Lillian "Lil" Green (December 22, 1919 – April
14, 1954) was an American blues singer and songwriter. She was among the
leading female rhythm and blues singers of the 1940s, possessed with an ability
to bring power to ordinary material and compose superior songs of her own.
Originally named Lillian Green, she was born in
Mississippi. Like so many Chicago blues artists, Lil Green first learned her
craft in the church and country jukes. After the early deaths of her parents,
she went to Chicago, Illinois, in the 1930’s where teamed up with Chicago
mainstay Big Bill Broonzy.
Green was noted for superb timing and a distinctively
sinuous voice. She was 18 when she recorded her first session for the 35 cent
Bluebird subsidiary of RCA. In the 1930s she and Big Bill Broonzy had a night
club act together. Her composition
"Romance in the Dark" was a 1940 Bluebird hit and in 1941 she
followed it with a best-selling version of fellow Mississippi Joe McCoy's
minor-key blues novelty "Why Don't You Do Right?" By then she had
outgrown Big Bill and the tavern scene and moved east to work as a rhythm &
blues band vocalist.
Lil Green and her band. Simeon Henry (piano), Big Bill
Broonzy (guitar), Lil Green, Ransom Knowling (bass).
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For the next ten years she enjoyed a successful career
touring theatres and clubs and recording for RCA, Aladdin, and Atlantic, all
major R&B labels. Green toured with Tiny Bradshaw and other bands, but
never really broke away from the black theatre circuit.
Although Green signed with Atlantic Records in 1951, she
was already in poor health. She died in Chicago in 1954 of pneumonia, at the
age of 34, and is buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Gary, Indiana.
Her experiences paralleled those of her male
contemporaries and she made it bigger than most. From Southern jukes to Chicago
clubs and on to the Apollo Theatre, she participated in the major blues
institutions of her time during the golden age of blues history. She was no
stranger to trouble. According to R.H. Harris, the leader of the legendary
gospel Soul Stirrers, she served time in prison because of her involvement in a
juke-joint killing. He also remembered that she sang religious songs
beautifully. Her former partner, Big Bill, remembered her in his autobiography
as a deeply religious woman who neither smoked nor drank and as a warm-hearted
friend.
Today, however, few people remember her or her fine work,
though they may be familiar with Peggy Lee's cover of her big hit "Why
Don't You Do Right?" We can only wonder why she has been overlooked while
more obscure male guitar players with lesser output have received substantially
more critical attention. Whatever the case, during her brief career, she proved
to be one of the best blues vocalists of her time and her contemporary
African-American audience appreciated her art. She deserves her place in history,
and today's listener would do well to listen to her music.
(Info edited from Wikipedia & AMG)
For Lil Green (1946-51) Complete works go here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.mediafire.com/download/20gmlvbhuux4w50/jpcd1527_LilGreen46-51.zip
01 - It's so bad with my man and me
02 - Blowtop blues
03 - How come you do me like you do?
04 - That old feeling
05 - Last go round blues
06 - No good man
07 - I want a good man bad
08 - You've been a good old wagon
09 - I want a man
10 - Lonely woman
11 - Take me back to Little Rock
12 - Aggravatin' papa
13 - Daddy Daddy blues
14 - Outside of that
15 - I gotta have it
16 - Walkin' and talkin'
17 - Rock me baby
18 - Them there eyes
19 - Running around in circles
20 - My be bop daddy
21 - Every time
22 - I've got that feeling
A big thank you to Reglame Esta Noche 1 blog for link.