Harrison Demotra Nelson, Jr. (July 17, 1925 – March 19, 1999), known as Peppermint Harris, was an American rhythm and blues and jump blues singer and guitarist.
Peppermint Harris was best-known for his 1951 No 1 rhythm and blues hit "I Got Loaded" (covered by everyone from Elvis Costello to Los Lobos and Terry Evans, on whose 1996 recording of the tune Ry Cooder played some excellent guitar). However, Harris was not a major player.
Indeed, his very name indicates that. His first recording had been a 78 for the Houston Gold Star label under the name of Peppermint Nelson in 1948 - his real name was Harrison D. Nelson Jnr, and he had acquired the Peppermint sobriquet from a local dance-hall owner. But when he went into the studio for Bob Shad's company Sittin' In With Records a year later, Shad forgot to write Nelson's name on the tape box, and misremembered it as Harris when he came to print up the record labels.
But the release, "Raining in My Heart", became
something of a local success for him in Houston, Texas, so from then on the
wrong name stuck, and Harris he was. Besides, he came from a religious family,
and they had already expressed unhappiness at his flirting with the
"Devil's music", as the blues was still known in those days. So
Harris decided to keep the new name, and keep peace with his people.
Born in Texarkana, Texas in 1925, he moved to Houston in 1947 after naval service in the Second World War, and was taken under the wing of Houston's greatest bluesman, Sam "Lightnin'" Hopkins, who gave him an introduction to Gold Star records and, ultimately, the title of his 1991 retrospective of sides recorded for Jewel in the 1960s and 1970s, reissued by the Collectables label, Being Black Twice. Lightnin' said to him that "Playing the blues in the old days was like being black twice."
However, Harris's music was far from socially conscious, as titles like "I'll Wipe Away Your Tears", "Is There Someone Else", and of course his lament about the perils of the bottle, "I Got Loaded", indicated. He tried to follow up the latter title with other booze-based anthems with titles like "Have Another Drink and Talk to Me", "Right Back On It", and "Three Sheets in the Wind", but none of them repeated the success of "Loaded".
"Pep" (as his fans called him) was no instrumentalist - though he does play guitar on some tracks - and he picked a young guitarist called Albert Collins to play with him on one of the albums he cut for Aladdin in 1956 after he moved to Los Angeles, Houston Can't Be Heaven, which was released in the UK on the Ace label in 1989.
The songs Peppermint Harris cut at that time are regarded by many as his best work. He also wrote lyrics for B.B. King and Etta James.. Later, Harris worked various day jobs around Houston, including one at a record pressing plant, before moving to Sacramento, California, and then to New Jersey to be with his daughter, before recording a final album on the Home Cooking label in 1995. Texas on My Mind which lacked much of the fire of his earlier work.
He died on 19 March 1999, in Elizabeth, New Jersey at the age of 73.
(Edited mainly from Karl Dallas @ The Independent)
ReplyDeleteFOR: ”THE VERY BEST OF PEPPERMINT HARRIS
- I GOT LOADED 1948-1959” GO HERE:
https://workupload.com/file/uLzeSgBKYUf
Disc 1
1. PEPPERMINT BOOGIE
2. HOUSTON BLUES
3. RAINING IN MY HEART
4. MY BLUES HAVE ROLLED AWAY
5. THIS IS GOODBYE BABY
6. MABEL, MABEL
7. TEXARKANA BOUND
8. FAT GIRL BOOGIE
9. GIMME, GIMME, GIMME
10. HEY SWEET THING
11. OO-WEE BABY
12. RECKLESS LOVER
13. I'M TELLING YOU PEOPLE (Times Are Getting Hard)
14. HOW LONG MUST I SUFFER (For the One Mistake I Made)
15. LET'S RIDE
16. THE BLUES PICK ON ME
17. I ALWAYS END UP BLUE
18. I SCREAMED AND I CRIED
19. SHE'S MY BABY
20. I WAKE UP SCREAMING
21. GOT A BIG FINE BABY
22. I WILL ALWAYS THINK OF YOU
23. THESE ARE MY BLUES
24. EVIL WOMAN BLUES
25. TOO LATE TO WORRY
26. OH, I GOT THE BLUES
27. PLEASE TELL ME BABY
Disc 2
1. GONNA END MY WORRIES
2. I WANT TO SEE YOU BABY
3. I'M WRITING YOU BABY
4. IT'S YOU, YES, IT'S YOU
5. I GOT LOADED
6. WASTED LOVE
7. I SURE DO MISS MY BABY
8. I NEVER GET ENOUGH OUT OF YOU
9. HAVE ANOTHER DRINK AND TALK TO ME
10. MIDDLE OF WINTER
11. P. H. BLUES
12. LET THE BACK DOOR HIT YOU
13. I CRY FOR MY BABY
14. HEY, LITTLE SCHOOLGIRL
15. THERE'S A DEAD CAT ON THE LINE
16. RIGHT BACK ON IT
17. MAGGIE'S BOOGIE
18. GOODBYE BLUES
19. THREE SHEETS IN THE WIND
20. BYE, BYE, FARE THEE WELL
21. BLACK CAT BONE
22. TREAT ME LIKE I TREAT YOU
23. CADILLAC FUNERAL
24. NEED YOUR LOVIN'
25. JUST ME AND YOU
26. I DON'T CARE
27. LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT
28. MESSING AROUND WITH THE BLUES
29. YOU GOT ME WONDERIN'
Peppermint Harris was a true original with a brilliant way with words which made him a superlative songwriter having many of his compositions recorded by top blues artists such as B. B. King and Bobby Bland.
This is a must for blues fans and across the 56 tracks there are many superb tracks as well as his two hits, 'Raining in My Heart' which reached #4 in 1950 R&B chart and more importantly the classic drinking song, 'I Got Loaded' which hit the #1 spot for two weeks in 1951. Although this excellent 2CD set is by no means the complete it does present the most comprehensive exploration of his work between 1948 and 1959 yet released in the CD era.
(Jasmine notes 2018)
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For "Peppermint Harris – Lonesome As I Can Be – The Jewel Recordings (2001)" go here:
http://www.mediafire.com/file/ew63ob68kl0vd8l/PrHs-LaiCB01.zip/file
1. True Love - 2:23
2. Marking Time - 2:39
3. Bad Bad Woman - 2:39
4. Mama Mama - 1:58
5. Anything You Can Do - 2:36
6. Raining In My Heart - 3:27
7. My Time After Awhile - 3:00
8. Unlucky - 2:25
9. True Confession - 2:41
10. Tell Me I Can Come Home - 2:19
11. Anytime Is The Right Time - 2:38
12. Wait Until It Happens To You - 2:09
13. Bad Bad Whiskey - 2:16
14. Lonesome As I Can Be - 2:26
15. Little Girl - 2:02
16. 24 Hours - 2:39
17. My Woman - 4:17
18. Nighty Night - 3:00
19. I'm Leaving - 2:59
20. Key To The Highway - 3:12
21. Raining In My Heart - 3:24
Harris arguably did his best work with Jewel Records, a Louisiana label owned and run by Stan "The Record Man" Lewis. While he didn't have any huge hits between 1965 and 1971, the length of his stay at Jewel, Harris nonetheless produced some solid material, as this anthology shows. He reprises his self-penned "Rainin' in My Heart" twice here, and turns in a fine version of Big Bill Broonzy's "Key to the Highway," as well, and working with a large band, he shows a real talent for songwriting, vocal phrasing, and arrangement. There aren't a lot of Peppermint Harris CDs on the market, and while the 1950s Aladdin sides are more famous, this one, given its consistent tone and excellent sound, makes for probably a better introduction to Harris' unique version of Texas R&B.(AllMussic)
A big thank you to bluesever @ The Blues That Jazz for the loan of above CD and active link.
Hi!
ReplyDeleteThanx for these. Nice "new" additions to R&B/Blues music collection.
Cheers!
Ciao! For now.
rntcj
Many thanks!
ReplyDeleteThanks guys for the chance to hear more from this artist :)
ReplyDeleteThanks BB, Just read his bio and had to indulge, thanks
ReplyDeletefor the opportunity
- D