Friday, 17 July 2026

Mickey Hawks born July 17, 1940

David Michael "Mickey" Hawks (July 17, 1940 – August 31, 1989) was an American rock and roll Rockabilly singer and pianist, and one of the few fifties rock 'n' rollers who always remained true to his original style which included screaming vocals and a thumping piano. Though he never had a national hit, he was able to making a living from this brand of music until his untimely death at the age of only 49.

He was born in Thomasville, North Carolina, moving with his family as a child to High Point. There he would spend his next 25 years before settling down in Readsville close to the Virginia state line. The fifth of six children, Hawks learned to play the piano from his mother when he was thirteen. Inspired by Little Richard and later by Jerry Lee Lewis, Mickey formed his first band in 1956, which was called The Rhythm Rockers. In September 1957 he joined The Night Raiders, a group led by Moon Mullins, who had a local radio show and played the sax. After playing together for some time, Moon wanted the band to cut a record to sell at dances and asked Mickey if he could write a song. 

                                  

Influenced by Gene Vincent's "Be-Bop-A-Lula", Hawks wrote "Bip Bop Boom", which they recorded in a Greensboro studio owned by Eddie Robbins. It became the B-side of their first single, "Rock and Roll Rhythm", a song Hawks co-wrote with Matthews, and was released on two local labels, Robbins Red (owned by Robbins) and Mart, before being picked up by the Profile label in Chicago. The label remixed the record, and moved "Bip Bop Boom" to the A-side. The single was credited to Mickey Hawks with Moon Mullins and his Night Raiders. It reportedly sold 50,000 copies in the Chicago area, but failed to reach the national charts; however, it did become a hit in South Africa.

The Nightriders

However, the next two singles on Profile, "Cotton Pickin'"(1959) and "Screamin' Mimi Jeanie" (1960) never came close to the success of "Bip Bop Boom", exciting as they were. Mickey and the band toured about a month to promote each record. They had a wild stage act and were very well received by most audiences, though there were problems at some theatres where people were used to traditional country and western stuff. In some cases the shows were stopped and people got their money back, because the excited crowd couldn't be controlled. Onstage the kinetic Hawks could imitate almost anyone, from Fats Domino to Chuck Berry, and of course his idols Jerry Lee Lewis and Little Richard.

Things slowed down a little in the sixties. Apart from a reissue of "Cotton Pickin'" on the Hunch label in 1961, the band had only one single release between 1960 and 1968, namely "Gonna Dance Tonight, Parts 1 & 2" on the Lance label (1961), with Mickey on piano and Moon on vocal and sax. In 1963 the band broke away from Moon Mullins (temporarily) and continued on their own as the Night Raiders, playing mostly in Virginia, where they also had a TV show called "Saturday Night Country Style". New recordings followed in 1968 and 1971, but they didn't sell or remained unreleased. Cees Klop reissued the six Profile recordings on one side of a Collector LP in 1971 and "Bip Bop Boom" was re-released as a single in the UK (1977) and Sweden (1982).

After "Bip Bop Boom" became popular among rock and roll audiences in Europe, Hawks did several tours there in the 1980s and cut a fine new album, "Sounds Of the 50's", released in the summer of 1989. This had several new songs that had not been released before. One of them "Me and MY Harley Davidson" was listed in the US Independent Country Singles Top 20 in August, giving Mickey real hope that his talents were finally starting to be appreciated. But fate can be cruel, for on August 31, 1989, at the age of 49, Mickey had a fatal heart attack at hs home whilst playing the piano.

(Edited from This Is My Story & Liner notes)

Here's some very super rare footage of Mickey Hawks playing Bip Bop Boom at The Lakers Hotel, Redhill 1987. 

Thursday, 16 July 2026

Nat Pierce born July 16,1925

Nat Pierce (July 16, 1925 – June 10, 1992) was an American jazz pianist and prolific composer and arranger, perhaps best known for being pianist and arranger for the Woody Herman band from 1951 to 1955. Pieces by Pierce were predominantly created for use in big bands.

Nat Pierce had a long, distinguished, somewhat low-profile career as a champion of latter-day big-band swing, serving as the co-leader of Los Angeles' crack Frank Capp-Nat Pierce Juggernaut and an arranger for several well-known big bands and solo artists. His scores created an irresistible force when allied with a swinging, pushing drummer like Capp, often hewing tightly to the loping drive and tight ensemble of the post-'50s Count Basie orchestra. Likewise, Pierce's spare, tasty piano style not only has been compared to that of Basie, he also subbed very capably for the great man off and on from the late '50s until Basie's death in 1984.

                                  

Nathaniel Pierce Blish Jr., was born in Somerville, Massachusetts. United States. He studied music at the New England Conservatory of Music back home in Massachusetts, worked with local Boston bands, including one led by Shorty Sherock. After playing eith Larry Clinton in 1948, he ran his own part-time big band featuring Charlie Mariano from 1949 to 1951. Having already started shopping arrangements to Basie and Woody Herman, he joined Herman's Third Herd in 1951 as pianist/arranger, remaining until 1955.  During the same period he led a group with Dick Collins. He also arranged the music for The Sound of Jazz, a 1954 CBS television special hosted by John Crosby. Pierce settled in New York City, where he became a busy freelance arranger, recording pianist, and occasional leader of bands, working with Ruby Braff, Lester Young, Ella Fitzgerald, Quincy Jones, Coleman Hawkins, Pee Wee Russell, and Lester Young.Pierce also took part in many recording sessions.

Two of his most famous projects took place in 1957, writing the arrangements for The Sound of Jazz television show, including that of his own composition "Open All Night.". He also played piano with the Basie rhythm section on the first ear-opening Lambert, Hendricks & Ross album Sing a Song of Basie. Pierce was also the last band leader to perform in the old Savoy Ballroom in New York City. In 1961, Pierce re-joined Herman and played a major role in lifting the band into one of its peak periods, serving as chief arranger, road manager, and talent scout until 1966.  Pierce settled in Los Angeles in 1971 and resumed his freelancing ways, arranging for Anita O'Day, Carmen McRae, Earl Hines, and others, working with the bands of Louie Bellson and Bill Berry, reuniting with Herman, and substituting for Basie and Stan Kenton on occasion.

In 1975 Pierce joined forces with Capp to form the Capp-Pierce Juggernaut band, which drew its personnel from the best Los Angeles session players out to decompress from their studio gigs. The band recorded a number of swinging albums for the Concord Jazz label, sometimes with guest vocalists like Joe Williams and Ernestine Anderson. Pierce continued to co-lead the Juggernaut which performed at clubs throughout the Los Angeles area, and appeared regularly at events like the Playboy Jazz Festival at the Hollywood Bowl and the Malibu Arts Festival until his death, while also making a brief appearance in the 1977 film New York, New York, touring Europe in 1980 and 1984 as a member of the Countsmen, and recording frequently for Concord as a sideman for Scott Hamilton, Jake Hanna, and others.

He died of complications from an abdominal infection at the Kaiser Permanente Hospital, in Los Angeles, California, June 10, 1992. He was 66 years old.

(Edited from AllMusic,  The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, Wikipedia & The New York Times) 

Wednesday, 15 July 2026

Cody Bearpaw born July 15, 1936

Cody Bearpaw (aka "Cody Cherokee") (June 15, 1936 - 2001) was a Cree native-American who competed in rodeos, did stunt work in movies and television programs and became well known as a songwriter and musician. 

Cody Bearpaw, a Cree native-American was born in the village of Fort Chipewyan in Northern Alberta, and moved to Montana and Wyoming in his pre-teen years. Cody mixed his love of the rodeo and music, and was soon dubbed "The All Around Indian Cowboy", fronting his own band The Fugitives, and opening for such headliners as Marty Robbins, Johnny Paycheck, Nat Stuckey and Mel Tillis.

In June 1969, Cody Bearpaw married country singer Debra Berry, best known for her Musictown Records single "The Cold Wind", b/w "All-American Sport". The couple also toured the USA as a duo, performing at clubs and concert venues. As a recording artist he released singles on the Dot and First American Records labels, including the 1969 Dot release "Happy People", a Bearpaw original, followed by "Old Man Willis" b/w "Straight Man" (Dot 17310), and "Playboy" b/w "Wait Till I Get My Hands On You" (Dot-17351). His first single on the First American label was his original tune, "Winter Love".

                                  

While working show dates in Las Vegas Cody Bearpaw was "discovered" by American war hero, movie star and songwriter, Audie Murphy, who enticed him to go to Hollywood to pursue a career in movies. In 1972 he won the Stunt Man of the Year Award. Cody Bearpaw did have a starring role in the 1973 movie The Devil & Leroy Bassett; but his main claim to fame in movies and television was as a stuntman, appearing in numerous stunt roles dating back to Audie Murphy's 1955 hit film "To Hell And Back", as well as such popular films as True Grit, High Plains Drifter, Oklahoma Crude, Thunderbolt & Lightfoot, Smokey & The Bandit, and the TV shows, Gunsmoke, Bonanza, The Streets Of San Francisco, the Dukes Of Hazzard, etc.. His stunt performance in a classic fire fall in the 1974 movie The Towering Inferno, earned Cody Bearpaw an award for the Best Stunt Performance Of The Year.

In 1978 Cody Bearpaw released the album "All Around Indian Cowboy" on the Canyon Records label (CR-537). The album was also released in Canada on Broadland Records (BR-1991). Cody Bearpaw was also a gifted songwriter with some 30 songs credited on the BMI registry, including "Twelve Long Stemmed Roses" recorded by Mel Tillis and "Tall, Good Looking And Bullet Proof" recorded by Warner Mack for the K-Ark label in 1971. Bearpaw also wrote the title track song for the Fess Parker/Stella Stevens movie "Climb An Angry Mountain". 

In 1978 Cody released a self titled album "Cody Bearpaw" on Broadland Records. It includes three originals by Bearpaw -- "All Around Indian Cowboy," "Winter Love," and "Let It Shine" -- as well as a couple of tunes apiece written by Jerry Abbott and Bobby Ray Spears, along with a version of Henry Briggs' "Miss Pauline."

In 1980 Cody released a "Angry Mountain" (Dine Records, 1980). A cassette-only release, this was packed with country covers, some folkie stuff, and a little bit of tribally-themed material (such as the song "Rain Dance"). Bearpaw's song, "Ten More Miles To Carway," previously appeared on an indie single from 1977 that featured backing from an established band called The Navajo Sundowners, though it's not clear if this is the same version of that song, as there are no musician credits on the packaging or the tape. This came out on a label from Kayenta, Arizona, and it seems like Bearpaw may have moves to the American Southwest during the late 'Seventies.

After a hiatus, Bearpaw returned to acting in the early 1990s with a guest appearance on television. He played the character Webb in the "Poisoned Harvest" episode of the action series Raven in 1993. His acting credits remain limited in number, reflecting a selective involvement in the profession alongside other pursuits. 

In his later years Cody Bearpaw returned to live near his birthplace in Northern Alberta, and passed away with little notoriety, in Edmonton, Alberta in 2001.

(Scarce information edited from 45Cat & Slipcue) 

Tuesday, 14 July 2026

Bob Scholl born 14 Jul 1938

Bob Scholl (14 Jul 1938 - 27 Aug 1975) was best known as the lead singer of the fifties' doo wop band The Mello-kings.

Robert Scholl, aka Bob Scholl, was born in Mount Vernon, Westchester County, New York. In 1956, Bob (tenor), his younger brother, Jerry Scholl (high tenor), and Eddie Quinn (second tenor) got together as a result of try-outs for a version of "South Pacific", being held at their Washington High school. Pianist/arranger Dick Levister liked the way they sounded and formed them into a group, initially known as the Mellotones. Auditions brought in two additional members: Neil Arena (baritone) and Larry Esposito (bass). The group's main influence was Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers, the originators of the "kid-sound" in popular music. In fact, with Jerry Scholl in the lead, the Mellotones were told they sounded too much like the Teenagers. Therefore, to create a different sound, Bob Scholl began to front the group.

By the fall of 1956, they were calling themselves the Mellotones, gaining attention in the local area and catching the ear of a black pianist named Dick Levister, who offered to become the group's manager and accompany them during live performances. It was Levister who brought them to the attention of Al Silver, who owned both the Herald and Ember labels, which had been up and running since 1952. Both New York-based labels specialized in vocal group records. Silver liked what he heard and the group with their trademark white jackets (supposedly at Levister's insistence) helped them forge an identity with the teenage public. For the Mellotones' first release, Silver chose a tune called "Tonite, Tonite" written by Billy Myles (who also penned "All My Love You Were Made For" with Jackie Wilson). It was released during the summer of 1957 and became an immediate regional smash hit. After about a thousand copies had been pressed, everyone discovered that there was another Mellotones group around. A quick name change was in order and the "Mellokings" were born. (The "King" part came from Dick Levister's middle name; he had once been leader of the King Levister Orchestra.)

                                   

However, Herald still couldn't get it right on the second pressing; some copies exist with "Do Baby Do" (Mellokings) backed with "Tonite, Tonite" (Mellotones). This probably indicates that "Do Baby Do" was the side that Herald was banking on. Eventually it was straightened out. In August, "Tonite, Tonite" was reported a Tip in Los Angeles. The single was a big seller in the Northeast, again having regional ties. Although it has sold over 3 million copies to date, never made it past #87 on the national charts for 1957, hardly qualifying for hit status. In fact, everything happened so fast (or so slow) that the group never even realized that they had a hit. With the limited success of "Tonite, Tonite", the group went on the road doing one-nighters, sometimes for as long as three months at a time. Jerry Scholl, being of small stature, used to sleep in the luggage rack above the seats. On one tour, his "rack-mate" was Paul Anka.

September 1957 was a busy month for the Mellokings. First, they appeared on American Bandstand, then Ted Steele's Bandstand and on the basis of that appearance, they were booked into Washington D.C.'s Howard Theater for a week, followed by a week at Baltimore's Royal. However none of their subsequent releases did well on the charts. Sometime in the spring of 1958, Neil Arena left and the Mellokings continued on with four singers for a while. It was during this four-voice period that they recorded the footage of "Tonite, Tonite" that was later used in the British movie Sweet Beat. (Released in November 1959, it also contained their labelmates, Billy Myles and the 5 Satins.) Within a few months after this, Larry Esposito also left, and the Mellokings got two new members: Louis Jannacone and Tony Pinto. The group was now Bob Scholl, Jerry Scholl, Eddie Quinn, Louis Jannacone, and Tony Pinto. This was the group that recorded "Chip Chip" in November 1958. All the songs from that session were released over the next year and a half or so, but the group didn't record again for almost two years.

Around mid 1959 Eddie Quinn left to pursue a solo singing and song writing career. In the summer of 1960, Herald released The Mellokings Sing, an LP that had a selection of all their released tunes, along with some previously-unreleased tracks. March 1961 saw the next Mellokings record: "Penny"/"'Till There Was None". Their final Herald release came in October of that year: "Love At First Sight", backed with a reissue of 1958's "She's Real Cool". Sometime after this, Bobby Scholl was drafted. He wasn't replaced, so the Mellokings remained as the trio of Jerry Scholl, Louis Jannacone, and Tony Pinto, although they didn't do all that many gigs until Bob returned.

To confuse issues another Mellow-Kings was formed fronted by Eddie Robbins, consisting of Jack Skulski, Bobby Schultz, and Tony Obert. This group known as Eddie Robins' Mello-Kings performed from 1968 until 1973, under the guidance of Richard Levister (still around). The fall of 1969 found the original Mellokings who at the time consisted of Jerry Scholl, Bobby Scholl, Louis Jannacone, and Tony Pinto perform as a part of Richard Nader's Second Rock & Roll Revival show at Madison Square Garden. Shows featured Bill Haley and the Comets, Jackie Wilson, Shep and the Limelites, the Penguins, Johnnie and Joe, the Capris, and the Bobby Comstock Orchestra.

Unfortunately tragedy struck when Bob Scholl died 27 Aug 1975, during a boat accident in New York, but his brother Jerry took over lead chores. With many changes in personnel, the Mellokings continued performing at private gigs and corporate parties. Going into the new century, both Jerry Scholl and Eddie Robbins had active Mellokings groups. However, Jerry, with the group since 1956, passed away on April 30, 2019.

(Edited from Marv Goldberg's R&B Notebooks) 

Monday, 13 July 2026

Blind Blake born 1896

 

Arthur Blake (1896 – December 1, 1934), known as Blind Blake, was an American blues and ragtime singer and guitarist. He is known for recordings he made for Paramount Records between 1926 and 1932.

Though so much of Arthur Blake’s story remains a mystery, recent research suggests that he was born in Newport News, Virginia, to Winter and Alice Blake, sometime between the years of 1890 and 1896. It is not known if Blake was born blind, but his disability would have made his life especially hard in early 20th century America. Busking, or playing music on street corners for tips, was often taken up by many a blind musician as an alternative to begging. Whether or not this is how Arthur got his start, his obvious talents proved adept at earning a living playing live music. Additional research suggests that Arthur lived a traveling musician’s life, with stories of him playing around Atlanta, Detroit, and even Bristol, Tennessee. But Blake’s main hub was Jacksonville, Florida, where he kept an apartment and learned to improvise his repertoire to wherever he was playing. Eventually, a talent scout recommended Blake to Wisconsin’s Paramount Records, where he would become one of the company’s biggest recording stars.

Paramount Records was a subsidiary of the Wisconsin Chair Company in Port Washington. These records, cheaply made and recorded on a tight budget, existed solely to encourage sales of the Chair Company’s phonograph cabinets. His only known photograph was taken at his first recording session in 1926. His first solo record was "Early Morning Blues", with "West Coast Blues" on the B-side which became a massive hit that catapulted him to the top tier of Paramount artists. In this tune, we hear Blake calling out dance steps and cracking jokes to a joyful ragtime beat. “I got something that’ll make ya feel good!” Blake laughs as he barrels into a killer guitar lick. “I know it’s good. I made it good.” The commercial success of this record prompted the company to records another 68 sides over the next 4 years.
               

                                   

Blake took up a residence in an apartment at the corner of 31st Street and College Grove Avenue in Chicago’s Bronzeville neighbourhood, where he would have had easy access to both Paramount’s downtown recording studio and Bronzeville’s array of concert halls and dance clubs. On most Mondays the flat was the site of a swinging musical and drinking party, attended by some of the Southside’s finest bluesmen. In later years, one of the regular revellers, Little Brother Montgomery, reminisced about these gatherings: “We called them rehearsals. Usually we had them on Mondays when everyone was free. We’d all get together over at Blake’s place. Be a few piano players there—me, Charlie Spand, sometimes, Roosevelt Sykes.

Big Bill Broonzy

Guitar players like Blake and maybe Tampa Red or Big Bill Broonzy. We’d drink moonshine and trade songs. Everyone was just like family.” Montgomery further remembered his host’s proficiency as a guitar player: “He kept good time and knew all the changes in all the popular songs back then. He would play it all and he was good in a  band, too, but he mostly played blues and ragtime tunes. Blake loved the blues most. He always wanted us to play blues.” The style of guitar that Blake played wasn’t like the intense and emotionally-charged country blues of the Delta, but one of a ragtime dance style with a swinging beat. He was inventive, with a flair for improvisation. He could be subtle and understated or play with an ornate flourish. His extraordinarily fast and exciting three-finger picking technique used walking basses, boogie-woogie, and cross rhythms, as well as syncopated thumb rolls. Blind Blake was widely respected and admired by other guitar players; many tried to copy his style but with little success. Big Bill Broonzy, hearing Blake in person in the early 1920s, said of his guitar playing "He made it sound like every instrument in the band- saxophone, trombone, clarinets, bass fiddles, pianos- everything. I never had seed then and I haven't to this day yet seed no one that could take his natural fingers and pick as much guitar as Blind Blake."

Paramount utilized Blake as a go-to session musician for several Paramount performers, but he remained an incredibly prolific solo artist. In addition to his guitar playing, Blake was also a charismatic singer and skilled lyricist, and several of his songs were no doubt popular with Bronzeville’s late night music scene. Blake seemed especially at home with the sexually suggestive hokum music, as proven by songs like “Diddie Wah Diddie” and “Too Tight Blues.”  While there is an undeniable sense of joy in much of Blake’s music, he seems just as comfortable performing darker subject matter. In “Rope Stretching Blues,” Blake’s narrator kills an intruder and awaits an inevitable death sentence. In “Third Degree Blues,” Blake is detained and forced to confess to an unknown crime in rather Kafkaesque fashion. And there’s an unsettling grimness within such songs as “Early Morning Blues,” in which Blake sneers, “The day you dare to quit me, baby, that’s the day you die.” Yet Blake’s charm remains front and center throughout, giving these songs an eerie and ironic quality.

Blake’s pièce de résistance may very well be his euphoric boogie woogie instrumental “Hastings Street,” recorded in 1929 with Detroit piano legend Charlie Spand. Blake’s guitar effortlessly compliments Spand’s rolling piano, with Blake gleefully name-dropping streets from Detroit’s red light district. Altogether, Blake would make about 80 recordings for Paramount, but the recording industry was in serious trouble following the stock market crash of 1929. Records were increasingly seen as a luxury, especially when radio provided hours of music for free. To save on costs, Paramount moved its main recording studio from Chicago to their record pressing plant in Grafton, Wisconsin, where artists would record just a short distance from Paramount’s Port Washington headquarters.

Grafton Recording Studio 

Blake moved to the north side of Milwaukee, presumably to be closer to the new Grafton recording studio. He married Beatrice McGee in 1931, and the Blakes lived at 621 W. Brown St. (today the site of Beckum Park). But Paramount’s sales continued to plummet, and in this era we hear Blake experimenting with new sounds and styles, seemingly throwing whatever he could to the wall to see what might stick. Sometimes this meant recording formulaic re-treads of his earlier output or derivatives of other pop songs, but there were still glimpses of his brilliance. On his record “Miss Emma Liza,” (considered lost until a copy was found at a flea market in 2012), Blake channels Dixieland jazz and sings in a hilarious falsetto. On the record’s flip side, “Dissatisfied Blues,” he thunders out a “rapping” beat on his guitar. And in a recorded duet with Papa Charlie Jackson, we hear more of Blake’s trademark wit: “My name is Arthur Blake,” he smirks, “and I’m the Arthur of many things.”

But no recording at Paramount—no matter how transcendent—could stop what the Great Depression had wrought. Paramount closed its doors for good in 1932. The top brass in Port Washington went back to focusing on making furniture. And Arthur Blake’s career as a recording musician was over. When Paramount closed, it seemed that was the last anyone ever heard of Blind Blake. As the years passed and his recordings were rediscovered, rumours abounded about what ever became of this unique visionary. Reverend Gary Davis had said he heard Blake was killed after being run over by a streetcar. Others swore they saw him playing in the streets of Jacksonville years later. It wasn’t until 2011 when researchers discovered what we should have known all along: Arthur Blake had spent his final years in Milwaukee. And it is in Milwaukee where he spends eternity.

According to his wife after Paramount closed down Blake became unemployed and in failing health, In 1933 he was treated for three weeks at the County General Hospital due to pneumonia and never fully recovered after his release. In 1934, after many weeks of decline, Beatrice Blake summoned an ambulance. He had a pulmonary haemorrhage and died on the way to the Milwaukee County Emergency Hospital. The cause of death was listed as pulmonary tuberculosis. His death certificate stated he was 38 years old. He was buried in Glen Oaks Cemetery, in Glendale, Wisconsin in an unmarked grave. In 2012, Blake’s grave finally received a memorial headstone. The marker shows Blake’s smiling promotional portrait—the same image that graced so many Paramount ads nearly a century ago. Fans and admirers from around the world now make their pilgrimage to Milwaukee’s Glen Oaks (formerly Evergreen) Cemetery to pay their respects. 

(Edited from Milwaukee Record & Kansas City Blues Society)

Saturday, 11 July 2026

Smokey Wilson born July 11, 1936

Robert Lee "Smokey" Wilson (July 11, 1936 – September 8, 2015) was an American West Coast blues guitarist. He spent most of his career performing West Coast blues and juke joint blues in Los Angeles, California. He recorded a number of albums for record labels such as P-Vine Records, Bullseye Blues and Texmuse Records. His career got off to a late start, with international recognition eluding him until the 1990s.

Wilson was born in Glen Allan, Mississippi, and raised in Lake Village, Arkansas. He  was eight when his father bought him his first guitar. His teenage years were spent developing his singing and playing skills. In 1961 he became a member of Junior Green And His Soul Searchers Band, which, after some years, he left to join Roosevelt ‘Booba’ Barnes, with whom he played for four years. 

He played alongside Big Jack Johnson and Frank Frost, before his move to Los Angeles in 1970 where he hoped that his down-home style would be popular. He played in a number of clubs and became part-owner of the Casino Club, where he worked on a regular basis as frontman of the house band. He also In booked blues musicians to perform at the club, including Big Joe Turner, Percy Mayfield, Pee Wee Crayton and Albert Collins. His down-to-earth guitar playing was typical of his Mississippi Delta background. "I bring the cotton-field with me," he said, "and I got the juke-joint inside."

                                   

Whilst Wilson's years of residency at the Pioneer Club did little to secure nationwide recognition, he appeared on the PBS special Three Generation of Blues, with Robert Cray and John Lee Hooker. He also appeared in various television commercials, including UPN's "The Watcher," and FOX's "Divas", plus in a music video made by Babyface.

Wilson released two albums on Big Town Records in the 1970s. His 1983 album, 88th Street Blues, for the Murray Brothers label (later reissued by Blind Pig Records) had contributions from Rod Piazza (harmonica and record producer) and Hollywood Fats (rhythm guitar). Wilson performed at the Long Beach Blues Festival in 1980, 1981 and 1999; having earlier appeared at the San Francisco Blues Festival in 1978.

A new contract with the Bullseye Blues label saw Wilson through the 90s and marked a resurgence in his career. Smoke N’ Fire (1993) had guest appearances by Larry Davis and Jimmy McCracklin, effectively flattering Wilson’s modest talent. The Real Deal (1995) followed, as Wilson's reputation began to grow as he reached his sixtieth year. He made one further recording for Bullseye (1997’s The Man From Mars)

During 2003 Wilson recorded an album with Andy T and his band who backed him on stage since 1997. Smokey, as always demonstrative, sang pretty well but left most of the guitar parts to Andy T. Nine days after this album Smokey suffered a stroke. In the years that follow, as his health gradually deteriorated, he remained very discreet and finally died in his sleep on September 8, 2015, in Los Angeles, California.

(Edited from Wikipedia, Blind Dog Radio & Blues Sessions) 

Friday, 10 July 2026

Blind Boy Fuller born July 10, 1904

Fulton Allen (July 10, 1904 – February 13, 1941), known as Blind Boy Fuller, was an American blues guitarist and singer. Fuller was one of the most popular of the recorded Piedmont blues artists, along with Blind Blake, Josh White, and Buddy Moss.

Allen was born in Wadesboro, North Carolina, United States, one of ten children of Calvin Allen and Mary Jane Walker. Most sources date his birth to 1907, but the researchers Bob Eagle and Eric LeBlanc indicate 1904. After his mother died, he moved with his father to Rockingham, North Carolina. As a boy he learned to play the guitar and also learned from older singers the field hollers, country rags, traditional songs and blues popular in poor rural areas. He married young, to Cora Allen, and worked as a labourer. He began to lose his eyesight in his teens. According to the researcher Bruce Bastin, "While he was living in Rockingham he began to have trouble with his eyes. He went to see a doctor in Charlotte who allegedly told him that he had ulcers behind his eyes, the original damage having been caused by some form of snow-blindness." Only the first part of this diagnosis was correct. A 1937 eye examination attributed his vision loss to the long-term effects of untreated neonatal conjunctivitis.

Blind Blake

By 1928 he was completely blind. He turned to whatever employment he could find as a singer and entertainer, often playing in the streets. By studying the records of country blues players like Blind Blake and live performances by Gary Davis, Allen became a formidable guitarist, playing on street corners and at house parties in Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Danville, Virginia; and then Durham, North Carolina. In Durham, playing around the tobacco warehouses, he developed a local following that included guitarists Floyd Council and Richard Trice, harmonica player Saunders Terrell (better known as Sonny Terry), and washboard player and guitarist George Washington. 

                                  

In 1935, James Baxter Long, a record store manager and talent scout in Burlington, North Carolina, secured Allen a recording session with the American Recording Company (ARC). Allen, Davis, and Washington recorded several tracks in New York City, including the traditional "Rag, Mama, Rag". To promote the records, Long credited Allen as Blind Boy Fuller and Washington as Bull City Red. Over the next five years Fuller recorded over 120 sides, released by several labels. His singing style was rough and direct, and his lyrics were explicit and uninhibited, drawing on every aspect of his experience as an underprivileged, blind black man on the streets—pawnshops, jailhouses, sickness, death—with an honesty that lacked sentimentality. Although he was not sophisticated, his artistry as a folk singer lay in the honesty and integrity of his self-expression. His songs expressed desire, love, jealousy, disappointment, menace, and humour.

In April 1936, Fuller recorded ten solo performances and also recorded with guitarist Floyd Council. In 1937, after auditioning for J. Mayo Williams, he recorded for Decca Records, but then reverted to ARC. Later that year he made his first recordings with Sonny Terry. In 1938, Fuller, who was described as having a fiery temper, was imprisoned for shooting a pistol at his wife, wounding her in the leg. His imprisonment prevented him from performing in "From Spirituals to Swing", a concert produced by John Hammond in New York City that year. Sonny Terry performed in his place; it was the beginning of Terry's long career in folk music. After Fuller was released from prison, he held his last two recording sessions in New York City in June 1940, but by then he was increasingly physically weak, and much of the material lacked the quality and energy of his earlier recordings.

 Fuller's repertoire included a number of popular double-entendre "hokum" songs, such as "I Want Some of Your Pie", "Truckin' My Blues Away" (1936) (the inspiration for Robert Crumb's comic "Keep On Truckin'"), "Let Me Squeeze Your Lemon", and "Get Your Yas Yas Out" (1938) (adapted as Get Yer Ya-Ya's Out for a Rolling Stones album title), and the autobiographical "Big House Bound", about his time in prison. Much of his material was culled from traditional folk and blues songs. He had a formidable fingerpicking guitar style. He played a steel National resonator guitar. Some criticized Fuller as derivative, but his fusion of elements of traditional and contemporary songs attracted a broad audience. He was an expressive vocalist and masterly guitarist, best remembered for his up-tempo ragtime hits, including "Step It Up and Go". He was also capable of deeper material; his versions of "Lost Lover Blues", "Rattlesnakin' Daddy", and "Mamie" are as deep as most Delta blues.

Brownie McGhee
Fuller underwent a suprapubic cystostomy in July 1940, probably due to the urethral stricture noted on his death certificate, a narrowing or blockage of the urethra that can be caused by syphilitic chancres, gonorrhoea, or chlamydia, but continued to require medical treatment. He died at his home in Durham, North Carolina, on February 13, 1941. The cause of death was pyaemia, due to an infected bladder, gastrointestinal tract, and perineum, plus kidney failure. He was so popular when he died that his protégé, Brownie McGhee, recorded "The Death of Blind Boy Fuller" for Okeh Records, and then reluctantly began a short-lived career as Blind Boy Fuller No. 2, so that Columbia Records could profit from Fuller's popularity.

Fuller's grave is Grove Hill Cemetery, on private property in Durham. According to state records, this was once an official cemetery, and Fuller's interment is recorded. Only one headstone remains, that of one Mary Caston Langey. The funeral arrangements were handled by McLaurin Funeral Home of Durham, and the burial took place on February 15, 1941. Fuller has been recognized with two plaques in Durham. The North Carolina Division of Archives and History placed a plaque a few miles north of Fuller's gravesite, along Fayetteville St. The city of Durham officially recognized Fuller on July 16, 2001, with a commemorative plaque along the American Tobacco Trail, adjacent to the property containing Fuller's unmarked grave (several hundred feet east of Fayetteville St.).

(Edited from Wikipedia)