Thursday, 30 March 2023

Harold Burrage born 30 March 1931


Harold Edwin Burrage (March 30, 1931 – November 26, 1966) was an American blues and soul singer, pianist, songwriter, and record producer. 

A chameleon-like singer who was remarkably versatile stylistically, adapting his delivery to suit both the era as well as the record labels he was recording for, though he had little commercial success to show for it. By the 1960’s, though still recording, he was transitioning into producing when he was felled by a heart-attack robbing the music world of a unique talent.  Burrage was born in Chicago and would remain a resident of the city his whole life and during that life would absorb seemingly all of its musical influences which came out on his own recordings. 

He got his professional start on Decca Records as a 19 year old in 1950 with a with a jumping "Hi-Yo Silver" with Horace Henderson's band in support. The record company was trying very tentatively to try their hand at rock ‘n’ roll, albeit with a pure jazz band backing him. After that early effort it’d be three years before he was back in the studio recording for Aladdin (1951) and States Records (1954). Ironically those dead-end one-off releases would be the only times he really worked for high profile record companies. 

He put in his longest stint starting in 1956 with Chicago blues label Cobra Records and while he never became a pure blues artist himself, he adapted some traits of it occasionally notably on “Satisfied” as well as being backed by some of the city’s best blues musicians, such as Otis Rush on guitar. Burrage also cut the amusing "You Eat Too Much" , backed by a solid combo featuring guitarist Wayne Bennett and bassist Willie Dixon. Jody Williams added stinging guitar to Burrage's 1957 Cobra offering "Messed Up," while "Stop for the Red Light," his third Cobra 45, was a novelty complete with auto-wreck sound effects. "Betty Jean," his last Cobra single, is unabashed rock & roll, with Otis Rush on guitar. 


                             

Burrage himself often backed those same blues acts on piano in the studio, earning a steady income as a session musician since his own records weren’t big sellers. Yet as a singer he showed he could easily handle whatever style was in vogue at the time, from his Amos Milburn takeoff in 1953 to a Fats Domino approach on “She Knocks Me Out”. He took on a breathy hiccuping style most often associated with rockabilly on his 1956 track “Messed Up” while channeling Larry Williams on “Betty Jean” in 1958. Throughout it all Little Richard was never far from his mind on many of the songs he tackled during this era. 

Maybe that versatility and lack of originality was the problem in establishing himself as a viable singer in his own right but he finally seemed to come into his own late in the decade when he emphasized the gospel-esque emotion on 1959’s “Crying For My Baby” on Vee-Jay. This was a breakthrough record of sorts as it coincided with the rise of this type of singing which would dominate black rock ‘n’ roll over the next decade and stuck with that more or less for the rest of his career.  He continued in the same style in his brief associations for the Paso and Foxy record labels. 

Burrage with Otis Clay

Burrage revamped his vocal approach considerably when recording rather prolifically for One-derful's M-Pac! subsidiary during the early to mid-'60s eventually scoring his lone national hit in 1965 with “Things Ain’t What They Used To Be”. His only national hit as singer was the 1965 Chicago soul song "Got to Find a Way", which reached number 31 on the US Billboard R&B chart. By now he was ensconced in the city’s thriving soul scene and was acting as a mentor to up and comers Otis Clay and Tyrone Davis when in 1966, at the age of 35, he died of a heart-attack in Davis’s apartment, a tragic end for someone who had managed to survive in a professional sense all of the stylistic shifts rock ‘n’ roll had undergone almost since its inception. 

(Edited from bio by Sampson @ SpontaneousLunacy, AllMusic & All About Jazz)

12 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Harold Burrage - Pioneer Of Chicago Soul (P-Vine CD-R)” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/aXhg4

1. Crying For My Baby
2. What You Don't Know
3. You KO'd Me
4. Great Day In The Morning
5. A Fool
6. Say You Love Me
7. Master Key
8. Faith & Understanding
9. She Knocks Me Out
10. A Heart Filled With Pain
11. That's A Friend
12. Everybody's Dancin
13. Baby I'm Allright
14. Fifty Fifty
15. Got To Find A Way
16. How To Fix Your Mouth
17. You Make Me So Happy
18. Things Ain't What They Used To Be
19. More Power To You
20. A Long Way Together
21. Take ME Now
22. I'm In Love
23. You Mean The World To Me
24. Hang My Head & Cry
25. Mr. Window

For “Harold Burrage – Messed Up! The Cobra Recordings 1956-58 (2001 Westside)” go here;

https://www.imagenetz.de/am3m8

1 You Eat Too Much
2 One More Dance
3 Hot Dog And A Bottle Of Pop
4 Messed Up
5 I Don't Care Who Knows (master)
6 Satisfied (Master)
7 Stop For The Red Light (overdubbed master)
8 A Heart (Filled With Pain)
9 She Knocks Me Out (master)
10 Betty Jean
11 I Cry For You (master)
12 She Knocks Me Out (alternate take)
13 Satisfied (alternate take)
14 I Cry For You (alternate take)
15 Stop For The Red Light (undubbed master)
16 I Don't Care Who Knows (alternate take 1)
17 I Don't Care Who Knows (alternate take 2)

A big thank you to Chi-Town & Summer Souvenir for loan of above CDs

=============================================

Whilst looking for Harold Burrage recordings I came across a few mp3’s not included in above CD’s . There are about 14 more titles in his discography which I cannot find or are unreleased

https://www.upload.ee/files/15068673/Harold_Burrage_-_Loose_Ends.rar.html

01) Harold Burrage - Hi Yo Silver (1950)
02) Harold Burrage - Way Down Boogie (1951)
03) Harold Burrage - I Feel so Fine (1954)
04) Harold Burrage - You-'re Gonna Cry (1954)
05) Harold Burrage - Ooh Wow (1958)
06) Harold Burrage - A Long Way Together (1963)
07) Harold Burrage - I-'ll Take One (1963)
08) Harold Burrage - Mountain of Soul (unreleased 63/65)
09) Harold Burrage - More Power to You (1966)

egroj.jazz said...

many thanks!!

egroj.jazz said...

Hi Bob on april:
Muddy Waters
Joey DeFrancesco
Scott LaFaro
Stanley Turrentine
Carmen McRae
Harold Vick
Andre Previn
Bill Hardman
Randy Weston
Pete La Roca
Ravi Shankar

;)

boppinbob said...

Thnks egroj, All are now noted in the birthday book. Regards, Bob.

Crab Devil said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Guitarradeplastico,scraping oddities said...

Thank you

D said...

What's so special about your blog is not only how you keep the past alive and relevant, but also the camaraderie of your fans and followers. Great to see how people chip in to provide info and shares. Makes me smile. Keep up this awesome work and passion.
Cheers Bob,
Thanks.
- Denis

ausman said...

Just a heads up:- Track #5 of the "LOOSE ENDS" posted above, which is listed as "OOH WOW" 1958, is actually "SHE KNOCKS ME OUT" from 1958 on the Westside CD of his Cobra recordings
posted here.

boppinbob said...

Thanks ausman, picked this track up on a various artist CD Shake Rattle & Roll Vol 9. Unfortunately there's no other info regarding it (that is until now!)Regards, Bob.

egroj.jazz said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
egroj.jazz said...

Hi Bob:

on April 5
Stanley Turrentine

on April 6
Andre Previn

on April 7
Freddie Hubbard

on 8
Carmen McRae


;)

boppinbob said...

Hello egroj, It seems like you are showing your age have a look at your comment on 30th March.
Don't worry I'm in the same boat and am making more blog errors as the years go by. Thanks for suggesting Freddie Hubbard. Regards, Bob.