Tuesday 28 December 2021

Young Jessie born 28 December 1936


Obediah Donnell "Obie" Jessie (December 28, 1936 – April 27, 2020) was an American R&B, rock and roll and jazz singer and songwriter. He recorded as Young Jessie in the 1950s and 1960s, and was known for his solo career, work with The Flairs and a brief stint in The Coasters. He later performed and recorded jazz as Obie Jessie. 

Jessie's father was a cook but had no musical background. His mother, Malinda (née Harris) was very musical, playing piano and other instruments; she had a brief musical career under the name Plunky Harris. On his mother's side of the family, Jessie was also kin to the blues musician, Blind Lemon Jefferson. As a youngster he was part of a school band that also included saxophonist David 'Fathead' Newman. 

In 1946, he moved with his family to Los Angeles, where he began studying music, and formed a vocal group, The Debonaires, which also included Richard Berry. The group recorded Jessie's song, "I Had A Love", in 1953, and the single

was released under the name of The Hollywood Blue Jays. They then renamed themselves as The Flairs, and won a recording contract with Modern Records. However, in 1954 Jessie signed a solo contract with producers Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, and began recording as "Young Jessie". He said: “The name came about because I sounded like I was forty, like ancient for a boy of 17. I had this deep baritone voice and the Biharis wanted me to get close to the rock 'n' roll market. I could have called myself Obie Jessie but I didn't want people to think I was old. 


                              

In 1955, he wrote and recorded the single "Mary Lou," later covered by Ronnie Hawkins in 1959, Steve Miller Band in 1973, Bob Seger in 1976, Gene Clark in 1977, Frank Zappa in 1983 and The Oblivians in 1997. In 1956, he released "Hit Git And Split", co-written with Buck Ram and recorded in New York City with guitarist Mickey Baker. 

He also briefly recorded with The Coasters in 1957, (including harmony vocals on "Searchin'" and "Young Blood"), and appeared on records by The Crescendos and Johnny Morisette, as well as being a writer for other artists' recordings, including The Chargers and Jimmy Norman. He released the single "Shuffle In the Gravel" / "Make Believe", again produced by Leiber and Stoller, on the Atco label in 1957. 

Jessie proved to be a versatile if not overly successful singer from a commercial perspective. He sang jazz for Capitol Records. He made novelty records like “Be Bop Country Boy” for Mercury Records. And he released soul ballads like “Make Me Feel a Little Good” on the Vanessa label in 1963. Jessie stayed busy, but chart success continued to be elusive. He recorded some unreleased material for Jake Porter in the 1960s. He also did an album's worth of songs owned by Harvey Fuqua in the 1970s that never got released. In 1972, he recorded a single as Obe Jessie & The Seeds Of Freedom for Stone Dogg Records. 

He also formed a jazz group, the Obie Jessie Combo, which played club dates, and in 1976 became musical director for Esther Phillips. In 1982, he toured in Europe and recorded jazz in Germany, and in 1983 performed at an "R & B Jamboree" in London, where he reportedly "astonished the audience with a charismatic performance." He has also performed with Leon Hughes' group of The Coasters. As Obie Jessie, he later released several jazz albums, including What Happened To Jr. (1995), Here's To Life (2002), and New Atmosphere (2009). He also recorded with Atlanta-based saxophonist Bob Miles, and performed on the song "People The Time Has Come" with lyrics by Nadim Sulaiman Ali. 

His younger brother DeWayne Jessie became an actor, and became well known as Otis Day in the film, National Lampoon's Animal House. Two of Young Jessie's four children sang in a group called Wizdom in the 1980s. 

Obie Jessie died on April 27, 2020, aged 83

 (Edited mainly from Wikipedia)

2 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Young Jessie - I'm Gone (Ace 1995)” go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/13749896/Young_Jessie_-_I_m_Gone.rar.html

1. Mary Lou (with Maxwell Davis and Orchestra) (3:04)
2. Lonesome Desert (2:56)
3. Rabbit on a Log (The Hunters) (2:59)
4. Don't Think I Will (with Maxwell Davis and Orchestra) (2:34)
5. Well Baby (2:35)
6. Nothing Seems Right (3:19)
7. Down at Hayden's (The Hunters) (3:00)
8. I Smell a Rat (2:26)
9. Why Do I Love You (with The Flairs) (3:11)
10. Pretty Soon (2:22)
11. Oochie Coochie (2:09)
12. Don't Happen No More (2:27)
13. Hit, Git and Split [take 1] (2:36)
14. Here Comes Henry (2:06)
15. Hot Dog (2:19)
16. Do You Love Me [alt. take] (2:39)
17. Well Baby [alt. take] (2:30)
18. Pretty Soon [take 2] (2:19)
19. Do You Love Me (2:37)
20. "This is Young Jessie" (0:10)
21. Hit, Git and Split (2:40)
22. I Hear You Knockin' (0:31)
23. Maybelline (0:21)

This terrific 23 track Ace CD assembles Young Jessie's legendary Modern recordings made between 1953-1957 and includes not only his most famous songs but also two previously unreleased snippets of planned sound-alike singles as well as a "This Is Young Jessie" station identification for KDMA (Mad Lad Johnstone's show).With the demise of Modern in 1957, Young Jessie went on to sing with The Coasters on their Searchin' and Young Blood hits.

Aussie said...

thank you very much love this