Thursday, 5 December 2019

Sonny Boy Williamson II born 5 December 1897


Aleck “Rice” Miller, later known in his career as Sonny Boy Williamson II (December 5, 1897 – May 24, 1965) was recognized as a giant throughout the blues world as a harmonica player, vocalist, songwriter, prolific recording artist, live performer and
wildly colourful personality. (Sonny Boy Williamson was also the name of a popular Chicago blues singer and harmonica player. To distinguish the two, Miller has been referred to as Sonny Boy Williamson II.)

Starting in 1951 and continuing into the 1960s, Sonny Boy made some of the most influential blues records of all time -- "Help Me", "Eyesight To The Blind", "Nine Below Zero", "Mighty Long Time", "One Way Out", "Don't Start Me Talking", "Keep It To Yourself", "Bring It On Home", and dozens more.


                              

Sonny Boy began his career in the 1920s in the Mississippi Delta. He was born near Glendora, Mississippi in either 1894, 1897, 1899, 1908, 1909 or 1912, depending on which of his interviews and documents you choose to believe. Certainly he was a wandering musician from an early age. Bluesmen like Robert Junior 

Lockwood remember him playing on street corners and at dances in the Delta plantation towns around 1930.

Sometimes he would be accompanied by a guitar player, but often by nothing more than his own snapping fingers to keep time. He developed a delicate yet rugged style of harmonica that perfectly fit his voice. It's almost as though they were the same instrument. His sound was entirely his own. He was a tremendous influence on other players; every blues harmonica player since Sonny boy has struggled to master his style. You can hear his licks played by James Cotton (whom Sonny Boy raised and tutored), Junior Wells, Howling Wolf, Junior Parker and literally hundreds of other harp players. But one listen to Sonny Boy and you'll know no one else was quite the same.

Sonny Boy with Robert Lockwood Jr.
After years of wandering from town to town in the Delta, Sonny Boy found a home in 1941 at KFFA radio in Helena, Arkansas. The Interstate Grocery Company put him on the air for 15 minutes a day at lunch time to advertise King Biscuit Flour. King Biscuit Time became an institution in the Delta. The sound of Sonny Boy's harp and his swinging little bands, including great guitarists like Robert Junior Lockwood, Joe Willie Wilkins, Elmore James and Houston Stackhouse, could be heard across the Delta at a time when very little blues was heard on the radio. He was a star in the Delta, playing dances and parties every weekend and broadcasting virtually every weekday for ten years.

At some point around this time Rice Miller "borrowed" the professional name of John Lee "Sonny Boy" Williamson, the extremely popular blues recording artist who himself was a major innovator on harmonica. Miller, being the older of the two men, liked to insist that he was the "original Sonny Boy," even though his recording career didn't begin until after John Lee's untimely death in 1948.

Sonny Boy & Muddy Waters
In fact, for all his popularity in the Delta, Sonny Boy didn't make a record himself until 1951, when Lillian McMurry of Trumpet Records took him and his band into the studio in Jackson, Mississippi to cut his first sides -- "Eyesight To the Blind", "Cross My Heart", and "Pontiac Blues" among them. When his records began to sell, he was lured away by Chess Records in Chicago, where he recorded into the early 1960s. Sonny Boy became one of Chess' great blues stars, along with Muddy Waters, Howling Wolf and Little Walter, and his recordings for 

Chess, Iike his Trumpet sides, were masterpieces of small band blues. In fact, few bluesmen could claim to have made so many brilliant records as Sonny Boy; it's hard to think of a single song he recorded not worth listening to again and again.

In the early 1960s, when European fans began discovering the blues, Sonny Boy was among the first American bluesmen to tour Europe. He went over with the groundbreaking American Folk Blues Festival caravan in 1963 and found a kind of adulation among the young, white fans that he had never experienced in the States. He stayed in Europe after the tour, 
gigging with Memphis Slim in Poland and with the Yardbirds in England. He loved the formal British businessmen's suits, and adopted them for his own, sometimes even carrying a rolled-up umbrella on stage.

 After spending some time in Europe in 1963 and 1964, Sonny Boy returned to Helena and began broadcasting again on King Biscuit Time. Few of his old friends believed his stories about touring Europe; after all, he was the same colourful storyteller they had known for decades. He died in his sleep of an apparent heart attack on May 26, 1965 in the Delta where his career began. (Edited mainly from an article @ Alligator.com)

1 comment:

  1. For “Sonny Boy Williamson - The Complete Checker Singles 1955-1962
    + The Classic LP 'Down and Out Blues” go here:

    https://www.upload.ee/files/10807635/Sonny_Boy_Williamson_-_Complete_Checker_Singles.rar.html

    1. DON'T START ME TALKIN'
    2. ALL MY LOVE IN VAIN
    3. LET ME EXPLAIN
    4. YOUR IMAGINATION
    5. KEEP IT TO YOURSELF
    6. THE KEY TO YOUR DOOR
    7. FATTENING FROGS FOR SNAKES
    8. I DON'T KNOW
    9. BORN BLIND
    10. NINETY NINE
    11. WAKE UP BABY
    12. YOUR FUNERAL. MY TRIAL
    13. CROSS MY HEART
    14. DISSATISFIED
    15. LET YOUR CONSCIENCE BE YOUR GUIDE
    16. UNSEEING EYE
    17. THE GOAT
    18. ITS SAD TO BE ALONE
    19. TEMPERATURE 110
    20. LONESOME CABIN
    21. TRUST MY BABY
    22. TOO CLOSE TOGETHER
    23. STOP RIGHT NOW
    24. THE HUNT
    25. ONE WAY OUT
    26. NINE BELOW ZERO

    Sonny Boy Williamson was an enigma in the modern blues world of the early 1960s, a real true example of the travelling blues man who rambled and hoboed across America playing music, gambling, womanising and drinking heavily along the way.

    Here are 26 tracks including all 12 titles from the classic 'Down and Out Blues' album which reached No. 20 in the UK charts. Gems such as 'One Way Out', 'Fattening Frogs For Snake' and the hit 'Don't Start Me Talkin'' which has been covered by The Doobie Brothers, Gary Moore, Rory Gallagher and even The New York Dolls. Session musicians include Muddy Waters, Otis Spann, Jimmy Rogers, Willie Dixon and more. (Jasmine notes)

    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    For “Sonny Boy Williamson – The Real & More Real Folk Blues” go here:

    https://www.upload.ee/files/10807996/Sonny_Boy_Williamson_-_Real_Folk_Blues.rar.html


    The Real Folk Blues

    01. One Way Out
    02. Too Young To Die
    03. Trust My Baby
    04. Checkin' Up On My Baby
    05. Sad To Be Alone
    06. Got To Move
    07. Bring It On Home
    08. Down Child
    09. Peach Tree
    10. Dissatisfied
    11. That's All I Want
    12. Too Old To Think

    More Real Folk Blues

    01. Help Me
    02. Bye Bye Bird
    03. Nine Below Zero
    04. The Hunt
    05. Stop Right Now
    06. She´s My Baby
    07. The Goat
    08. Decoration Day
    09. Trying To Get Back On My Feet
    10. My Younger Days
    11. Close To Me
    12. Somebody Help Me

    Like other entries in the Chess Real Folk Blues series, Sonny Boy Williamson's The Real Folk Blues and More Real Folk Blues (here combined onto one CD) were not really folk and not really regular albums. Rather, they were somewhat arbitrarily chosen compilations, titled to appeal to the crowd that had gotten turned onto the blues during the 1960s folk revival. In Williamson's case, all 24 tracks were done between 1960 and 1964, save "Dissatisfied," which dates from 1957. Because the standard of the electric blues on this disc is very good, whether on the smaller-combo workouts or ones that add organ or saxes, one hates to discuss it dispassionately in terms of whether it's really necessary or advisable to fit into your collection. But the presence of other comprehensive Williamson anthologies on the market, and the lack of any real coherent theme to this particular grouping of songs, makes that necessary. (AllMusic Review by Richie Unterberger)

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