Junior Wells (born Amos Wells Blakemore Jr., December 9, 1934 – January 15, 1998) was an American singer, harmonica player, and recording artist.
Born Amos Wells Blakemore Jr. in Memphis, Wells learned his earliest harp licks from another future legend, Little Junior Parker, before he came to Chicago at age 12.
Wells moved to Chicago in 1948 with his mother, after her divorce, and began sitting in with local musicians at house parties and taverns. Wild and rebellious but needing an outlet for his talents, in 1950 he began performing with the Aces, consisting of the brothers Dave and Louis Myers on guitars and the drummer Fred Below, with whom he developed a modern amplified harmonica style influenced by Little Walter. In 1952, he made his first recordings when he replaced Little Walter in Muddy Waters's band and played on one of Waters's sessions for Chess Records in 1952.
Little Walter left Muddy Waters in 1952 (in the wake of his hit instrumental "Juke"), and Wells jumped ship to take his place with Waters. That didn't stop the Aces (who joined forces with Little Walter) from backing Wells on his initial sessions for States Records, though -- his debut date produced some seminal Chicago blues efforts, including his first reading of "Hoodoo Man," a rollicking "Cut That Out," and the blazing instrumentals "Eagle Rock" and "Junior's Wail." More fireworks ensued the next year when he encored for States with a mournful "So All Alone" and the jumping "Lawdy! Lawdy!" (Muddy Waters moonlighted on guitar for the session). Wells was already exhibiting his tempestuous side -- he was allegedly AWOL from the Army at the time.
In 1957, Wells hooked up with producer Mel London, who owned the Chief and Profile logos. The association resulted in many of Wells' most enduring sides, including "I Could Cry" and the rock & rolling "Lovey Dovey Lovely One" in 1957, the grinding national R&B hit "Little by Little" (with Willie Dixon providing vocal harmony) in 1959, and the R&B-laced classic "Messin' with the Kid" in 1960 (sporting Earl Hooker's immaculate guitar work). Wells' harp was de-emphasized during this period on record in favour of his animated vocals.
With Bob Koester producing, the harpist cut an all-time classic LP for Delmark in 1965. Hoodoo Man Blues vividly captured the feel of a typical Wells set at Theresa's Lounge, even though it was cut in a studio. With Buddy Guy (initially billed as "Friendly Chap" due to his contract with Chess) providing concise lead guitar, Wells laid down definitive versions of "Snatch It Back and Hold It," "You Don't Love Me," and "Chitlin' con Carne."
The harpist made his second appearance on the national R&B lists in 1968 with a funky James Brown-tinged piece, "You're Tuff Enough," for Mercury's feisty Blue Rock logo. Wells had been working in this bag for some time, alarming the purists but delighting R&B fans; his brass-powered 1966 single for Bright Star, "Up in Heah," had previously made a lot of local noise. After a fine mid-'70s set for Delmark (On Tap), little was heard from Wells on vinyl for an extended spell, though he continued to enjoy massive appeal at home (Theresa's was his principal haunt for many a moon) and abroad (whether on his own or in partnership with Guy; they opened for the Rolling Stones on one memorable tour and cut an inconsistent but interesting album for Atco in the early '70s).
Toward the end of his career, Wells just didn't seem to be into recording anymore; a pair of sets for Telarc in the early '90s were major disappointments, but his last studio session, 1997's Come on in This House, found him on the rebound and the critics noticed: the album won the W.C. Handy Blues Award for Traditional Blues Album in 1997. Even when he came up short in the studio, Wells remained a potent live attraction, cutting a familiar swaggering figure, commanding the attention of everyone in the room with one menacing yelp or a punctuating blast from his amplified harmonica.
He continued performing until he was diagnosed with lymphatic cancer in the summer of 1997. That fall, he suffered a heart attack while undergoing treatment, sending him into a coma. Wells stayed in the coma until he passed away on January 15, 1998. He was interred in the Oak Woods Cemetery, Chicago.
A handful of compilations were released shortly after his death, as was the film Blues Brothers 2000, which featured a cameo by Wells.
(Edited
from Bill Dahls bio @ AllMusic & Wikipedia)
6 comments:
For “JUNIOR WELLS - JUNIOR'S WAIL - SINGLES AS & BS (2014 Jasmine Reconstructed)” go here;
https://www.imagenetz.de/ki86S
1. CUT THAT OUT
2 EAGLE ROCK
3. HOODOO MAN
4. JUNIOR'S WAIL
5. 'BOUT THE BREAK OF DAY
6. LORD LORD (LAWDY! LAWDY!)
7. TOMORROW NIGHT
8. SO ALL ALONE
9. TWO HEADED WOMAN
10. LOVEY DOVEY LOVELY ONE
11. I COULD CRY (1957 Version)
12. CHA CHA CHA IN BLUE
13. LITTLE BY LITTLE
14. COME ON IN THIS HOUSE
15. YOU DON'T CARE
16. PRISON BARS ALL AROUND ME
17. GALLOPING HORSES AND A LAZY MULE - JUNIOR WELLS AND EARL HOOKER
18. CALLING ALL BLUES - JUNIOR WELLS AND EARL HOOKER
19. MESSIN' WITH THE KID
20. UNIVERSAL ROCK
21. I'M A STRANGER
22. THE THINGS I'D DO FOR YOU
23. YOU SURE LOOK GOOD TO ME
24. IT HURTS ME TOO
25. SO TIRED
26. LOVE ME
27. I COULD CRY (1961 Version)
28. I NEED ME A CAR
As a sub-genre of blues music, Chicago Blues is perhaps the most famous on a global level with many big name performers, and in the early 50s the teenager Junior Wells was on his way to being the windy city's greatest harmonica player.Here we feature both sides of his 14 singles released between 1953 and 1961 making 28 tracks of prime Chicago Blues that is not to be missed!The cream of Chicago musicians appear on many of these tracks, including: Muddy Waters; Elmore James; Otis Spann and more. (JASMINE NOTES)
thanks, bob!
Many thanks
Merci beaucoup!
Thank you muchly!
Great CD of early Junior Wells. Excellent mastering, Thank you a lot, Bob. All the best!
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