifting Blues The Complete Aladdin Recordings of Charles Brown
Roy Hawkins Strange LandBad Luck Is Falling
Ida CoxChicago Bound BluesIda Cox Vol. 1923
Blind Teddy DarbyThe Girl I Left BehindBlind Teddy Darby 1929-1937
Arthur CrudupChicago BluesA Music Man Like Nobody Ever Saw
The Mississippi Sheiks Still I'm Travelling OnMississippi Sheiks Vol. 2 1930

Show Notes:

As the great blues scholar Paul Oliver wrote in Meaning of the Blues: “The last quarter of the nineteenth century saw an ever increasing movement of Negro workers from state to state. By 1910 nearly one and three-quarter million Negroes had left their home states for others and of these some had moved West and half a million had gone to the North. As the pressure of hostile opinion and legislation became ever greater, Negro workers sought new employment and traveled long distances in order to find it. In the ensuing years they were to be followed by thousands more. …Tied in permanent debt to the planters on whose lands they were share-croppers or tenants, a vast number of Negroes were still forced to remain. He secretly calls the White man Mister Tom, Mister Charlie or Mister Eddie and tries to convince himself that he ‘gets along’ and will one day earn enough to free himself and seek work elsewhere.” In Blues and the Poetic Spirit Paul Garon notes that “as early as 1926, Odum and Johnson noted that …the song of the ”po’ boy long ways from home who wonders ‘down the lonesome road’ is rich in pathos and plaintive. They devoted a chapter …to ‘Songs of the Lonesome Road’.” Indeed many blues singers spent much of their lives on the road, with trains, cars, walking, highways, the lure of the North and the names of states and towns, featured prominently in blues lyrics. Today we feature a wide range of traveling songs and there’s plenty more which I’m sure will lead to a sequel or two.

For southern Blacks the appeal of the railroads has always been both a real and a symbolic one. For them the train was a symbol of power, of freedom and escape. As the blues developed, the railroad featured prominently in the songs. Numerous songs were sung about individual trains such as the Flying Crow, the Sunshine Special and the Panama Limited, many simply abbreviated like the C&O (Chesapeake and Ohio), T&P (Texas Pacific) or the L&N (Louisville and Nashville), many songs dealt with the hobos who rode the rails, others dealt with working for the railroad while other songs retold the famous railroad ballads of John Henry, Railroad Bill and Casey Jones.

One of the most famous railroad songs is Henry Thomas’ “Railroadin’ Some” which William Barlow called the most “vivid and intense recollection of railroading in all the early blues recorded in the 1920’s.” Thomas, nicknamed “Ragtime Texas”, was born in 1874 in Big Sandy, Texas. The 1874 date marks him as one of the eldest-born blues performers on record. Thomas was the archetypal rambling musician who went wherever the railroads would take him. According to Mack McCormick, as told to him from a former railroad conductor, “Ragtime Texas was a big fellow that used to come aboard at Gladewater or Mineola or somewhere in there. I’d always carry him, except when he was too dirty. He was a regular hobo, but I’d carry him most of the time. That guitar was his ticket.”

Among the oldest traveling songs are “Poor Boy, Long Ways From Home” and ”Traveling Man.” “Poor Boy, Long Ways From Home” is a song that has had a very wide circulation among Blues musicians although the origin of the song is unclear. The song is usually associated with slide guitar playing. Bo Weavil Jackson recorded the song in 1926 for Vocalion Records, Gus Cannon cut”Poor Boy Long Ways From Home” for Paramount in 1927, Barbecue Bob cut a version in 1927 and Ramblin Thomas cut a version in 1928. Numerous other version of the song were cut through the post-war era.

Folklorists Odum and Johnson collected three versions ”Traveling Man” – one from a quartet that came to Dayton, Tennessee; another by Kid Ellis of Spartenburg,, South Carolina, himself a professed ‘travelling man’; and a third from a North Carolina Negro youth who had traveled through several states. “Traveling Man (or “Traveling Coon”) was recorded by numerous blues and country artists during the 1920’s and 30’s. There is a connection with the song “Didn’t He Ramble” (also referred to as “Oh! Didn’t He Ramble”) which was composed by J. Rosamond Johnson, James Weldon Johnson, and Bob Cole in 1902.

Highways feature prominently in blues lyrics. Big Joe cut the original version of “Highway 49” in 1935 which was covered by Howlin’ Wolf among others. The highway’s northern terminus is in Piggott, Arkansas, and its southern terminus is in Gulfport, Mississippi. Several other blues songs reference highways 51 and 61. Highway 51, like Highway 61 connected to New Orleans to Chicago via Memphis. In addition to “Travelin’ Highway Man”, Tommy McClennan also record “New Highway 51” after the original “Highway 51 Blues” recorded by Curtis Jones in 1938. Big Joe Williams sang “Im gwine down Highway 49 border, I’m gonna be rockin’ to my head” later picked up by Robert Johnson in “Traveling Riverside Blues”: “But I’m going back to Friars Point, if I be rocking to my head.”

One of the most famous recurring highways is Highway 61. The original road began in downtown New Orleans, traveled through Baton Rouge, and ran through Natchez, Vicksburg, Leland, Cleveland, Clarksdale, and Tunica in Mississippi, to Memphis and north to the Canadian border. The first song recorded about the road was Roosevelt Sykes’s “Highway 61 Blues,” cut in 1932. In 1933 two Memphis bluesmen, Jack Kelly and Will Batts, recorded “Highway No. 61 Blues,” and the Tupelo-born Sparks Brothers cut “61 Highway.” Other 1930’s recordings included “Highway 61,” a sermon by Raymond, Mississippi, native “Hallelujah Joe” McCoy; “Highway 61” by Jesse James; and “Highway 61 Blues” by Sampson Pittman, recorded for Alan Lomax of the Library of Congress. In 1947 Gatemouth Moore recorded a jump blues version of “Highway 61 Blues,” and in 1956 pianist Sunnyland Slim of Vance, Mississippi, recorded “Highway 61.” Over the next decades Highway 61 songs often appeared on albums by James “Son” Thomas of Leland, Honeyboy Edwards, Big Joe Williams, Mississippi Fred McDowell, and other traditional blues veterans.

There were numerous songs with geographical titles, one of the most famous being “Sweet Home Chicago” which is related to several other songs. “One Time Blues” was recorded in March 1927 by Blind Blake for Paramount. Freddie Spruell had sung it as an alternate theme to end his record ‘‘Milk Cow Blues’’ on June 25, 1926. Several groups of blues were to use this melody. The most prominent was “Kokomo Blues,’’ first recorded by Madlyn Davis in November 1927 (mistitled “Kokola Blues,”), with a second recording by guitarist Scrapper Blackwell in June 1928. “Ko Ko Mo Blues” parts 1 and 2 was recorded by Jabo Williams for Paramount in 1932. Other “Kokomo” versions include Lucille Bogan’ 1933 unissued number, Charlie McCoy (as “Baltimore Blues,” 1934), Kokomo Arnold (“Kokomo Blues”, 1934), and Big Boy Knox (as ‘”Eleven Light City”, 1937). The set of lyrics with which the tune has long flourished is “Sweet Home Chicago,” first recorded by Robert Johnson in November 1936. The lyrics evolving from the “Kokomo” group of songs.  Frank Busby cut “‘Leven Light City (Sweet Old Kokomo)” in 1937 for Decca. The first post-war versions of the song were ‘‘Sweet Home Chicago’’ by Roosevelt Sykes recorded in 1954 followed by Robert Lockwood’s “Aw Aw Baby (Sweet Home Chicago)” in 1955.

There were many songs in the 1920’s with titles like “Chicago Bound Blues”, Memphis Bound Blues, “Detroit Bound Blues”, “Florida Bound Blues” and “North Bound Blues.” “Chicago Bound Blues (Famous Migration Blues)”, featured today, was recorded by Ida Cox in 1923 and soon after by Bessie Smith.

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Big Road Blues Show 5/12/13: Good Scuffler Blues – Sideman Blues Part II


ARTISTSONGALBUM
Mary Johnson w/ Tampa RedDeath Cell Blues Twenty First. St. Stomp: The Piano Blues Of St. Louis
James Stump Johnson w/ Tampa RedJones Law BluesThe Piano Blues Vol. 2 - Brunswick 1928-30
Texas Alexander w/ Lonnie JohnsonLong Lonesome DayTexas Alexander Vol. 1
Mooch Richardson w/ Lonnie JohnsonHelena BluesA Richer Tradition: Country Blues and String Band Music 1923-1942
Peetie Wheatstraw w/ Lonnie JohnsonTruckin' Thru TrafficPeetie Wheatstraw Vol. 5
Lil Green w/ Big Bill BroonzyJust Rockin'Lil Green -1940-1941
Charlie Spand w/ Big Bill Broonzy Rock And RyeRoots N' Blues: Booze & The Blues
Cripple Clarence Lofton w/ Big Bill BroonzyBrownskin GirlsThe Piano Blues Vol. 9: Lofton/Noble 1935-1936
Bumble Bee Slim w/ Casey Bill WeldonThis Old Life I'm Living Bumble Bee Slim Vol. 5 1935-1936
Memphis Minnie w/ Casey Bill WeldonWhen The Sun Goes DownFour Woman Blues
Leroy Henderson w/ Casey Bill WeldonGood Scuffler BluesCharley Jordan Vol.3 1935-1937
Dorothy Baker w/ Roosevelt SykesSteady Grinding BluesBarrelhouse Mamas
Teddy Darby w/ Roosevelt Sykes The Girl I Left BehindBlind Teddy Darby 1929-1937
Napoleon Fletcher w/ Roosevelt Sykes – She Showed It AllGrass Cutter BluesShe Showed It AllRoosevelt Sykes: The Essential
Alice Moore w/ Kokomo ArnoldGrass Cutter BluesKokomo Arnold Vol. 3 1936-1937
Roosevelt Sykes w/ Kokomo ArnoldThe Honey DripperRoosevelt Sykes Vol. 4 1934-1936
Peetie Wheatstraw w/ Kokomo ArnoldWorking On The Project Broadcasting the Blues
Robert Lee McCoy w/ Sonny Boy Williamson ITough LuckProwling With The Nighthawk
Yank Rachel w/ Sonny Boy Williamson II'm Wild And Crazy As Can Be Yank Rachell Vol. 1 1934-1941
Ma Rainey w/ Tampa RedBlack Eye BluesMother of the Blues
Victoria Spivey w/ Tampa RedDon't Trust Nobody Blues Victoria Spivey Vol. 3 1929-1936
Bessie Mae Smith w/ Lonnie JohnsonMy Daddy's Coffin Blues St. Louis Bessie & Alice Moore Vol. 1 1927-1929
Victoria Spivey w/ Lonnie JohnsonDope Head BluesBlues Images Vol. 4
Georgia White w/ Lonnie Johnson Alley BoogieGeorgia White Vol. 3 1937-1939
Mary Johnson w/ Roosevelt SykesRattlesnake BluesMary Johnson 1929-1936
Charlie McFadden w/ Roosevelt SykesGambler's BluesCharlie ''Specks'' McFadden 1929-1937
Washboard Sam w/ Big Bill BroonzyLife Is Just A BookWashboard Sam Vol. 6 1941-1942
Washboard Sam w/ Big Bill BroonzyMy Feet Jumped SaltyRockin' My Blues Away
Big Joe Williams w/ Sonny Boy Williamson IPlease Don't Go Big Joe Williams Vol. 1 1935-1941
Speckled Red w/ Sonny Boy Williamson IYou Got To Fix ItSpeckled Red 1929-1938
Big Bill Broonzy w/ Papa Charlie JacksonAt The Break of DayAll The Classic Sides 1928-1937
Lucille Bogan w/ Papa Charlie JacksonJim Tampa BluesLucille Bogan Vol. 1 1923-1929
Big Boy Teddy Edwards w/ Papa Charlie Jackson & Big Bill BroonzyLouise Big Boy Teddy Edwards 1930-1936
Washboard Sam w/ Big Bill Broonzy & Roosevelt SykesRiver Hip MamaRockin' My Blues Away

Show Notes:

Tampa Red
Tampa Red

A few months back I did a show called “Sideman Blues” where we shined the light on some superb session musicians who backed blues artists in the pre-war era. On today’s sequel to that show we focus on some of the stars of the pre-war blues era who were also active session artists. Artists featured today include some of the era’s big names such as Lonnie Johnson, Tampa Red, Roosevelt Sykes, Kokomo Arnold, Sonny Boy Williamson I and others who were also very active backing others on record. Bluesmen such as Big Bill, Tampa Red, Lonnie Johnson and Roosevelt Sykes in particular, backed dozens of artists, both well known and obscure on record. Many of these artists also acted in the role as talent scouts for the labels.

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 (including classic compositions “Anna Lou Blues,” “Black Angel Blues,” “Crying Won’t Help You,” “It Hurts Me Too,” and “Love Her with a Feeling”). Jim O’Neal neatly summed up Tampa’s place in blues history when he wrote the following in 1975: “Few figures have been as important in blues history as Tampa Red; yet no bluesman of such stature has been so ignored by today’s blues audience. As a composer, recording artist, musical trendsetter and one of the premier urban blues guitarists of his day, Tampa Red remained popular with black record buyers for more than 20 years and exerted considerable influence on many post-World War II blues stars who earned greater acclaim for playing Tampa’s songs than Tampa himself often did.”

Tampa was a very busy session guitarist mainly in the early years of his career, circa 1928-1929. Among those he backed include Big Maceo, Lucille Bogan, Bertha “Chippie” Hill, Lil Johnson, Frankie Jaxon, Victoria Spivey, Romeo Nelson, Ma Rainey, Mary Johnson and many others. Tampa’s work behind underrated singer Mary Johnson has always been among my favorites. Johnson cut six sides at two sessions in 1930. The April 8, 1930 was outstanding do in large part to the shimmering slide guitar of Tampa and the excellent piano of the under recorded Judson Brown. The two work beautifully behind Johnson on the mournful “Three Months Ago Blues” with Tampa shinning on “Dawn Of Day Blues” and the magnificent “Death Cell Blues.”

Lonnie Johnson was a true musical innovator who’s remarkable recording career spanned from the 1920’s through the 1960’s. During that time his musical diversity was amazing: he played piano, guitar, violin, he recorded solo, he accompanied down home country blues singers like Texas Alexander, he played with Louis Armtrong’s Hot Fives, recorded with Duke Ellington, duetted with Victoria Spivey and cut a series of instrumental duets with the white jazzman Eddie Lang that set a standard of musicianship that remains unsurpassed by blues guitarists. In Johnson’s single-string style lie the basic precedents of such jazz greats as Django Reinhardt and Charlie Christian, while being a prime influence on bluesman as diverse as Robert Johnson, Tampa Red and B.B. King. Thus Johnson enjoys the rare distinction of having influenced musicians in both the jazz and blues fields. Like Tampa, Johnson backed dozens of artists on record including Texas Alexander, Jimmie Gordon, Merline Johnson, Alice Moore, Victoria Spivey, Peetie Wheatstraw, Johnnie Temple and a host of others.

Big Bill Broonzy
Big Bill Broonzy

As Bob Riesman wrote in his biography of Big Bill Broonzy: “…Bill’s recording career took off in this era, and his prodigious output was nearly unmatched among blues musicians. From 1934 until 1942, when the combination of a musicians’ union ban and the diversion of shellac to the war effort halted virtually all recording for two years, Bill averaged better than thirteen double-sided 78 rpm records each year as a featured artist. In addition, he played on an average of forty-eight sides each year as a sideman. In other words, for nearly a decade, he averaged one new Big Bill record a month, and he appeared on two more as a studio guitarist. …As ‘Big Bill,’ he was one of the most productive and popular artists in the business, with a name that was familiar to his audiences and reinforced by his easily recognized singing style. At the same time, he became the first-call studio guitarist for dozens of recording sessions that Lester Melrose organized for several record companies, particularly Bluebird. In that capacity, he was an integral part of the distinctive sound of numerous musicians, including some of the most popular artists of the era. Two artists whose careers were interwoven with Bill’s were Washboard Sam and Jazz Gillum. Bill played guitar on a most every one of the more than 150 recordings that Sam made over a period of twenty years, as well as on many of the sides that Gillum recorded.”

Broonzy’s 40’s work with Washboard Sam really hit a high point with Big Bill laying down some lengthy, swinging amplified guitar on featured tracks like “Life Is Just A Book”, “My Feet Jumped Salty” and “River Hip Mama.” Washboard Sam recorded hundreds of records between 1935 and 1949 for the bluebird label, usually with backing by guitarist Big Bill. In 1932, Sam moved to Chicago, initially he played for tips, but soon he began performing regularly with Broonzy. Within a few years, Sam was supporting Broonzy on the guitarist’s Bluebird recordings. Soon, he was supporting a number of different musicians on their recording sessions, including pianist Memphis Slim, bassist Ransom Knowling, and a handful of saxophone players, who all recorded for Bluebird. In 1935, Sam began recording for both Bluebird and Vocalion Records. Throughout the rest of the ’30s and the ’40s, Sam was one of the most popular Chicago bluesmen, selling plenty of records and playing to packed audiences in the Chicago clubs.

Broonzy was also prominent on the recordings of Lil Green who’s “Just Rockin'” we feature today. Her professional career was launched around 1940, when the manager of a Chicago club hired her on the spot after a group of her friends had arranged for a bandleader to call her up from the audience to sing.By May 1940 Green had come to the attention of Lester Melrose, who brought her into the studio to record on the Bluebird label. He assigned a trio of musicians to back her, including Big Bill, Simeon Henry on piano, and New Orleans veteran Ransom Knowling on bass. That session produced her first hit, “Romance in the Dark.” As Broonzy noted in his autobiography: “I played for Lil Green for two years as her guitar player. I wrote some songs for her, like “My Mellow Man” and “Country Boy,” “Give Your Mama One More Smile” and some more that I fixed up for her.

Roosevelt Sykes
Roosevelt Sykes

In 1929 Roosevelt Sykes met Jesse Johnson, the owner of the Deluxe Record Shop in St. Louis. Sykes, who at the time performed at an East St. Louis club for one dollar a night, quickly accepted Johnson’s invitation to a recording session in New York. In the early 1930s, Sykes moved to Chicago. During the Depression years, he recorded for several labels under various pseudonyms. For the Victor label, he recorded as Willie Kelly on the classic 1930 side “32-20 Blues.” Two years later, he cut his popular number “Highway 61 Blues” for Champion, the subsidiary label of Gennett Records. During the 1930’s, Sykes served as a back-up pianist for more than thirty singers including Mary Johnson and James “St. Louis Jimmy” Oden. Through the recruiting efforts of Mayo “Ink” Williams, Sykes signed with Decca Records in 1934. His 1936 Decca side “Driving Wheel Blues” emerged as a blues classic. Sykes settled in Chicago in 1941 and, within a short time, became a house musician for the Victor/Bluebird label. Although the label marketed him as the successor to Fats Waller, who recorded on the same label and died in 1943, Sykes found success as the creator of his own style and remained active as a session man.

Sonny Boy Williamson was already a harp virtuoso in his teens. He learned from Hammie Nixon and Noah Lewis and ran with Sleepy John Estes and Yank Rachell before settling in Chicago in 1934. Sonny Boy signed to Bluebird in 1937. Henry Townsend recalled driving Sonny Boy, Robert Nighthawk, Walter Davis and Big Joe Williams to Aurora, Illinois, in his 1930 A Model Ford for their 1937 sessions: “I transferred them to Aurora, Illinois. There was about eight or nine of us …we stacked them in the car like sardines.” This led to a marathon recording session resulting in six songs by Nighthawk (as Robert Lee McCoy), six by Sonny Boy Williamson I, four by Big Joe Williams and eight sides by Walter Davis. It was Sonny Boy’s songs, especially, “Good Morning Little School Girl”, “Bluebird Blues” and “Sugar Mama Blues” which were the biggest hits. Sonny Boy recorded prolifically for Victor both as a leader and behind others in the vast Melrose stable (including Robert Lee McCoy and Big Joe Williams, who in turn played on some of Williamson’s sides). Sonny Boy cut more than 120 sides in all for RCA from 1937 to 1947

Kokomo Arnold was born in Georgia, and began his musical career in Buffalo, New York in the early 1920’s. During prohibition, Kokomo Arnold worked primarily as a bootlegger, and performing music was a only sideline to him. Nonetheless he worked out a distinctive style of bottleneck slide guitar and blues singing that set him apart from his contemporaries. In the late 1920’s, Arnold settled for a short time in Mississippi, making his first recordings in May 1930 for Victor in Memphis under the name of “Gitfiddle Jim.” Arnold moved to Chicago in order to be near to where the action was as a bootlegger, but the repeal of the Volstead Act put him out of business, so he turned instead to music as a full-time vocation. From his first Decca session of September 10, 1934 until he finally called it quits after his session of May 12, 1938, Kokomo Arnold made 88 sides.Arnold also did session work backing Peetie Wheatstraw, Roosvelt Sykes, Alice Moore, Mary Johnson and others.

Papa Charlie Jackson
Papa Charlie Jackson

“Papa” Charlie Jackson was a six-string banjo player who was one of the earliest and most successful of the solo blues singer/instrumentalists. Jackson settled in Chicago on the famed Maxwell Street around 1920 where he began earning a living by playing on street corners and at house parties. In 1924 he cut his first solo sides “Papa’s Lawdy Blues” and “Airy Man Blues” for the Paramount label. During this period Jackson also became a sideman with many of the hot groups in and around Chicago. He also recorded with Ma Rainey, Ida Cox, Bumble Bee Slim, Big Bill Broonzy and others before his subsequent death around 1938.

Despite several busy years in the recording studio and a couple of medium-sized hits (“Somebody Changed The Lock On My Door” and “We Gonna Move (To The Outskirts of Town)”), very little is known about Casey Bill Weldon. It was assumed he was the Will Weldon who played with the Memphis Jug Band but that remains in dispute. Between 1927 and 1935 he cut just over 60 sides for Victor, Bluebird and Vocalion. He was also an active session guitarist, appearing on records by Teddy Darby, Bumble Bee Slim, Memphis Minnie, Peetie Wheatsraw and others.

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