⬇️ JESSE THOMAS ⬇️
(Jesse 'BabyFace' Thomas)
(7CD)
BIOGRAPHY
The brother of Texas bluesman Willard "Ramblin'" Thomas, Jesse "Babyface"
Thomas never had the success of his more famous sibling. Born in the
hamlet of Logansport, LA, near the Texas border in 1911, Jesse Thomas and
his brother were personally close growing up, often working in the fields together, and he also aspired to a music career -- the two
performed together.
He moved to Dallas in 1929, at a time when Blind Lemon Jefferson and Lonnie
Johnson were in their heyday; Thomas made his first recordings that year, at
age 18, for Victor. He cut four sides, but found little success coming from
those efforts. Whether by design or a simple process of selection, he
decided not to emulate his more famous brother's slide guitar-based sound,
instead playing in a fingerpicking style closer to that of Blind Blake,
Lonnie Johnson, or Blind Lemon Jefferson himself.
In the early '40s, Jesse Thomas relocated to Los Angeles, losing contact in
the process with both his sibling and the itinerant musician's life he'd led
in the previous decade. He also got to hear and play with musicians who were
more influenced by jazz, and the more sophisticated varieties of blues that
had taken root in the big cities. These influences soon became clear when he
resumed his recording career in the late '40s in Los Angeles; he also
demonstrated his songwriting prowess.
He tended to write and sing about more upbeat and romantic subjects than
his brother, and favored a highly rhythmic and animated style on his
instrument. "Double Do Love You" recalled T-Bone Walker at his best, and
anticipated the work of Chuck Berry by six or seven years. Jesse Thomas also
worked well in a band setting, playing his instrument off against piano
accompaniment by Lonnie Lyons and Lloyd Glenn, amongst others, and also
saxmen such as Sam Williams and Conrad Johnson. He recorded for Milltone,
Freedom, Modern, Swing Time, Hollywood, Specialty, and Elko between 1948 and
1958, and briefly had his own label, Club Records, at the end of the
'40s.
It may have been Thomas' sheer versatility that hurt him as a recording
artist, at least in terms of commercial success. Unlike his brother, who
never evolved too far out of his rural life or roots, Jesse Thomas was
always adding strings to his bow, so that by the late '40s he was doing what
amounted to R&B rather than pure blues, as both a singer and guitarist,
and altering his sound with almost every release, working in different group
contexts -- all effective, but all different.
He was doing what would later be defined as rock & roll years before it
got that name, and was cutting perfectly fine, Chess Records-style rock
& roll music in the mid-'50s. He was back in Shreveport from 1957 on,
cutting sides of Hollywood Records, He kept working at least into the '70s
and '80s, even founding another label, Red River. He cut his last session in
1992, at age 81, working once more in a country-blues vein and a small group
setting, and showed his playing skills still intact. Thomas died in 1995 at
the age of 84, after a 60-year career in music.