Jo Ann Kelly (5 January 1944 – 21 October 1990) was an English blues singer and guitarist. She is respected for her strong blues vocal style and for playing country blues guitar.
The rock era saw a few white female singers, like Janis
Joplin, show they could sing the blues. But one who could outshine them all --
Jo Ann Kelly -- seemed to slip through the cracks, mostly because she favoured
the acoustic, Delta style rather than rocking out with a heavy band behind her.
But with a huge voice, and a strong guitar style influenced by Memphis Minnie
and Charley Patton, she was the queen.
Born January 5, 1944, Kelly and her older brother Dave
were both taken by the blues, and born at the right time to take advantage of a
young British blues scene in the early '60s. By 1964 she was playing in clubs,
including the Star in Croydon, and had made her first limited-edition record
with future Groundhogs guitarist Tony McPhee. She expanded to play folk and
blues clubs all over Britain, generally solo, but occasionally with other
artists, bringing together artists like Bessie Smith and Sister Rosetta Tharpe
into her own music.
After the first National Blues Federation Convention in
1968 her career seemed ready to take flight. She began playing the more lucrative
college circuit, followed by her well-received debut album in 1969. At the
second National Blues Convention, she jammed with Canned Heat, who invited her
to join them on a permanent basis. She declined, not wanting to be a part of a
band -- and made the same decision when Johnny Winter offered to help her.
As with many good things British the Americans got
interested. In 1969 Jo Ann appeared live with Mississippi Fred McDowell and
later made many US tours. Back in the UK, In 1972 she completed an album with
Woody Mann, John Miller and flashy guitarist John Fahey, before forming a group
called Spare Rib. She recorded a second solo album called 'Do It' - on Alan Robinson's Red Rag label. Bully
Wee's masterful 'Enchanted Lady' album with Alan was also being produced around that time. The title
track of Jo Ann's album is quite wonderful.
She became a major player on the blues circuit, recording
with the John Dummer Blues Band and no lesser mortals than Chilli Willi and the
Red Hot Peppers, as well as Stefan Grossman. This period of her career
obviously reached its peak with a concert at Leyton County High for Boys! In
1979 she helped found the Blues Band, along with brother Dave, and original
Fleetwood Mac bassist Bob Brunning. The band backed her on an ambitious show
she staged during the early '80s, Ladies and the Blues, in which she paid
tribute to her female heros. In 1988, Kelly began to suffer pain.
A brain tumor was diagnosed and removed, and she seemed
to have recovered, even touring again with her brother before collapsing and
dying on October 21, 1990 Posthumously,
she's become a revered blues figure, one who helped clear the path for artists
like Bonnie Raitt and Rory Block. But more than a figurehead, her recorded
material -- and unreleased sides have appeared often since her death -- show
that Kelly truly was a remarkable blueswoman.
by Chris Nickson.
(Edited from Wikipedia and various sources)
Jo Ann Kelly produced 6 LPs during her lifetime, & then there were re-issues & compilations following her tragic & untimely death. At least some of these recordings are still available on CD, including her compelling eponymous debut album. Here are a few I found on the web….
ReplyDeleteJo Ann Kelly – Blues & Gospel: Rare & Unissued Recordings (2004)
https://pixeldrain.com/u/MxZdGiNb
1 Long Black Hair 2:09
2 Boyfriend Blues 3:40
3 New Milk Cow Blues 2:49
4 I Looked Down The Line (And I Wondered) 3:04
5 Whose Been Telling Your Buddie Brown Eyes 4:31
6 Black Rat Swing 3:00
7 Walking Blues 2:37
8 Just Like I Treat You 2:17
9 Sugar Babe (Ain't Got No Lovin' Now) 2:58
10 The Girl I Love, She Got Long Curley Hair 2:49
11 Special Rider Blues 3:52
12 Someday Baby Blues 3:20
13 Moon Going Down 4:13
14 Make Me A Pallet 2:25
15 Sweet Nuthins 3:58
16 Big Boss Man 5:59
Credits
Bass – Tony Ellis (4)
Drums – Mel Wright
Guitar – Phil Taylor (14), Sammy Mitchell* (tracks: 9), Stefan Grossman (tracks: 9), Tom McGuinness (tracks: 14)
Harmonica – Steve Rye (tracks: 4), Wolfie Witcher (tracks: 14)
Keyboards – Alan Dunn (tracks: 14)
Piano – Bob Hall (3) (tracks: 5, 6), Gil Kodilyne (tracks: 4)
Vocals, Guitar – Jo-Ann Kelly
AMG Review by Jo-Ann Greene
The Jo Ann Kelly archive has been very poorly treated over the years, with only Indigo’s occasional forays during the late 1990s truly spotlighting one of Britain’s most underrated, but highly-treasured, blues vocalists. Into this sorry state of affairs weighs Blues Matters!, the label wing of the magazine of the same name, with a collection that totally lives up to its title. Sixteen tracks, recorded between 1967-1984, are bundled up within, and capture Kelly ranging across the stylistic spectrum. The set kicks off with four numbers taken from a rare Harlequin blues EP compilation, recorded with Tony McPhee in 1965. This was not Kelly’s first session, she’d done an earlier one for Mike Vernon’s Purdah label, but that remains unreleased, and thus this was the music with which Kelly was introduced to the world. Also featured are a pair of tracks from another scarce blues Harlequin compilation, this one released by the label in 1968, as well as a few more taken from other various rare collections. However, the bulk of the album boasts a stream of superb unreleased material, including no less than five songs recorded with guitarist Stefan Grossman during his U.K. tour in the summer of 1977. Kelly guested at several of his shows during that outing, and her performances — captured for posterity on-tape by Grossman’s own tape recorder, and unveiled here for the first time, are as powerful as any of her own period recordings. A wonderful album that hopefully will bring Kelly the acclaim she so justly deserves.
Thanks to the Irate Pirate @ grapewrath.wordpress.com for original link.
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For "Jo Ann Kelly With John Fahey, Woody Mann, John Miller, Alan Seidler (1972)" go here:
https://mega.nz/#!T10CiRxJ!HNgRcHvPlBmzyhAjOGZ5W_NRmhYfoZQ45ttJXOGDp34
A1 Pigmeat Blues
A2 Stocking Feet Blues
A3 Henry Miller's Dream
A4 Hard Time Killing Floor Blues
A5 What's the Matter?
A6 High Sheriff Blues
A7 Arrangement for Me Blues
B1 Bothering That Thing
B2 Soo Cow Soo
B3 Jo's Mistreated Blues
B4 Tricks Ain't Walking No More
B5 I Want You to Know
B6 New Mind Reader Blues
Jo-Ann Kelly - Woman In (E)Motion (1995)*
https://www.mediafire.com/file/1dm94b3xim43dlx/JAK-WiM95.zip/file
1 Where My Good Man At
2 Moon's Going Down
3 Death Have Mercy
4 Weekend Blues
5 2:19 Blues
6 Ain't Nothing But Ramblin
7 Jonah In The Belly
8 Come See About Me
9 Try Me One More Time
10 Sugar Babe
11 Bollweevil Blues
12 Love Blind
13 Wide Open Road
14 God Bless The Child
15 Black Rat Swing
16 Boney Maroney
Jo-Ann Kelly - Vocals, Guitar
Recorded at Kassenhalle/Sparkasse am Brill, Bremen, Germany, 20.09.1988
Thanks to The Blues That jazz forum for active links.
For “Jo Ann Kelly - Jo-Ann Kelly (1969)” go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://dfiles.eu/files/1575b6fg5
(password: xara)
1. Louisiana Blues (McKinley Morganfield) - 3:32
2. Fingerprints Blues (Joe McCoy) - 3:27
3. Driftin' and Driftin' (Oscar Brown, Jr. Warren "Pete" Moore) - 2:40
4. Look Here Partner (Jo Ann Kelly) - 2:36
5. Moon Going Down (Charley Patton) - 4:04
6. Yellow Bee Blues (Joe McCoy) - 3:48
7. Whiskey Head Woman (Tommy McClennan) - 1:52
8. Sit Down on My Knee (Jo Ann Kelly) - 2:43
9. Man I'm Lovin' (Hooker, Josea) - 2:44
10.Jinx Blues (Son House) - 2:31
11.Come on in My Kitchen (Robert Johnson) - 2:49
Thanks to Marios @ Plain & Fancy blog for active link
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TRAMP - PUT A RECORD ON (1974)
https://www.mediafire.com/file/lhbdnyh9r0jobh4/1974_Put_A_Record_On_%2528Japan_Cardboard_Sleeve_2007%2529.rar/file
A1 Too Late For That Now
A2 Now I Aint A Junkie Anymore
A3 What You Gonna Do
A4 Like You Used To Do
A5 You Gotta Move
side two:
B1 Put A Record On
B2 Funky Money
B3 Beggar By Your Side
B4 Maternity Orders (Keep On Rolling In)
B5 It's Over
Bob Brunning - Bass
Mick Fleetwood - Drums
Danny Kirwan - Guitar
Ian Morton - Percussion (2)
Bob Hall - Piano (3)
Dave Brooks - Saxophone
Dave Kelly - Vocals (3)
Jo-Ann Kelly - Vocals
Thanks to Bordel Go Rock Blog fo active link (VINYLRIP, SINGLE WAV + CUE + SPLITTER, DR13 + ARTWORK)
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hello, absolutely fantastic post. these define blues music perfectly. thank you very much. r. keith noble
ReplyDeleteWonderful stuff. Thank you! Could you please repost "Ann Kelly With John Fahey, Woody Mann, John Miller, Alan Seidler (1972)"?
ReplyDeleteHere you are Johnny........https://disk.yandex.com/d/tCr7HimWaJAsA
ReplyDeleteNew link from original uploader. Regards, Bob.
Thank you from Brazil
ReplyDeleteHi Bob,
ReplyDeleteJust found this via Brunning Sunflower Blues Band.
Looks like the only LP link still working is for Put A Record On.
Regards
Robbie
Hello Robbie, Just checked all links. As well as "Put a Record On", "Woman in E Motion" and "With Fahey Mann Miller" all still work. Mediafire can be very tempramental and needs to be tried a few times before it works (or use another browser)
ReplyDeleteThe only one I have is the Blues and Gospel album.
All others were with reference to other blogs whose links I checked at the time but did not download. Try visiting them and requsting albums you need.
If you want a re-up of "Blue & Gospel" let us know.
Regards, Bob
Thanks for prompt response and trouble Bob.
ReplyDeleteKind regards
Robbie in Australia
Hi Bob,
ReplyDeleteMe again.
Would please re-up "Blues & Gospel"?
Thanks again
Robbie
Hello Robbie, Here's the new link:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.upload.ee/files/14561938/JoAnnKelly_Blues_Gospel.rar.html
Thanks very much Bob.
ReplyDelete