Showing posts with label Eddie Burks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eddie Burks. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Chico Chism - Chico Chism's West Side Chicago Blues Party

Album: Chico Chism's West Side Chicago Blues Party
Size: 111,2 MB
Time: 47:45
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2006
Styles: Blues, Chicago blues
Art: Full

1. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - I Don't Trust Nobody (2:51)
2. Highway Man - I Walked From Dallas (2:55)
3. Chico Chism - Coo Fannie Coo (3:25)
4. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - I Got To Tell Somebody (2:24)
5. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - Bluesman Of Yesterday (2:55)
6. Eddie Burks - Operator (3:46)
7. Highway Man - Don't Laugh At Me (3:21)
8. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - This Little Voice (2:57)
9. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - Big Leg Woman (3:57)
10. Willie Davis - Why'd You Leave Me Baby (2:49)
11. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - I Can't Stop Loving You (2:47)
12. Highway Man - Louise (3:39)
13. Highway Man - Killing Floor (3:47)
14. Eddie Burks - Evelina (3:04)
15. Eddie Shaw & The Wolf Gang - I Got To Tell Somebody (Alternate Version) (3:02)

Blues as a macrocosm of music has an over-reaching arch that has influenced every American musical art form in some shape or another since its birth from the South. After spending time in the hands of the Delta Blues masters, it migrated north like many of its masters did after WWII in search of better pay and better work. Most of these masters came to Chicago. Chicago is the home of the blues. Blues as a microcosm on the South and West Sides has existed as a way of life since those early post war days. With many musicians coming and going either in or not written in the pages of history, the late 70s era was a very vibrant time for blues and blues musicians. Maxwell Street was still very alive and well, along with its many characters.

One of its many characters was Chico Chism. Chism is widely known as Howlin’ Wolf’s last drummer. However, there was much more to him than that. Shortly after Wolf’s death, Chism along with his fellow band mates sax man Eddie Shaw, guitar legend Hubert Sumlin, blues legend Detroit Junior, and Shorty Gilbert became the first incarnation of Eddie & the Wolf Gang. Probably recorded about a few months after Howlin’ Wolf’s death in 1976, the Gang recorded on Eddie Shaw’s Simmons label Have Blues Will Travel. It would be the only original recording the group would make. Forty years later, the album would make it out of the dusty alleys of the now vacant Maxwell Street and from the back corners to CD for the first time here.

To call this a piece of recorded blues history is an understatement. Hearing a young Eddie Shaw blasting away on vocals and sax, with the unmatched guitar prowess of Sumlin strumming away in the background, as Junior holds the underbelly rhythm with his piano is simply majestic. The remaining eight tracks also have been unearthed too. Many of the 45s and LPs of the remaining recordings were sold of Chico Chism’s briefcase and from bandstands at local gigs on the South & West Sides of Chicago; some of these tracks have probably never been heard out of that area.

Chism started his own label shortly after the disbanding of the original Wolf Gang and called it Cher-Kee after his mother’s Native American heritage. A virtual go-to guy for many of the unheralded musicians on Chicago’s blues scene, Chism recorded the remaining slices and time capsules of what the blues clubs were playing in the late 70s. Guys like Highway Man, Johnny Christian (who’s not included here), Eddie Burks, Willie Davis, and even Chism himself were what we would today consider regional musicians. Due to their location and their music, this recording is without a doubt essential for understanding blues at that time. Chism, like those who captured the godfathers of the Delta, is due some rightful respect for his efforts to record musicians we would otherwise not have heard.

Traditional blues specialist Bob Corritore, who supervised the production of this album, does a fine job in preserving the ambience of the recordings themselves. This CD is a great time capsule and a diamond in the rough of some of the late 70s blues CDs out there. For those new to the blues, these are artists you will probably have never heard of before. That’s okay. Make yourself familiar. Some of the guys playing on here are some names you’ll get to know. In other words, welcome back in time to Chicago. Listen and follow along. These under recorded players are going to give you a lesson on what it was like. Trust me, you’ll enjoy this history lesson. /Ben the Harpman, Juke Joint Soul

(For personnel details, see artwork included.)

Chico Chism's West Side Chicago Blues Party mc
Chico Chism's West Side Chicago Blues Party gofile

Saturday, February 24, 2018

Eddie Burks - Vampire Woman

Size: 94,3 MB
Time: 33:22
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1990
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. I'm A Lover (4:45)
02. Vampire Woman (3:48)
03. Just Got Married (4:05)
04. O'Hare Field (4:57)
05. Bald Headed Eagle (5:54)
06. Hey Mr. Bluesman (4:35)
07. Tell Me Why (5:15)

Chicago bluesman Eddie Burks was born September 17, 1931, on a plantation outside Greenwood, MS -- the 14th and youngest child of sharecroppers, his childhood was marked by tragedy, most notably his brother's lynching at the hands of the Ku Klux Klan. Burks discovered the music of Robert Johnson and Sonny Boy Williamson as a prepubescent, and began playing harmonica even before he relocated to the Windy City in 1946; there he worked at a steel mill while singing gospel as a member of the Greater Harvest Baptist Choir, famed for also launching the careers of Mahalia Jackson and Sam Cooke.

Despite the pull of the spiritual life, Burks could not leave the blues behind, playing so often at the old Maxwell Street Market that locals dubbed him "Jewtown Eddie" -- still he became an Apostolic minister, with his own storefront church on Chicago's West Side. After much of the area was destroyed by riots in the wake of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s 1968 assassination, Burks abandoned the church and his steel mill job to play the blues full-time, passing the cup along Maxwell Street in addition to backing bandleaders Eddie Shaw and Jimmy Dawkins -- on occasion, he even sat in with immortals Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf.

Despite his fame among local bluesmen, Burks remained virtually unknown outside of the Chicago city limits until 1990, when he and then-wife Maureen Walker founded Rising Son Records to release his debut LP, Vampire Woman. This Old Road followed in 1992, but he earned his biggest mainstream exposure appearing in the Academy Award-nominated 1994 documentary Blues Highway. Burks remained a staple of the Chicago blues circuit until his death in an auto accident outside Miller, IN, on January 27, 2005. ~by Jason Ankeny

Vampire Woman

Friday, June 13, 2014

Eddie Burks - This Old Road / Comin' Home

Album: This Old Road
Size: 123,5 MB
Time: 53:02
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1992
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. I'm A King Bee (5:30)
02. Hoochie Koochie Man (4:07)
03. I've Got My Mojo Workin (8:41)
04. Li'l Red Rooster (4:50)
05. Sloppy Drunk (5:07)
06. Rocks Is My Pillow (4:30)
07. Shake It For Me (5:50)
08. Rock Me Mama (5:10)
09. Stop Breakin' Down (4:45)
10. Sweet Home Chicago (4:29)

"This Old Road" stayed on the charts for several months, peaking at #2 on the Living Blues charts.

Chicago bluesman Eddie Burks was born September 17, 1931, on a plantation outside Greenwood, MS -- the 14th and youngest child of sharecroppers, his childhood was marked by tragedy, most notably his brother's lynching at the hands of the Ku Klux Klan. Burks discovered the music of Robert Johnson and Sonny Boy Williamson as a prepubescent, and began playing harmonica even before he relocated to the Windy City in 1946; there he worked at a steel mill while singing gospel as a member of the Greater Harvest Baptist Choir, famed for also launching the careers of Mahalia Jackson and Sam Cooke.

Despite the pull of the spiritual life, Burks could not leave the blues behind, playing so often at the old Maxwell Street Market that locals dubbed him "Jewtown Eddie" -- still he became an Apostolic minister, with his own storefront church on Chicago's West Side. After much of the area was destroyed by riots in the wake of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s 1968 assassination, Burks abandoned the church and his steel mill job to play the blues full-time, passing the cup along Maxwell Street in addition to backing bandleaders Eddie Shaw and Jimmy Dawkins -- on occasion, he even sat in with immortals Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf.

Despite his fame among local bluesmen, Burks remained virtually unknown outside of the Chicago city limits until 1990, when he and then-wife Maureen Walker founded Rising Son Records to release his debut LP, Vampire Woman. This Old Road followed in 1992, but he earned his biggest mainstream exposure appearing in the Academy Award-nominated 1994 documentary Blues Highway. Burks remained a staple of the Chicago blues circuit until his death in an auto accident outside Miller, IN, on January 27, 2005. ~Biography by Jason Ankeny

This Old Road

Album: Comin' Home
Size: 115,8 MB
Time: 49:16
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1993
Styles: Chicago Blues
Art: Full

01. Dead Or Alive (I Want My Baby Back) (4:23)
02. I Ain't Mad At You Pretty Baby (2:36)
03. Plough Handle (5:39)
04. Sugar Hills Blues (6:03)
05. Baby What Is Wrong With You (4:09)
06. My Daddy's House (4:15)
07. Maxwell Street Jump (5:12)
08. I Know She Was A Dreamer (3:53)
09. I'm A Man (Manish Boy) (4:40)
10. Worried Life Blues (4:22)
11. Minnie Sue (3:57)

"Comin' Home" reached #11 on the Living Blues charts.

There is a "blues pipeline" that runs between the gritty south side of Chicago right to the front door of The Blues Saloon in St. Paul, Minnesota. This pipeline, paved with concrete and asphalt, has been the major artery that has brought Chicago blues to The Blues Saloon for the past two decades. This pipeline is littered with broken dreams, hardship, and the sweat and tears of countless blues players who have made the trip. But it also has brought blues men and women who have an optimistic spirit. A spirit that has been tempered by life's hardships but that is still driving them on to one more performance.

Eddie Burks is one of these travelers with that optimistic spirit. Perhaps less know than some of his contemporaries but still the "real deal" (in the words of photographer Tom Asp). This was traditional Chicago blues harmonica blown by one of the veterans of the Chicago scene. He opened the 9:30 PM show with a "good afternoon ladies and gentlemen," that brought a few chuckles from the audience and set the tone for a fun evening of down home and back alley Chicago blues. He also had his bags and suit case right up there on stage - packed and ready to hit the road again after another one night stand.

Eddie likes to move around a lot and was out in the audience just about every other song playing to the crowd. Sometimes he would even be singing without a microphone just like when he was growing up in rural Mississippi singing out in the fields. He pulled out his chromatic harp later in the show, playing with a rich, full sound. Eddie was backed by guitar and a solid rhythm section that really kept this 12 bar blues groove going all night long. He played a very nice harp solo on the introduction of the Jimmy Reed song "Big Boss Man," and started the second set blowing his harp while sitting out in the audience (he was actually sitting on Tom Asp's jacket at the time).

He said his first influence on the harmonica was Sonny Boy Williamson #1. "His name was called John Lee, I used to listen to him play on a radio program out of Helena, Arkansas called King Biscuit. That was a long, many years back. I was in Mississippi, I was little boy then. He kind of influenced me. But I always wanted to blow my own style, it's very hard to create a style of music."

Comin' Home