Big Road Blues Show 2/15/26: Don’t The Moon Look Lonesome – Blues Labels of the 60s & 70s Pt. 6: Southland Records

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Furry LewisB-L-A-C-KThe Fabulous Furry Lewis
Furry LewisGlory, Glory, HallelujahThe Fabulous Furry Lewis
Robert Pete WilliamsYour Troubles Gonna Be Like MineWhen I Lay My Burden Down
Robert Pete WilliamsStraighten UpWhen I Lay My Burden Down
Cecil BarfieldWililam Robertson BluesSouth Georgia Blues
Cecil BarfieldHooks In The WaterSouth Georgia Blues
Jimmie Lee HarrisDon't The Moon Look Lonesome #1I Wanna Ramble
Jimmie Lee HarrisSitting Here Looking 1000 Miles AwayI Wanna Ramble
Jimmie Lee Harris & Eddie HarrisRabbitt on a LogI Wanna Ramble
Willie Guy RaineySomebody's Calling My NameWillie Guy Rainey
Willie Guy RaineySo SweetWillie Guy Rainey
Little Brother MontgomeryI Keep on Drinkin'Chicago Blues Session
Sunnyland SlimDevil Is a Busy ManChicago Blues Session
Big Joe Williams'72 Cadillac BluesHighway Man
Big Joe WilliamsBig Joe's Hometown BluesHighway Man
Lonnie PitchfordLast Fair Deal Going DownNational Downhome Blues Festival Vol. 1
Precious BryantPrecious Bryant Staggering BluesNational Downhome Blues Festival Vol. 1
Thomas BurtMy Hook's In The Water And My Cork's On Top.National Downhome Blues Festival Vol. 2
Albert Macon & Robert ThomasShe Wanna Do The Boogie WoogieNational Downhome Blues Festival Vol.
John JacksonI'm A Bad ManNational Downhome Blues Festival Vol. 4
Snooky Pryor & Homesick JamesWhy You Want To Treat Me Like ThatNational Downhome Blues Festival Vol. 4
Booker T. LauryWoman I Love Lives In Memphis, TennesseeNational Downhome Blues Festival Vol. 4
Henry & Vernell Townsend The Tears Come Rolling DownChicago Blues - Live at the Fickle Pickle
Larry JohnsonCan't You Hear The Angels SingingChicago Blues - Live at the Fickle Pickle
Joe CallicottRiver BluesNorth Mississippi Blues
Joe CallicottLet The Deal Go DownNorth Mississippi Blues
Joe CallicottGoodbye Baby BluesNorth Mississippi Blues
Drink Small You Can Call Me Country I Know My Blues Are Different
Piano RedBlues Why Don't You leave Me AloneDr Feelgood
Roosevelt SykesPut up or Shut UpA "Dirty Mother" For You
Furry Lewis & Will ShadeFurry Lewis & Will ShadeTennessee Recordings

Show Notes: 

Click Cover to Read Notes

Today’s show is the sixth in a series of shows spotlighting small blues labels that popped up in the 60s and 70s. Many of these labels were run by record collectors like Belzona/Yazoo run by Nick Perls, Don Kent who ran Mamlish Records, Bernard Klatzko of Herwin, numerous labels by George Paulus, Leroy Pierson’s Boogie Disease/Nighthawk, John Fahey’s Takoma label, Francis Smith’s Magpie among others. Many of these labels were strictly reissue labels, while others recorded the numerous older blues musician who were “rediscovered” in the 60’s and as well as older artists like Fred McDowell, Thomas Shaw who got recorded in later life. For this installment we spotlight the Southland label operated by Joe Mares. The label was founded c.1948 in New Orleans to spotlight traditional style New Orleans jazz, they continued through to the late 1960s when Mares retired. The label was sold to George H. Buck, Jr. We take a selective look at the label, spotlighting their blues offerings which include great field recordings by George Mitchell as well as recordings by Furry Lewis, Robert Pete Williams, Sunnyland Slim, Little Brother Montgomery, Big Joe Williams and others.

In 1925 Furry Lewis got together with Will Shade, Dewey Thomas and Hambone Lewis to form an early version of the Memphis Jug Band and like Jim Jackson took to traveling with medicine shows. Vocalion talent scouts saw both men in 1927 but it was Lewis who went to Chicago first in April where he cut six sides. Just under a year later Victor recorded eight more titles by Lewis in Memphis and Vocalion brought him in the studio one last time in 1929, cutting four songs at the Peabody Hotel in Memphis. Thirty year would pass before Sam Charters came knocking in 1959 subsequently recordings him for Folkways that same year with two more albums following for Prestige in 1961. Our album, The Fabulous Furry Lewis, was released in Southland in 1973.

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Robert Pete Williams began to play for small events such as Church gatherings, fish fries, suppers, and dances. From the 1930s to the 1950s, Williams played music and continued to work in the lumberyards of Baton Rouge.  e was discovered by ethnomusicologists Dr. Harry Oster and Richard Allen in Louisiana State Penitentiary, where he was serving a life sentence for fatally shooting a man in a nightclub in 1956. Oster and Allen recorded Williams performing several of his songs about prison life and pleaded for him to be pardoned. Under pressure from Oster, the parole board issued a pardon and commuted his sentence to 12 years. In December 1958, he was released into ‘servitude parole’, which required 80 hours of labor per week on a Denham Springs farm without due compensation, and only room and board provided. This parole prevented him from working in music, though he was able to occasionally play with Butch Cage and Willie B. Thomas at Thomas’s home in Zachary. By this time, Williams’ music was becoming popular, and he played at the 1964 Newport Folk Festival. Our album, When I Lay My Burden Down, was recorded in 1971 in New Orleans.

Using the name William Robertson, in fear of endangering his welfare checks, Cecil Barfield cut the LP South Georgia Blues for Southland in the mid-70’s with several other tracks appearing on Flyright’s Georgia Blues Today (reissued by Fat Possum). George Mitchell recorded Barfield extensively and there were a couple of digital collections available at one point. Art Rosenbaum and Axel Küstner also record Barfield. Barfield was born in 1922 and was farmer all his life until a back injury forced him to retire.  On how he came up with his songs he told Art Rosenbaum “your heart feels a certain way, then your mind follows, then you hands follow that.”

Born March 1, 1935, in Seale, Alabama, Harris spent his childhood working in the fields around Phenix City, and assisting his father making moonshine. At 19, Harris left home to ramble. or all his traveling, Harris frequently arrived back to Phenix City, where George Mitchell found him in 1981. With his older brother Eddie, Jimmy Lee played at rent parties, where the host served liquor and food to pay the rent. Harris died from a heart attack in the early 1980s, not long after Mitchell recorded him. I Wanna Ramble was recorded early 1980s.

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Willie Guy ‘Scoot’ Rainey born April 17, 1901 near Anniston in Calhoun County, Alabama. His mother was an organ player, and Rainey began playing organ that same year. By the age of 9, Rainey was playing organ, guitar, fiddle and a pie pan banjo that his mother’s boyfriend made for him. He played music at parties and on the streets of small towns near Atlanta, he finally began playing bars in Atlanta and was “discovered” by music teacher, Ross Kapstein. Guy recorded one album, Willie Guy Rainey in 1978 and with the help of Kapstein and toured Europe before his death. He was the subject of a short film, Nothin’ But the Blues, produced by Georgia Folklore Society. Willie passed in 1983.

This session that makes up Chicago Blues Session (featuring Sunnyland Slim and Little Brother Montgomery) was recorded on July 14, 1960 and arranged and supervised by Paul Oliver. As Oliver wrote: ” The liquor flowed and so did the music. John Steiner recorded it ‘as it came’ with as little indifference with the informality of the session as possible; glasses were filled and filled again; jibes, shouts and comments went on tape with the music. The result was ‘authentic blues’ – the blues and boogie of Chicago as it was then and is today, played and sung by some of its best exponents, no holds barred, without fake or ‘folk.'”

Joe Callicott, waxed a lone 78 in Memphis in 1930, the year before played second guitar on Garfield Akers’ “Cottonfield Blues Parts 1 & 2.” It was  George Mitchell who found him in Nesbit, Mississippi off Highway 51 not far from Hernando and short distance from Brights were Akers was supposedly born. Callicott’s “comeback” was about as short as his first recording career, lasting from the summer of 1967 through the summer of 1968; he recorded nineteen sides for Mitchell either late August or early September (split between Revival’s Deal Gone Down and Arhoolie’s Mississippi Delta Blues – “Blow My Blues Away” Vol. 2) four sides at the 1968 Memphis Country Blues Festival (split between The 1968 Memphis Country Blues Festival and Stars Of The 1969-1970 Memphis Country Blues Festival) and seventeen sides for Blue Horizon in 1968 which have all been issued in 2007 as Furry Lewis & Mississippi Joe Callicott: The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions.

The National Downhome Blues Festival was held in Atlanta in October, 1984. Four volumes of music from the festival were released on Southland.  We hear tracks by Lonnie Pitchford, Precious Bryant, Thomas Burt, Junior Kimbrough, Albert Macon & Robert Thomas, John Jackson, Snooky Pryor & Homesick James, Booker T. Laury, Henry & Vernell Townsend and Larry Johnson.

Click Cover to Read Notes

In addition to the acoustic and electric guitar, Lonnie Pitchford was also skilled at the one-string guitar and diddley bow, a one-string instrument. He was a protégé of Robert Lockwood Jr., from whom he learned the style of Robert Johnson. For a while, Pitchford performed accompanied by Johnny Shines and Lockwood. His first recording appeared in 1980 on the Living Country Blues USA series: Living Country Blues USA: The Introduction and Living Country Blues USA Vol. 7: Afro American Blues Roots. His own debut album, All Round Man was released on Rooster in 1994. Pitchford performed at the Smithsonian Festival of American Folklife, and at the 1984 Downhome Blues Festival in Atlanta. In November 1998, Pitchford died at his home in Lexington, from AIDS.

Precious Bryant learned to play guitar from her father and uncle before dropping out of high school in eleventh grade and beginning to perform wherever she could. Her uncle was blues musician George Henry Bussey. he was first recorded by folklorist George Mitchell in 1967, who described her as “Georgia musical treasure.” In 1983, she performed at the Chattahoochee Folk Festival, and soon began playing at local, regional, and international venues. In 1995, Bryant met Tim Duffy and became involved with the Music Maker Relief Foundation, who assisted her in booking global tours and shows. She cut three albums in the early 2000s.

Albert Macon began teaching Robert Thomas to play blues guitar when Thomas, who was nine years younger than Macon, was about 15 years old. For over 40 years the two men played music together at fish fries, parties and festivals around Georgia. The two men also received national and international attention, playing such venues as the Knoxville World’s Fair and the American Blues Festival in the Netherlands and the WDR Blues Festival in Bonn, Germany. Macon and Thomas recorded Blues and Boogie from Alabama on the Dutch Swingmaster label as well as recordings captured by George Mitchell.

Booker T. Laury was born in Memphis and grew up with his lifelong friend Memphis Slim. In the early 1930s, in the company of the younger Mose Vinson, Slim and Laury began playing in local clubs. Laury didn’t start recording until the 80s, cutting several albums through the 90s.

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Big Road Blues Show 2/1/26: Open Your Book, Daddy Wants To Read With You – Forgotten Gems from Aristocrat/Chess

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Andrew TibbsI Feel Like CryingAndrew Tibbs 1947-1951
Tom ArchiaFishin' PoleThe Aristocrat Of The Blues
The Five BlazesChicago BoogieThe Aristocrat Blues Story
Clarence SamuelsBoogie Woogie BluesThe Aristocrat Blues Story
Jo Jo AdamsCabbage Head Part ITom Archia 1947-1948
Jimmy BellJust About Easter TimeHidden Gems Vol. 4 (Aristocrat Records)
Forrest SykesForrest Sykes Plays The BoogieThe Aristocrat Of The Blues
Sax Mallard & His Orchestra w/Pro McClamRolling TearsHidden Gems Vol. 4 (Aristocrat Records)
Laura Rucker Cryin' The BluesThe Aristocrat Blues Story
Floyd SmithSaturday Nite BoogieHidden Gems Vol. 3 (Aristocrat Records)
Blues RockersTrouble In My HomeHidden Gems Vol. 3 (Aristocrat Records)
Elijah JonesSad Home BluesSouthside Screamers
Forest City JoeA Woman On Every StreetThe Aristocrat Blues Story
Charles BradixWee Wee HoursHidden Gems Vol. 3 (Aristocrat Records)
Floyd JonesDark RoadDrop Down Mama
Honey Boy EdwardsDrop Down MamaDrop Down Mama
Johnny ShinesSo Glad I Found You Drop Down Mama
Big Boy SpiresMurmur LowDrop Down Mama
Blue SmittyCryingDrop Down Mama
Otis RushSo Many RoadsDoor To Door
Albert KingSearching For A WomanDoor To Door
L. J. Thomas and His Louisiana PlayboysBaby Take a Chance with MeThe Sun Blues Box 1950-1958
Robert CafferyBlodie's BluesChicago Jump Bands: Early R&B Vol. I 1945–53
Morris PejoeTired of Crying Over YouChess Blues Guitar: Two Decades Of Killer Fretwork 1949-1969
Arthur "Big Boy" CrudupOpen Your BookA Music Man Like Nobody Ever Saw
Willie NixJust One MistakeDown Home Blues Classics Vol. 5: Memphis & The South 1949-1954
Doctor RossDoctor Ross BoogieThe Sun Blues Box 1950-1958
Rocky FullerFuneral Hearse At My DoorDown Home Blues - Chicago Vol. 2: Sweet Home Chicago
Memphis MinnieLake MichiganDown Home Blues - Chicago Vol. 2: Sweet Home Chicago
Lightnin' SlimStation BluesLightnin' Slim 1954-1965
Henry GrayI Declare That Ain't RightKnights Of The Keyboard
Alberta AdamsMessin' Around with the BluesMen Are Like Street Cars
Jimmie (T99) NelsonFree and Easy MindComplete Jimmy Nelson
Jimmy Witherspoonen The Lights Go OutSpoon So Easy: The Chess Years
Gus JenkinsMean and EvilComplete Gus Jenkins
Joe Hill LouisDorothy MaeThe Sun Blues Box 1950-1958
Eddie BurnsBiscuit Baking MamaJuicy Harmonica
Otis SpannIt Must Have Been the DevilKnights Of The Keyboard
Robert Nighthawk Someday BabyChess Blues Guitar: Two Decades Of Killer Fretwork
Jessie KnightNothing but Money45
Danny Overbea40 Cups Of CoffeeThose Rhythm and Blues

Show Notes: 

Cashbox Ad 1949
Cashbox 1949

For today’s show we trawl through the catalogs of Aristocrat and Chess and it’s Checker subsidiary, through the mid-50s with a couple of later numbers, featuring some lesser knowns plus some well knowns who recorded little for the labels. An inspiration for the shows were two Chess albums I’ve long treasured: Drop Down Mama (featuring several artists who recorded sparingly for Chess) and Door to Door (featuring Albert King sides bought by Chess from Parrot & Bobbin plus sides by Otis Rush cut for Chess in 1960). The Aristocrat label was the predecessor of Chess Records but had different owners and a different approach to recording and selling music. The company was founded by Charles and Evelyn Aron in April 1947 and ran through 1950. Leonard Chess bought a stake in Aristocrat Records in 1947 and slowly bought out other owners. The Chess brothers became the sole owners of the company in 1950 by buying out founder Evelyn Aron then renamed the company Chess Records. Of the first 8 releases on the new label (Chess 1425 through 1432), 6 used material recorded in June 1950 or earlier; they mark a transitional phase from Aristocrat to Chess. During the new label’s first two years, its proprietors dipped further, but not very systematically, into the Aristocrat archives. Meanwhile, the Aristocrat records that they had in stock kept on being distributed until January 13, 1951, when the old label was officially discontinued.

The first part of the show opens with Aristocrat sides spotlighting fine forgotten urban singers such as Andrew Tibbs, Tom Archia, Jo Jo Adams and some down homes artists such as Forest City Joe and Charles Bradix. From Chess we hear from some well-known names who cut sparingly or had unreleased material for the label such as Johnny Shines, Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup, Lightnin’ Slim, Louisiana Red, Jimmy Witherspoon, Otis Spann to more obscure names like Blue Smitty, Big Boy Spires, Robert Caffery, Jessie Knight, Danny Overbea among others. For today’s show we provide background on some of the artists with a huge debt to The Red Saunders Research Foundation.

Aristocrat was founded by Charles and Evelyn Aron. From June through December 1947, talent scout Sammy Goldberg helped to point the label toward rhythm and blues; he brought Jump Jackson, Tom Archia, Clarence Samuels, Andrew Tibbs, and Sunnyland Slim to the label. By September 1947, Leonard Chess, the proprietor of a neighborhood bar and after-hours joint called the Macomba Lounge, had invested in the company and become involved in the sales end of Aristocrat’s operations. The most-recorded musician during 1947 was Lee Monti, who led a polka band with two accordions; the second and third-most recorded artists were jazz tenor saxophonist Tom Archia and uptown blues singer Andrew Tibbs. Sax man Tom Archia performed mostly in jazz and swing bands. He cut some R&B sides for Aristocrat in 1947-48 as well as backing blues singers Andrew Tibbs and Jo Jo Adams. Andrew Tibbs was singing at Jimmy’s Palm Garden when Sammy Goldberg saw him at the club and signed him to Aristocrat; Leonard Chess saw commercial potential in recording Tibbs, and decided to invest in the company. Tibbs’ debut session has always been said to be the first one that Leonard Chess attended. Tibbs continued to be the company’s top seller until well into 1949.

Cashbox Ad 1949
Cashbox 1949

Jo Jo Adams was among the most flamboyant singers of Chicago’s South Side who sang an urbane style of blues that prevailed in the 1940’s. He also danced, told dirty jokes, and showed off his wardrobe of loudly colored formal wear with extra-long coattails. More often than not he doubled as MC at the clubs he played.  He cut some eighteen sides for Aristocrat, some unissued and a six song session for Chess in 1950 with only two items released.

The Blues Rockers were an ensemble that consisted of James Watts (vocals), Willie Mabon (piano and vocals), Eddie El and a second electric guitarist, and Earl Dranes (bass). Watts appears to be the lead singer on “Trouble in My Home” while “Times Are Getting Hard” from 1949, obviously features Willie Mabon. The Blues Rockers sides were recorded by DJ Al Benson as a free-lance production and later sold to Aristocrat. Now signed directly to the label, the Blues Rockers, returned for a four-tune session in March 1950. A later edition of the Blues Rockers—in which only “Earley” Dranes remained from 1949-1950—recorded in Nashville in 1955, for the Excello label.

Free and Easy Mind

After graduating from high school in St. Louis in 1928, Jimmie Bell pursued a career in music. Starting out with a carnival band, he spent the 1930’s in local Swing bands. Near the end of the decade he headed his own band, before joining the great Jeter-Pillars band in 1940 (where he played trumpet). During the 1940’s, leading his own bands, he worked out of St. Louis, Detroit, and New York. He was discovered by Leonard Chess working with his trio. He recorded for Chess’ Aristocrat label in 1947. The other two sides from this session were finally released on the new Chess label, in June 1950. He did a session in Shreveport in 1949 that remained unreleased until British JSP label put out the LP Stranger In Your Town collecting new and old recordings. In 1950, he recorded two sides for the Texas-based Royalty label and another two for Premium in Chicago. A final session on Chance was cut in 1954. Returning to his hometown, Bell worked in Peoria playing piano bar during his last decades.

Sax Mallard worked briefly (April–May 1943) with Duke Ellington and his Orchestra, as well as with Ellington’s Octet. Like so many Swing musicians, Mallard had to contend with changing popular tastes as the war ended and the Big Bands wound down. When he returned to Chicago, after a stint in the navy, and picked up studio work.  In the studios Mallard took over a role that had belonged to Buster Bennett before the war. He became an extremely active participant in blues recordings for Victor and Columbia through the end of 1947. Mallard made his debut as leader for Aristocrat in December 1947.During this period he also worked with singer Andrew Tibbs and The Dozier Boys with label credits to Sax Mallard’s Combo. Mallard also appeared during this period on Arbee Stidham’s first session as a leader. He recorded with artists such as Tampa Red, Roosevelt Sykes, Eddie Boyd, Big Bill Broonzy among others.

Blues harpist Forest City Joe was heavily influenced by John Lee “Sonny Boy” Williamson. Joe was remembered as a “great harp player” by Muddy Waters. Joe was raised in the area around Hughes and West Memphis, AR, and even as a boy played the local juke joints in the area. He hoboed his way through the state working roadhouses and juke joints during the 1940s. Beginning in 1947, he also began working the Chicago area, and a year later had his one and only session for the Chess brothers’ Aristocrat label. Lomax recorded his final sides in 1959 and Joe passed away in 1960.

Drop Down Mama

Elijah Jones was brought to the studios in 1938 by Yank Rachell, recording some titles and resurfacing in 1949 for another (at that time unissued) session where he was billed as Kid Slim. These latter sides were possibly recorded for Aristocrat records but George Paulus, who owned the acetates from this session, has said that they carry no matrix numbers so it’s unclear their real source.

The album Drop Down Mama was issued in 1970 as part of the Chess Vintage Series as was the sole anthology featuring sides by several who recorded sparingly for Chess such as Honeyboy Edwards, Johnny Shines, Big Boy Spires, Blue Smitty and Floyd Jones. Honeyboy cut a four song session for the label in 1953 but nothing was issued until “Drop Down Mama” and “Sweet Home Chicago” was included on this collection. Door to Door was issued in 1969 and included sides by Albert King purchased by Chess plus sides Otis Rush cut for Chess. Rush cut ten sides for the label at two session in 1960.

When he was discharged, Claude Smith AKA Blue Smitty, wound up in Memphis for a spell, and the following year he was playing clubs in Chicago with Jimmy Rogers and Muddy Waters. They played some club dates with Jimmy and a drummer called ‘Pork Chop’, but Claude had a well-paid day-job as an electrician, which was great for fixing amplifiers and pick-ups, but he was obviously not so committed to all-night gigs: he got the boys their first paid residency, but often did not show up himself. As the others moved up, Claude moved around the towns of Illinois over the next few years, plying his trade and playing in the evenings, and at a residency at Club 99 in Joliet, he picked up the name “Blue Smitty.” Smitty’s association with Muddy got him some session work at Chess Studios over in Chicago, and he recorded four of his own songs for them in July 1952. Smitty’s career did not take off, and although he continued to play around Illinois for many decades.

After visiting Chicago a couple of times, Floyd Jones moved to the city permanently in 1945. He began playing on Maxwell Street and in non-union venues with such artists as Little Walter, John Henry Barbee, and Sunnyland Slim. In the fall of 1946, Jones teamed up with Snooky Pryor, soon joined by his cousin Moody Jones. Throughout the late 1940’s and early 1950’s, Jones recorded over a dozen songs for Marvel, JOB, Chess, and Vee-Jay. Jones also appeared on recordings throughout the 1950’s by Eddie Taylor, Little Willie Foster, and Sunnyland Slim, and continued to play in clubs and on Maxwell Street into the 1970’s, often with Big Walter Horton. In the 1960’s and 70’s he recorded more sparingly, cutting sides for Testament and some intimate sides with Walter Horton.

Murmur Low

In 1943 Big Boy Spires moved to Chicago and started playing at house parties. At the time of his first recording session for Chess Records, in 1952, Spires was working with a band, the Rocket Four, with Eddie El on guitar and Willie “Big Eyes” Smith on drums and harmonica. A second recording session, for Chance Records in 1953, resulted in the release of another single, but an additional four sides by Spires and two by guitarist Johnny Williams remained unissued until the 1970s. Spires performed with the Rocket Four through the 1950s. He recorded another largely unissued session for Testament Records.

Morris Pejoe was from Louisiana, In the late ’40s he moved to Beaumont, TX, where he switched to guitar. Fellow Louisiana pianist Henry Gray remained his musical sidekick throughout these years, and in the early ’50s the two relocated to Chicago together. During 1952 and 1953, he cut sides for Checker, accompanied by Gray and went on to cut sides for Vee-Jay, Abco, Atomic H, and Kaytown.

After the war, Willie Nix joined Sonny Boy Williamson’s band, where he was taught to play drums for the group. After Williamson left the group, Nix and the other members, singer Willie Love and guitarist Joe Willie Wilkins, formed a group that was featured on a radio show on KWEM in West Memphis, Arkansas. Nix took over the lead spot in 1950 after Willie Love left. His show lasted more than a year. In 1951 Sam Phillips heard Nix and recorded him, with sides going to RPM (1951), Checker (1952), and Phillips’s own Sun label (1953), the latter released under the name of Memphis Blues Boy. At Sun, Nix backed several artists in the studio including Walter Horton, Joe Hill Louis, Earl Hooker and others. n 1953, after Nix committed a murder (according to Steve LaVere it was a triple murder committed in Goulds, Arkansas in 1953 ) in Arkansas under unclear circumstances, he moved up to Chicago, where he stayed five years, drumming behind such blues greats as Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Elmore James, Aleck Miller ‘‘Sonny Boy Williamson,’’ and Sunnyland Slim. He backed Muddy on a four-song session for Chess  in 1953. Nix recorded two singles for Art Sheridan for his Chance and Sabre labels.

According to one story Louisiana Red met Muddy Waters when he was a teenager when Muddy was passing through Pittsburg and Red got to sit in with him. After Red got discharged from the Army he went to Chicago and reconnected with Muddy. Muddy hooked him up with Chess where Red recorded ten sides for Chess in 1952 under the name Rocky Fuller. Only one coupling came out on Checker: “Soon One Morning b/w Come On Baby Now.” The other sides eventually saw the light of day in the 80s on an LP shared with sides by Forrest City Joe titled Memory Of Sonny Boy. Two of the Chess numbers featured Little Walter on harmonica.

Just One Mistake

Henry Strong was one of Muddy Waters’ harmonica players who replaced Walter Horton in 1953. He was murdered by a jealous girlfriend before he was able  to record anything with Muddy. On June 3, 1954, Strong’s girlfriend turned up ranting and raving in the middle of the night at the South Greenwood Ave. building where she and Strong shared an apartment, in the same building where Muddy lived. When Strong tried to calm things down, she grabbed a knife and stabbed him in the chest. He died in the back seat of Muddy’s car, on the way to the hospital. Strong did play behind Henry Gray on two numbers cut for Chess in 1953 but not issued until decades later. From that session we spin “I Declare That Ain’t Right.”

Blessed with a booming voice and a hip delivery, Jimmy Nelson cut a swath of fine sides for Modern’s RPM and Kent imprints in the early 50’s and 60’s but only scored big with his signature “T-99 Blues.” After getting dropped from Modern Nelson bounced through a number of small labels before giving up music in the 60’s. It wasn’t until the 80’s that he decided to refocus his energies on music, playing locally and making some guest appearances on record and appearing at festivals. After many trials and tribulations Nelson finally made his long-awaited comeback record with 1999’s Rockin’ And Shoutin’ The Blues on Rounder, followed by two more on his own Nettie Marie label. “Free and Easy Mind” arrived from some little operation in Houston, Texas. Chess would pick up further Nelson sides made in Houston in October 1957 and December 1959.

Gus Jenkins was born in Birmingham, and developed his piano style influenced by St. Louis blues pianist Walter Davis. He toured with Sammy Green’s Hot Harlem Review, and backed singers Big Mama Thornton and Percy Mayfield, before reaching Chicago in the late 1940s. Jenkins first recorded for the Chess label in January 1953, accompanied by Walter Horton (harmonica) and Willie Nix (drums), but his recordings, including “Eight Ball”, were not released for some years. Later in 1953 he recorded “Cold Love” and other tracks as Little Temple for the Specialty label in Los Angeles. He remained in Los Angeles for the rest of his career, and learned woodworking while continuing to perform, with Johnny Otis’ band and others, and record. He recorded “I Miss My Baby” for Jake Porter’s Combo label in 1955, before recording “Tricky” in 1956 for the Flash label owned by Charlie Reynolds. The single reached no.2 on the R&B chart and no.79 on the Billboard pop chart in late 1956. He released several further singles on Flash, including “Spark Plug” and “Payday Shuffle”, before forming his own label, Pioneer International.  He released a string of records on the label until 1962, many being piano and organ instrumentals released under his own name.

Otis SpannMessin' Around with the Blues‘s debut featured his piano and vocals, with George “Harmonica” Smith (on “It Must Have Been the Devil”), Jody Williams and surprise guest B. B. King on guitar, the omnipresent Willie Dixon at the bass, and Earl Phillips on drums. Both Spann’s idiosyncratically upbeat approach to “It Must Have Been the Devil” and the instrumental side, “Five Spot,” were successful performances, but Spann lacked name recognition at this point in his career, and his debut release on Checker 807 is a rarity today. Spann would record two more sides in 1956, but they were not released until years later. Otis Spann began enjoying more success as a recording artist in 1960, when he recorded an LP for British Decca and one for Candid

Danny Overbea made his first recording in 1950 as guest vocalist on saxophonist Eddie Chamblee’s “Every Shut Eye Ain’t Sleep”. He signed as a solo artist to Premium Records and released his first single in early 1951. He became a popular club performer, noted for his guitar skills while performing splits, playing behind his back, and with his teeth. He signed to Chess in 1952 where he had some chart success with releases on the Checker subsidiary and later Argo.

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Big Road Blues Show 5/25/25: Hobson City Stomp – Post-War Label Spotlight Pt. 6 – Circle & Comet Records

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Bertha 'Chippie' HillCharleston BluesMontana Taylor & 'Freddy' Shayne 1929-1946
Bertha 'Chippie' HillHow Long BluesMontana Taylor & 'Freddy' Shayne 1929-1946
Bertha 'Chippie' HillBlack Market BluesMontana Taylor & 'Freddy' Shayne 1929-1946
Hociel ThomasGo Down SunshineHociel Thomas and Chippie Hill
Hociel ThomasTebo's Texas BoogieHociel Thomas and Chippie Hill
Montana TaylorI Can't SleepThe Circle Recordings
Montana TaylorIn The BottomThe Circle Recordings
Montana TaylorIndiana Avenue StompThe Circle Recordings
Freddie ShayneChestnut Street BoogieMontana Taylor & 'Freddy' Shayne 1929-1946
Freddie ShayneMr. Freddy's RagMontana Taylor & 'Freddy' Shayne 1929-1946
Bertha 'Chippie' HillMistreatin' Mr. DupreeMontana Taylor & 'Freddy' Shayne 1929-1946
Bertha 'Chippie' HillTrouble In MindHociel Thomas and Chippie Hill
Bertha 'Chippie' HillWorried Jailhouse BluesMontana Taylor & 'Freddy' Shayne 1929-1946
Lizzie Miles & Her New Orleans BoysBasin Street Blues78
Lizzie Miles & Her New Orleans BoysCareless Love78
Dan Burley’s Skiffle Boys31st Street BluesCircle Blues Session 1946
Dan Burley’s Skiffle BoysBig Cat, Little Cat #1Circle Blues Session 1946
Dan Burley’s Skiffle BoysFishtail BluesCircle Blues Session 1946
Montana TaylorMontana's BluesMontana Taylor & 'Freddy' Shayne 1929-1946
Montana TaylorLow Down BugleMontana Taylor & 'Freddy' Shayne 1929-1946
Montana TaylorRotten Break BluesMontana Taylor & 'Freddy' Shayne 1929-1946
Bertha 'Chippie' HillAround The Clock BluesChicago The Blues Yesterday Vol. 24
Bertha 'Chippie' HillNobody Knows You When You're Down and OutHociel Thomas and Chippie Hill
Pete JohnsonClimbin' and Screamin'78
Cow Cow DavenportHobson City StompCow Cow Davenport Vol. 2 1929-1945
Cow Cow DavenportGotta Girl For Every Day In The WeekCow Cow Davenport Vol. 2 1929-1945
Cow Cow DavenportChimin' AwayCow Cow Davenport Vol. 2 1929-1945
T-Bone WalkerDescription BluesThe Complete Recordings of T-Bone Walker 1940-1954
T-Bone WalkerFirst Love BluesThe Complete Recordings of T-Bone Walker 1940-1954
T-Bone WalkerT-Bone ShuffleThe Complete Recordings of T-Bone Walker 1940-1954
T-Bone WalkerI'm Still in Love With YouThe Complete Recordings of T-Bone Walker 1940-1954
T-Bone WalkerLonesome Woman BluesThe Complete Recordings of T-Bone Walker 1940-1954
T-Bone WalkerInspiration BluesThe Complete Recordings of T-Bone Walker 1940-1954
T-Bone WalkerThat Old Feelin' Is GoneThe Complete Recordings of T-Bone Walker 1940-1954
T-Bone WalkerWest Side BabyThe Complete Recordings of T-Bone Walker 1940-1954
Jack McVea & His All StarsB. B. Boogie (Bartender Boogie)Jack McVea Vol. 2 1945-1946
Jack McVea & His All StarsBoogie (House Party Boogie)Jack McVea Vol. 2 1945-1946

Show Notes: 

Bertha "Chippie" Hill
Bertha Hill in New York City, 1940s, photo by William P. Gottlieb

After the World War II, or slightly before, through the 1960s, there a slew of independent labels that popped around the country to record all sorts of music, but quite a number specialized in black music such as blues, gospel and jazz. In the early 1940s, the record industry was dominated by the majors: RCA Victor, Decca, and Columbia. As John Broven wrote in Record Makers and Breakers: “The postwar independent record era was kick-started by a serendipitous confluence of events that may be described, without understatement or originality, as the perfect storm. There was the launch of BMI (Broadcast Music, Inc.) in 1940, America’s dramatic entry into World War II in 1941, and the union strike by the American Federation of Musicians (AFM) in 1942.”

In our continuing survey of these labels we spotlight two New York based labels, Circle Records and Comet Records. In New York, Rudi Blesh and Janis Harriet heard jazz drummer Warren “Baby” Dodds playing inventive solos with Bunk Johnson’s band. Blesh said he hated drum solos until he saw Dodds. To record Dodds and others, they started Circle Records. Circle recorded traditional jazz uch as Baby Dodds, Sharkey’s Dixieland Band, Paul Barbarin’s New Orleans Band, Kid Rena’s Delta Jazz Band plus blues singers Bertha ‘Chippie’ Hill and Lizzie Miles plus boogie pianists such as Dan Burley, Freddie Shayne, Hociel Thomas and Montana Taylor. Blesh also had a radio program called This is Jazz around this time. Comet Records was founded in 1944 by Les Schriber, Sr. and Harry Alderton. The label was acquired by Black & White Records and operated as a subsidiary. The label recorded notable blues by Cow Cow Davenport, Jack McVea and T-Bone Walker.

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, Hill 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. Between 1925 and 1929 she recorded 23 titles.

Montana Taylor

In the 1930s Hill 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.

Circle Newspaper
The New York Age New York, Dec. 28, 1946

The early Texas piano tradition was based around the remarkable Thomas family who made the bulk of their recordings between 1923 and 1928. The music sounds quite different from those who recorded in the 30’s. As David Evans states: “It is likely that no family has contributed more personalities to blues history than the Thomas family of Houston, Texas, whose famous members included George W. Thomas, his sister Beulah “Sippie” Wallace, their brother Hersal Thomas, George’s daughter Hociel Thomas, and

Moanin’ Bernice Edwards who was raised up in the family.”  Hersal was busy between 1925 & 1926 cutting a dozen titles with Hociel, fifteen with Sippie and backing singers Lillian Mller and Sodarisa Miller. Hersal died tragically at the age of 16 in 1926 of food poisoning. In 1946, Hociel recorded seven songs as pianist and vocalist with Mutt Carey for the Circle label, which were her last recordings. She worked with Kid Ory’s Orchestra in San Francisco In 1948. She died in 1952.

Montana Taylor was born in Butte, Montana, where his father owned a club. The family moved to Chicago and then Indianapolis, where Taylor learned piano around 1919. In 1929 he recorded a few tracks for Vocalion Records, including “Indiana Avenue Stomp” and “Detroit Rocks”. Later he moved to Cleveland, Ohio in 1936. Montana disappeared from the public record for some years, during which he may have given up playing piano. However, in 1946 he was rediscovered by jazz fan Rudi Blesh, and was recorded both solo and as the accompanist to Bertha “Chippie” Hill. His final recordings were from a 1948 radio broadcast. Taylor, again forgotten, vanished in 1958 into obscurity.

Big Cat, Little Cat

Freddie Shayne is a shadowy figure who spent his life working in Chicago. He first time on record was backing singer Priscilla Stewart on “Mr. Freddie Blues.” Shayne also made a very rare piano roll of this song. In 1935 Shayne recorded a solo record, “Original Mr. Freddie Blues b/w Lonesome Man Blues.” “Mr. Freddie Blues” became something of a boogie standard covered by many artists including Meade Lux Lewis, Pete Johnson, Jimmy Blythe, Art Tatum and others. In the 40’s he made some recordings for the Circle label where he also backed singer Bertha “Chippie” Hill.

Lizzie Miles was born in New Orleans in 1895. She worked with Joe Oliver, Kid Ory, Bunk Johnson, and A.J. Piron from 1909-1911. She then toured the South, performing in theaters, circuses, and with minstrel shows. She moved to New York and made her first recordings in 1922. Miles toured Europe in 1924 and 1925 and then returned to New York and worked in clubs from 1926 to 1931. She recorded around sixty sides between 1922 and 1930. Miles suffered a serious illness and retired from the music industry in the 1930s. Despite her illness, Miles appeared in two films in the early 1930s. She began working regularly again in 1935, performing with Paul Barbarin at the Strollers Club in New York. She sang with Fats Waller in 1938, made some recordings in 1939 and then worked in Chicago until she left music in 1942. In 1950, Miles lived in California where she sang with George Lewis in 1953 and 1954, performed and in Las Vegas from 1955 to 1957 and sang with Joe Darensbourg in Chicago in 1958 and 1959. She returned to New Orleans, where she appeared with Freddie Kohlman and Paul Barbarin. She recorded with several Dixieland and traditional jazz bands, appeared at the Monterey Jazz Festival in 1958, and made regular radio broadcasts before retiring in 1959.

Chimin’ Away

As a teenager Dan Burley played boogie-woogie piano in Chicago. While attending Phillips High School he developed friendships with Lionel Hampton, Milton Hinton, Louis Jordan. By 1929 Burley was the sports editor for the Daily Defender with a featured column syndicated throughout the country. He also wrote for the Chicago Bee. After moving to New York City Burley became theatrical editor of the Amsterdam News. He became the managing editor of the New York Age, which he co-owned and was an editor of Ebony magazine from the late 1930s. Burley reputedly coined the word bebop and was the creator of The Harlem Handbook of Jive, which sold more than 100,000 copies. Burley started his music career by playing Chicago “house rent parties”, blues cafes, socials, and clubs. He founded Dan Burley & His Skiffle Boys in 1946. Burley recorded with Leonard Feather and Tiny Grimes in 1945, and with Lionel Hampton in 1946. That same year, he put together Dan Burley & His Skiffle Boys, an ensemble that included Brownie McGhee and his brother Sticks, as well as Pops Foster. During the course of his career, Burley also recorded with Hot Lips Page, Tyree Glenn, and Baby Dodds.

Cow Cow Davenport’s early career revolved around carnivals and vaudeville. He toured TOBA with an act called Davenport and Company with blues singer Dora Carr and they recorded together in 1925 and 1926. Davenport didn’t cut a 78 record until 1927 although prior to that he made a number of piano rolls between 1925 and 1927 including three versions of “Cow Cow Blues.” Davenport briefly teamed up with blues singer Ivy Smith in 1928 and worked as a talent scout for Brunswick and Vocalion records in the late 1920’s and played rent parties in Chicago. They formed an act called the Chicago Steppers which lasted for some months and, in 1928, the partnership began to record for the Paramount Company. Davenport moved to Cleveland, Ohio in 1930 and toured the TOBA vaudeville circuit and recorded with Sam Price. In 1938 Davenport suffered a stroke that left his right hand somewhat paralyzed and affected his piano playing for the rest of his life, but he remained active as a vocalist until he regained enough strength in his hand to play again. In 1942 Freddie Slack’s Orchestra scored a huge hit with “Cow Cow Boogie” with vocals by seventeen year old Ella Mae Morse which sparked the Boogie-Woogie craze of the early 1940. This led to a revival of interest in Davenport’s music. He tried to make a “comeback” in the forties and fifties but but his career was often interrupted by sickness. He died in 1955 of heart problems in Cleveland.That Old Feelin' Is Gone

T-Bone Walker was a key figure in the electrification and urbanization of the blues, probably doing more to popularize the use of electric guitar in the form than anyone else. In 1929, Walker made his recording debut with Columbia Records, billed as Oak Cliff T-Bone. n 1942, Charlie Glenn, the owner of the Rhumboogie Café, brought T-Bone Walker to Chicago for long stints in his club. In 1944 and 1945, Walker recorded for the Rhumboogie label. Much of his output was recorded from 1946 to 1948 for Black & White Records, including his most famous song, “Call It Stormy Monday (But Tuesday Is Just as Bad)” (1947). He recorded from 1950 to 1954 for Imperial Records. Walker’s only record in the next five years was T-Bone Blues, recorded during three widely separated sessions in 1955, 1956 and 1957 and released by Atlantic Records in 1959. By the early 1960s, Walker’s career had slowed down, in spite of an energetic performance at the American Folk Blues Festival in 1962 plus cutting several albums for Delmark, BluesWay, BluesTime.

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Big Road Blues Show 4/20/25: Long Ways From Home – Paramount 1200/1300 Greatest Hits Pt. 3

ARTISTSONGALBUM
Louise JohnsonLong Ways From HomeJuke Joint Saturday Night
Blind BlakeDiddie Wa Diddie No. 2The Best of Blind Blake
Robert PeeplesFat Greasy BabyTwenty First St. Stomp
Tommy JohnsonLonesome Home BluesBlues Images Vol. 8
Little Brother MontgomeryVicksburg BluesLittle Brother Montgomery 1930-1936
Little Brother MontgomeryNo Special Rider BluesJuke Joint Saturday Night
Louise JohnsonOn The WallJuke Joint Saturday Night
Son HousePreachin' the Blues Pt. 1 & 2Masters of the Delta Blues: Friends of Charlie Patton
Charlie PattonMoon Going DownThe Best Of
Edward ThompsonShowers Of RainEssential Alabama Blues 1926-195
Charlie SpandSoon This Morning #2Dreaming The Blues
Irene ScruggsMust Get Mine in FrontComplete Irene Scruggs
Charlie PattonSome Happy DayPrimeval Blues, Rags, and Gospel Songs
Son HouseMy Black Mama, Pt. 1 & 2American Epic: The Best Of Blues
Jaydee ShortLonesome Swamp RattlesnakeBlues Images Vol. 2
Skip JamesHard Time Killin' Floor BluesTimes Ain't Like They Used To Be Vol. 5
Skip James22-20 BluesJuke Joint Saturday Night
Skip JamesIf You Haven't Any Hay, Get On Down The RoadJuke Joint Saturday Night
Charlie PattonBird Nest BoundThe Best Of
Charlie PattonJim Lee - Part 1The Best Of
Geechie Wiley & Elvie ThomasPick Poor Robin CleanI Can't Be Satisfied Vol. 1
Skip JamesDevil Got My Woman1931 Sessions
Blind Joel TaggartSatan Your Kingdom Must Come DownGuitar Evangelists Vol.2
Big Bill BroonzyHow You Want It DoneBlues From The Vocalion Vaults
Willie BrownFuture BluesAmerican Epic: The Best Of Blues
Willie BrownM & O BluesBlues Images Vol. 3
Son HouseMississippi County Farm BluesBlues Images Vol. 4
Skip JamesI’m So Glad1931 Sessions
Skip JamesDrunken SpreeBlues Images Vol. 3
King Solomon HillDown On My Bended KneeThe Paramount Masters
King Solomon HillTimes Has Done Got HardBlues Images Vol. 1
King Solomon HillGone Dead TrainBlues Images Vol. 3
Jabo WilliamsFat Mama BluesPiano Blues Vol. 20: The Barrelhouse Years
Jabo WilliamsPratt City BluesThe Piano Blues Vol. 17: Paramount Vol. 2
Mississippi SheiksHe Calls That ReligionBlues Images Vol. 3
Mississippi SheiksShe's Crazy About Her Lovin'Stop and Listen

Show Notes: 

The Paramount 12000/13000 Series Second, revised editionParamount Records recorded some of the greatest blues artists of the 20’s and early 30’s. Today’s show is the third program inspired by the new discography book The Paramount 12000/13000 Series Second, revised edition by Max Vreede and Guido van Rijn. As Guido wrote in the preface : “In 1971, Storyville Publications published a groundbreaking discography of the Paramount label’s famous 12000-13000 “’Race’ series by pioneering researcher and collector Max E. Vreede (1927-1991). It featured contemporary advertisements on the left-hand pages, while the right-hand pages listed issues (about ten to a page) in numerical order. Long sold-out, the book has become a cherished collector’s item and an indispensable tool for the serious blues and gospel music enthusiast. In the more than fifty years since publication, a great many records that Max had never seen have been discovered, and the time is ripe for a second edition. Like the original, it features relevant advertisements on the left-hand pages, along with other ephemera; advances in editing and printing techniques have enabled their presentation in greatly improved quality.”

Paramount’s “”race record” series was launched in 1922 with its 1200 “race” series exclusively devoted to black music. The 1300 series operated between 1931 and 1932. A large mail-order operation and weekly advertisements in black owned newspapers like the Chicago Defender were keys to the label’s early success. The label’s successful recordings by Blind Lemon Jefferson and Blind Blake shifted the focus from women singers to male. The label went on to record some of the era’s most celebrated male blues artists such as delta legends Charlie Patton, skip James, Tommy Johnson, Son House, Willie Brown plus diverse artists such as Buddy Boy Hawkins, the Mississippi Sheiks, Charlie Spand, Papa Charlie Jackson among many others. The onset of the depression crippled the recording industry and Paramount was eventually discontinued in 1932. The show’s title, “Greatest Hits”, is of course a bit of a joke but the records selected are personal favorites with some hard choices being made on what to omit. We start with the Paramount 12500 series which covers 1927 to 1930 and today work our way through the 1300 series. Below you will find some background on some of today’s artists.

J. Mayo “Ink” Williams 1924 he joined Paramount Records, which had recently begun to produce and market “race” records. Williams became a talent scout and supervisor of recording sessions in the Chicago area, becoming the most successful blues producer of his time. Upon joining Paramount, Williams became the first African American to hold an executive position in a white-owned recording company. One of his duties was to arrange to have songs scored for publication in order to register them with the copyright division of the Library of Congress. Williams drew no salary but received a royalty from sessions he produced.[3] Two of his biggest discoveries as recording artists were the singer Ma Rainey – already a popular live performer – and Papa Charlie Jackson. A new biography on Williams titled Ink: The Indelible J. Mayo Williams lays out his remarkable career in music and as a football star.

Blind Lemon Jefferson and Blind Blake were the two major male stars of the label. In 1925 Jefferson was discovered by a Paramount recording scout and taken to Chicago to make his first records either in December 1925 or January 1926. Though he was not the first country blues singer/guitarist, or the first to make commercial recordings, Jefferson was the first to attain a national audience. His extremely successful recording career continued until 1929 when he died under mysterious circumstances. He recorded 110 sides. He was the most heavily advertised blues artist, just behind Lonnie Johnson and Bessie Smith, with forty-four ads appearing in the Chicago Defender between 1926 and 19

Long Ways From Home

Besides his music and session details, not much is known of Blind Blake. Despite his popularity and much investigation, he remains a shadowy figure. On his death certificate, which turned up in 2011, Blake’s place of birth was listed as Newport News, Virginia, and 1896 was entered as his date of birth. Blake made his first records for Paramount during the summer of 1926, playing solo guitar behind Leola B. Wilson. He made his debut under his own name a few months late with “Early Morning Blues b/w West Coast Blues.”  Like Blind Lemon, Blake too was advertised heavily with twenty-four ads in the Chicago Defender. And as Tony Russell sums up: “Blind Blake’s most remarkable achievement as a recording artist was that in a career lasting almost six years, in which he made about 80 sides, he was never reduced, whether by slipping skill, waning inspiration or the single-mindedness of record company executives, from a multifaceted musician to a formulaic blues player.” After Paramount folded in 1932, Blake never recorded again. His death certificate lists his profession as “unemployed musician,” and his date of death was entered as December 1, 1934. The cause was Pulmonary tuberculosis.

Charley Patton was another popular male artists for the label who’s popularity seems to have been more regional. Born in 1891, Patton was older than the other Delta musicians who recorded during the golden age of the 1920s and 1930s, and he seems to have developed many of the themes that are now considered basic to the Delta blues repertoire. Paramount asked Gennett to record 14 tunes by Patton at their Richmond, Indiana studio in June 1929. “Pony Blues” b/w “Banty Rooster Blues” was the first issued. The coupling was a hit and Paramount labeled his second release, “Screamin’ And Hollerin’ The Blues”, as by The Masked Marvel. The advert bore a drawing of a blindfolded singer and the clue that this was an exclusive paramount artists. Anyone guessing his identity would get a free Paramount record of their choice.  In all, Patton recorded 38 numbers for Paramount in 1929, some issued the following year, with two gospel songs issued under the pseudonym Elder J.J. Hadley.

In 1930, Arthur Laibley who had produced Charley Patton’s last session for Paramount, stopped in Lula to arrange another session with Patton. Patton told Laibley about Son House and about two other musicians Willie Brown and Louise Johnson, setting the stage for one of the blues most legendary recording sessions. The group headed to the Paramount studios in Grafton, WI, where House recorded six songs at the session: three of which were long enough to fill both sides of a 78: “Dry Spell Blues,” “Preachin’ The Blues,” and “My Black Mama.”

Mississippi County Farm Blues

Tommy Johnson’s records may not have been widely popular but he was certainly influential. His influence was unusually vast and long lasting; after all his recorded output only consists of six issued sides for Victor in 1928 and six issued sides for Paramount in 1929. A welcome surprise in recent years has been the discovery of several recordings of unissued material.  It was Johnson’s Victor sides that were the most influential and oft covered: “Cool Drink of Water Blues”, “Big Road Blues”, “Bye-Bye Blues”, “Maggie Campbell Blues”, “Canned Heat Blues” and “Big Fat Mama.” Unlike the Paramount records these sold fairly well and were apparently the songs Johnson sang most often in person. As David Evans wrote: “For about thirty years Tommy Johnson was perhaps the most important and influential blues singer in the state of Mississippi.”

Paramount had some strong female sellers such as Ida Cox and Ma Rainey. Rainey waxed a remarkable body of songs between 1923 and 1938, more than 100 during that period. Many of the early woman blues singers had a strong vaudevillian streak but Rainey’s output is dominated by the blues, something by her own account she added to her act in 1902. Her records were advertised often in the Chicago Defender between 1925 and 1929.

Many iconic blues artists recorded for the label who’s records weren’t necessarily big sellers but are highly prized among collectors. Those in that category featured on these shows include artists such as Buddy Boy Hawkins, Ramblin’ Thomas, Rube Lacey, Ed Bell, Gus Cannon, Clifford Gibson, Frank Stokes, Jaybird Coleman, Blind Joe Reynolds, Geeshie Wiley and Ishman Bracey. Buddy Boy Hawkins recorded a dozen tracks for Paramount Records between 1927 and 1929.

Fat Mama Blues

In 1914, Gus Cannon began work with a succession of medicine shows that would continue into the 1940’s. His recording career began with Paramount sessions in 1927 cut under the name Banjo Joe and also made sides with Blind Blake. In 1928 he began recording as Cannon’s Jug Stompers, cutting over two-dozen sides with the group through 1930 for Victor. He returned in 1956 to make a few recordings for Folkways Records and made some college and coffee house appearances with Furry Lewis and Bukka White. In 1963 the Rooftop Singers had a hit with “Walk Right In” and in the wake of that recorded an album for Stax Records in 1963. He cut a few other scattered sides before his death in 1979.

Perhaps at the behest of Blind Lemon Jefferson, who had a session around the same time, Dallas music seller R.T. Ashford arranged for Ramblin’ Thomas venture to Chicago, Illinois, in February of 1928 for a session with Paramount Records, netting a total of eight titles of which all were released.  He returned to Chicago that November for another session.   Finally, he made four recordings for Victor in their field trip to Dallas in February of 1932.

In 1926, Jaybird Coleman began his recording career by making four sides for the Starr Piano Company (Gennett) which were not issued at the time. In 1927 Gennett issue several sides by Coleman with some sides withheld.  Some of the Gennett recordings were later reissued on subsidiary labels like Challenge, Champion, Conqueror, Silvertone, Superior, Supertone, Bell and Buddy – often using a pseudonym like Rabbits Foot Williams or George Alexander, for the artist or group to avoid paying the musicians royalties. A 1929 record under the name Frank Palmes is likely Coleman. On June 15, 1930 Jaybird made his last solo record for Columbia: “Man Trouble Blues, and “Coffee Grinder Blues.” The latter record was advertised in the Chicago Defender.

M&O Blues

In November 1929 at the Paramount Recording Studios in Grafton, Wisconsin, four songs were recorded by a Louisiana street musician named Joe Sheppard who, on the run from the law, used the name Blind Joe Reynolds. Within a year, the four songs were released on two records. Neither record sold well, but almost 40 years later, one of the two attracted the attention of Eric Clapton who heard the song “Outside Woman Blues” on a reissue album. In 1967, Clapton and his Cream band mates Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce recorded a more modern day version of “Outside Woman Blues” on their classic Disraeli Gears. “Ninety Nine Blues b/w Cold Woman Blues” was thought to be lost until 2000 when a copy surfaced.

Ishman Bracey learned guitar from locals Louis Cooper and Lee Jones and moved to Jackson in the late 1920s after encountering Tommy Johnson. Bracey’s music came to broader attention after he auditioned for recording agent H. C. Speir, who operated a furniture store on North Farish Street. Speir arranged for Bracey and Tommy Johnson to make their debut recordings at a session for Victor in Memphis in February of 1928. At that session and another for Victor later that year, Bracey was accompanied on guitar and mandolin by Charlie McCoy. Bracey recorded again in 1929 and early 1930 for the Paramount label.

Paramount also recorded some terrific piano records by artists like Moanin’ Bernice Edwards, Charlie Spand, Cow Cow Davenport, Cow Cow Davenport, Will Ezell,  Blind Leroy Garnett, Charles Avery, Charley Taylor and several others. Spand was the most prolific but remains a shadowy figure despite numerous attempts to uncover his story. Spand’s recording career started for Paramount on 6th June, 1929; during the next two years he recorded 24 songs. By 1929 Spand had moved to Chicago, and recorded “45th Street Blues” at Grafton in 1930, the title being an indication of his recent Chicago address. In September 1930 Spand traveled to Grafton to record some more titles for Paramount, six in total. Spand’s last session for the Paramount label was recorded in Grafton, Wisconsin in July 1931, by which time the company was on its last legs.

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