Charley Jordan (January 1, 1890 – November 15, 1954) was an American St. Louis blues singer, songwriter and guitarist, as well as a talent scout. He was known for a unique style that drew on his rural roots.
Time has been kind to Charley Jordan's music. He had some moderate success in his own right as a recording artist during his own time, in the 1930s, but he's probably better known among casual blues listeners of the 21st century than he was outside of St. Louis in the '30s. Jordan wasn't the greatest singer of his era, but he had a way with a song and especially his guitar, which makes his records some of the most endearing of the '30s St. Louis blues scene, of which he was a key part.
He was a relative rarity in his time, a player who could coax a beautiful melody out of his instrument within a phrase or riff yet retain a steady tempo and push a song forward. Jordan was born in Arkansas -- some sources say Helena, others Mabelvale in (or around) 1890. Nothing is known of his early life except that he served in the Army during World War 1, apart from the obvious fact that he was a talented guitarist and singer, and made some of his living while hobo-ing around the south in his twenties; he'd spent a fair amount of time in Memphis before settling in St. Louis. And sometime during that same decade, he became involved with the bootlegging business, which led to a shooting and a spinal injury that left him walking on crutches. The exact date of the injury is conjectural, but it did push Jordan toward music as a source of income, and the end of Prohibition in 1933 ensured that he would rely on music for most of his living.
Not only did Jordan record extensively for Vocalion starting in 1930 -- both his own sides and as an accompanist to Peetie Wheatstraw, but he and Big Joe Williams also ran what has been variously described as a rehearsal studio or a club inside a residential building in St. Louis that became a mecca for visiting bluesmen preparing to record in the city; by some accounts, he was to the St. Louis‘ blues scene what Tampa Red became in Chicago in the second half of the '30s and the early '40s. With that perch as a vantage point, Jordan was also perfectly positioned to serve as a talent scout for both Vocalion and Decca in the '30s; and that position, coupled with his own prodigious guitar skills, ended up giving him the pick of talent to work with on his own sides, though he was never as well known as a lot of the people with whom he played.
Peetie Wheatstraw |
In addition to his recordings with Wheatstraw, which are probably the way that most blues listeners know him best, Jordan played with Big Joe Williams, Memphis Minnie, Roosevelt Sykes, and Casey Bill Weldon, among many others. He later recorded under the name "Uncle Skipper". Of his own recorded work, the song that was most popular in his time -- and continues to attract the most attention today is his suggestive "Keep It Clean," for which he recorded at least one major follow-up record; it's of a piece with such risqué works as "It's Tight Like That" by Tampa Red, "The Signifying Monkey" by Willie Dixon, and "Reelin' and Rockin'" by Chuck Berry.
He lived until 1954, probably age 64, and some accounts say he succumbed to pneumonia while others say he died by violence on November 15 of that year. Jordan's memory lingered in obscurity, neglected by the successors to the record labels for which he recorded, until the '90s when Austria's Document Records assembled a three-volume CD series devoted to his complete recorded output. His reputation grew exponentially as a result of those discs, and since then, his work has also been compiled by the Classic Blues label.
(Edited mainly from AllMusic)
For “The Charley Jordan Collection 1930-37” go here:
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Disc 1:
1 Keep It Clean Charley Jordan
2 Big Four Blues Charley Jordan
3 Raidin' Squad Blues Charley Jordan
4 Hunkie Tunkie Blues Charley Jordan
5 Just A Spoonful Charley Jordan
6 Two Street Blues Charley Jordan
7 Running Mad Blues Charley Jordan
8 Gasoline Blues Charley Jordan
9 Stack O'Dollars Blues Charley Jordan
10 Dollar Bill Blues Charley Jordan
11 Sugar Man Blues Part 1 St. Louis Bessie
12 My "Lovin' Good" Blues Charley Jordan
13 Tough Times Blues Charley Jordan
14 So Soon Peetie Wheatstraw
15 Keep It Clean No. 2 Charley Jordan
16 You Run and Tell Your Daddy Charley Jordan
17 Mama's Advice Peetie Wheatstraw
18 Cheating Blues Charley Jordan
19 Starvation Blues Charley Jordan
20 Tight Haired Mama Blues Charley Jordan
21 Days Of The Weeks Blues Charley Jordan
22 Lost Ship Blues Charley Jordan
23 Hungry Blues Charley Jordan
Disc 2:
1 Santa Claus Blues Charley Jordan
2 Greyhound Blues Charley Jordan
3 Bad Breaks Blues Charley Jordan
4 Nut Factory Blues "Hi" Henry Brown
5 Skin Man Blues "Hi" Henry Brown
6 Cherry Wine Woman Charley Jordan
7 Hell Bound Boy Blues Charley Jordan
8 Hospital Blues "Hi" Henry Brown
9 Honey Sucker Blues Charley Jordan
10 Titanic Blues "Hi" Henry Brown
11 Preacher Blues "Hi" Henry Brown
12 Bottle Passing Blues Charley Jordan
13 Rolling Moon Blues Charley Jordan
14 It Ain't Clean (That Thing Ain't Clean) Charley Jordan
15 Tight Times Blues Charley Jordan
16 Christmas Tree Blues Verdi Lee And Charley Jordan
17 Christmas Christmas Blues Charley Jordan
18 Get It If You Can Verdi Lee And Charley Jordan
19 No Christmas Blues Mary Harris
20 Happy New Year Blues Mary Harris
21 Chifferobe Uncle Skipper
22 Cutting My A B C's Uncle Skipper
23 Twee Twee Twa Uncle Skipper
24 Look What A Shape I'm In (Bonus Blues) Uncle Skipper
This great-value 47-track 2-CD set comprises most of his recordings for Vocalion under his own name which are extant and of acceptable quality, plus recordings as Uncle Skipper for Decca, some of which feature Peetie Wheatstraw, plus recordings he made accompanying other artists - St. Louis Bessie, ‘Hi’ Henry Brown, Verdi Lee as well as one recordings under Wheatstraw’s name. He was by no means one of the figures of the blues, but this is an interesting and entertaining insight into the kind of music played in St. Louis, and a worthy showcase for a distinctive talent.
A big thank you goes to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday artist and also for the loan of this album.
Thanks for a great blog ! Happy New Year to you and yours.
ReplyDeleteGreat stuff. I remember Robert Crumb covering Keep It Clean.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year and thanks again for all the good stuff you share with us.