Thursday 27 January 2022

Smokey Hogg born 27 January 1914

Andrew "Smokey" Hogg (January 27, 1914 – May 1, 1960) was an American post-war Texas blues and country blues musician navigating a post-war era infatuated by R&B, but he got along quite nicely nonetheless, scoring a pair of major R&B hits in 1948 and 1950 and cutting a thick catalogue for a slew of labels. 

Hogg was born near Westconnie, Texas, and grew up on a farm. He was taught to play the guitar by his father, Frank Hogg. In 1927 he fell in love with his “little schoolgirl”, 15 year old Bertha Blanton. They married in 1932.  A son was born in 1933, but they split up the following year.  While still in his teens he teamed up with the slide guitarist and vocalist B. K. Turner, also known as Black Ace, and the pair travelled together, playing a circuit of turpentine and logging camps, country dance halls and juke joints around Kilgore, Tyler, Greenville and Palestine, in East Texas.

In 1937, Decca Records brought Hogg and Black Ace to Chicago to record. Hogg's first record, "Family Trouble Blues" backed with "Kind Hearted Blues", was released under the name of Andrew Hogg. It was an isolated occurrence — he did not make it back into a recording studio for over a decade. By the early 1940s, Hogg was married and making a good living busking around the Deep Ellum area of Dallas, Texas. While in Dallas he met his second wife, Doris Louise McMillan, who gave birth to his second son and last child in 1944. 

Hogg was drafted in the mid-1940s. After a brief spell with the U.S. military, he continued working in the Dallas area, where he was becoming well known. In 1947 he came to the attention of Herbert T. Rippa Sr., the head of the Dallas-based record label Bluebonnet Records, who recorded several sides with him and leased the masters to Modern Records. 

                              

The first release on Modern was the Big Bill Broonzy song "Too Many Drivers". It sold well enough that Modern brought Hogg to Los Angeles to cut more sides with their team of studio musicians. These songs included his two biggest hits, "Long Tall Mama" in 1949 and another Broonzy tune, "Little School Girl." 

In January 1950, "Little School Girl" reached number 5 on the Billboard Retail R&B chart and number 9 on the Most Played Juke Box R&B chart. His two-part "Penitentiary Blues" (1952) was a remake of the prison song "Ain't No More Cane on the Brazos". Hogg recorded a good many songs by blues singers who were popular in his and their day. 

Big Bill Broonzy and Peetie Wheatstraw and Black Ace were clearly the artists he most admired, but most of his recordings were his own compositions, with lyrics that often appear to be created spontaneously. Hogg’s playing tended to be rhythmically inconsistent; author and critic Peter Guralnick observed that “there is never any beat as such to Smokey Hogg’s music, though a pulse can sometimes be detected”. His music was popular with record buyers in the South during the late 1940s and early 1950s. 

Between 1947 and 1957 Hogg recorded prolifically for a host of labels, mostly West Coast, such as Combo, Ebb, Exclusive, Fidelity, Imperial, Jade, Meteor, Ray’s, Recorded in Hollywood, Show Time and Specialty, but also Bullet in Nashville and Macy’s, Mercury and Sittin’ In With in Houston. The company which recorded him most heavily was Los Angeles-based Modern Records, which meant that he had to spend long periods on the West Coast, leaving his wife and son in Dallas. The stresses of this way of life probably contributed to the failure of his second marriage around 1951. 

By his own account, Hogg had a girlfriend in all the major cities that he frequented, but nevertheless considered himself unlucky in love, no doubt because of the failure of his two marriages. He became an alcoholic but continued to work the party and juke joint circuit in Texas and the west coast of California until he died in McKinney, Texas of a haemorrhaging ulcer, on 1 May 1960, at the age of 46. 

Hogg was reputed to be a cousin of Lightnin' Hopkins and to be distantly related to Alger "Texas" Alexander, but both claims are ambiguous. However he did have a cousin named John Hogg who was also a blues musician; he recorded for Mercury Records in 1951.Smokey Hogg should is not to be confused with Willie "Smokey" Hogg, a musician based in New York City in the 1960s. 

(Edited from Wikipedia, Ace Records, AllMusic & The Blues Trail) 

8 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “The Texas Blues Of Smokey Hogg” (Ace 2021) go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/13833995/Smokey_Hogg_TBO.rar.html

1 I Don't Want You 2:16
2 Worrying Over You 2:33
3 Everybody Gotta Racket 2:41
4 Good Mornin' Little School Girl 2:24
5 The Way You Treat Me 2:29
6 I Want My Baby (But My Baby Don't Want Me) 2:47
7 You Can't Tell Them Where I'm Goin' 2:14
8 No Matter What You Do 2:19
9 When The Sun Goes Down 2:50
10 Coming Back Home To You Again 4:04
11 Kind Hearted Blues 3:13
12 What's That You Got 3:12
13 You'll Need My Help Someday 3:04
14 Somebody New 2:16
15 Ain't You Sorry Baby 2:39
16 Ruby 2:37
17 Penitentiary Blues Part 1 2:38
18 Penitentiary Blues Part 2 2:46
19 Baby Shake Your Leg 2:40
20 Fortune Teller Blues 2:41
21 Where Have You Been 3:04
22 My Gal Gave Me Money 2:55
23 Instrumental 2:25
24 Too Late Old Man 2:54


13 tracks from singles, 7 tracks from albums. Tracks 11, 12, 22, 23 previously unreleased.
Track 2 recorded in 1947; tracks 3, 5, 11, 12 recorded in 1950; tracks 13 to 18, 22 & 23 recorded in 1951; tracks 19 to 21 recorded in 1952, track 24 in 1953, tracks 4 & 10 in 1960, track 10 in 1961 and tracks 1, 6 to 9 recorded in 1967. Remasters ℗ & © 2021

“The Texas Blues of Smokey Hogg” explores the paradox that he was very popular among African Americans despite his limited and sometimes flawed musical skills. As far as possible, this collection has been compiled to avoid duplication with previous legitimate CD releases. Of the 24 recordings, 13 come from 78s and 45s that have not been reissued before, seven are from LPs and are making their first appearance on CD, and four are previously unissued in any form. (Ace notes)

A big thank you to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday blues musician and for the loan of above CD.
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Here’s my contribution……

For “SMOKEY HOGG - WHO'S HEAH!
- SELECTED SINGLES, 1947-1954” (Jasmine 2020)

https://www.upload.ee/files/13833952/Smokey_Hogg_WhosHeah.rar.html

1. TOO MANY DRIVERS
2. UNEMPLOYMENT BLUES
3. HARD TIMES
4. MY CHRISTMAS BABY
5. HIGH PRICED MEAT
6. GOLDEN DIAMOND BLUES
7. (I Wonder) WHERE DID MY BOOGIE GO?
8. LITTLE SCHOOL GIRL
9. LONG TALL MAMA
10. SUITCASE BLUES (Lowdown Blues)
11. NOBODY TREATS ME RIGHT
12. WHAT'S ON YOUR MIND?
13. RESTLESS BEDROOM BLUES
14. WHO'S HEAH
15. MISERY BLUES
16. YOU GOTTA GO
17. GOING BACK TO TEXAS
18. WORRYIN' MY LIFE AWAY
19. YOU WON'T STAY HOME
20. I'M SO LONELY
21. UP TODAY - DOWN TOMORROW
22. DIRTY MISTREATER
23. ANGELS IN HARLEM
24. SIZE 4 SHOE
25. HIGHWAY 51
26. KEEP A-WALKIN' (Take 1)
27. BABY DON'T LEAVE
28. UP AND DOWN
29. TRAIN WHISTLE
30. DARK CLOUDS

Smokey Hogg was one of the most prolific and best-selling Blues artists of his era. This collection gathers together 30 of his greatest recordings including the hits that made him so famous. 'Good Morning Little School Girl' and 'Long Tall Mama' were the Top 10 hits that established him and both are featured here. He was one of the stars of Jukeboxes and made a phenomenal number of recordings until his death in 1960. His records do stand up and still sound, in the main, fantastic up to 70 years after they were recorded. (Jasmine notes)
---------------------------------------------------------------
Looking for the other four Ace CD’s if anyone can help.

1. "Angels In Harlem" (August 1992 UK Ace/Specialty Records CDCHD 419)
2. "Deep Ellum Rambler" (January 2001 UK CD on Ace Records CDCHD 780)
3. "Serve It To The Right: The Combo And Modern Recordings 1947-52"
(December 2002 UK CD on Ace Records CDCHD 866)
4. "Midnight Blues" (November 2004 UK Ace Records CDCHD 1019)


Gustavo said...

Amigo,hoy alegras mi vida en el dia de mi cumpleaños 64.Te agradezco con el corazon.
Te saludo con todo afecto...Gustavo desde Argentina.

bluesjumper33 said...

I have them all -will send on Wetransfer in a few minutes

bluesjumper33 said...

https://we.tl/t-KNOGeYXNmn

Mike Britcom said...

If anyone would like to know what the name of the tracks are on Midnight Blue here is a link.
https://www.allmusic.com/album/midnight-blues-mw0000167609

thanksloads said...

thanks to all

boppinbob said...

Hello bluesjumper33, Thanks big time for your generosity for the loan of the 4 Ace albums. As We Transfer lasts about 7 days I have uploaded these to MediaFire.

https://www.mediafire.com/file/0i6bozvpt9zi3s8/Smokey+Hogg+-+Angels.rar/file

https://www.mediafire.com/file/p6hdtpoq43n0749/Smokey+Hogg+-+Midnight.rar/file

https://www.mediafire.com/file/n0strew8py1ysmd/Smokey+Hogg+-+Serve.rar/file

https://www.mediafire.com/file/1kk5a09j3f7h24p/Smokey+Hogg+-+Deep.rar/file
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Hello Mike, Thanks for the link. I usually get all my track lists from Discogs.

Regards, Bob

bluesjumper33 said...

No problem, Bob
Don't do this often so use the WeTransfer 7 day.
Had some nice ones from you recently ! Thanks

John