Saturday, 24 June 2023

T-Model Ford born 24 June 1924

James Lewis Carter Ford (probably June 24, 1923 – July 16, 2013) was an American blues musician, using the name T-Model Ford. Unable to remember his exact date of birth, he began his musical career in his early 70s, and continuously recorded for the Fat Possum label, then switched to Alive Naturalsound Records. His musical style combined the rawness of Delta blues with Chicago blues and juke joint blues styles. 

According to records, Ford was born in Forest, Mississippi, between 1921 and 1925. Researchers Bob Eagle and Eric LeBlanc indicate June 24, 1923, though at the time of his death his record company gave his age as 94, suggesting a birth in 1918 or 1919. According to an interview recorded for his album "The Ladies Man", Ford's passport gives his date of birth as June 24, 1921 but his Mississippi driver's licence gives it as June 27, 1924. Starting with an abusive father who had permanently injured him at eleven, Ford lived his entire life in a distressed and violent environment, towards which he was quite indifferent. 

Ford, an illiterate, worked in various blue collar jobs as early as his preteen years, such as plowing fields, working at a sawmill, and later in life becoming a lumber company foreman and then a truck driver. At this time, Ford was sentenced to ten years on a chain gang for murder. Allegedly, Ford was able to reduce his sentence to two years. He spent many of his years following his release in conflicts with law enforcement. Ford lived in Greenville, Mississippi and for a time wrote an advice column for Arthur magazine. Reportedly, he had twenty six children. 

In 1973 he moved to Greenville, in the Mississippi Delta. For years, black Greenvilleans had gone for their entertainment to Nelson Street, where every juke-joint had a Seeburg in it, and every Seeburg had 50 records. Ford listened to discs by homeboys who had gone to Chicago, such as Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters; in his 50s, he took up the guitar and began to sing their songs himself. He hung out with locally celebrated figures such as Frank Frost and Roosevelt "Booba" Barnes, and worked regularly with the harmonica player Willie Foster at house parties and juke-joints all over the Delta and central Mississippi. 

                          

For a while Ford opened for Buddy Guy and in 1995, was discovered by Matthew Johnson of Fat Possum Records, under which he released five albums from 1997 to 2008. In 1997 T-Model Ford was featured in a 26-minute documentary JUKE Directed by Mary Flannery and produced by Yellow Cat Productions. T-Model appeared along with Farmer John and John Horton. All this made him an attractive-sounding proposition to promoters, and he was booked for several visits to Britain and Europe. The Living Blues reporter had noted that Ford could usually be found sitting outside his house with a guitar and a bottle of Jack Daniels, and he liked to have both with him at all times. 

When he appeared in England in 2007, notices were posted at one venue asking the audience not to buy him a drink. By his next visit in 2009, he was on the wagon and looking, some of his audience thought, rather frail, but he performed with scarcely diminished intensity. Since 2008, Ford worked with the Seattle-based band, GravelRoad. The project began as a single event, with Ford needing assistance to play the Deep Blues Festival in Minnesota in July 2008. GravelRoad, longtime fans of Ford and performers already scheduled for the festival, agreed to provide support for a ten-show United States tour for Ford through July. 

Ford had a pacemaker inserted at the end of that tour, but appeared on stage again with GravelRoad in 2008, 2009 and 2010. He suffered a stroke in early 2010, but despite difficulty with right-hand mobility, managed to complete a successful tour with GravelRoad. This tour concluded with an appearance at Pickathon Festival. Ford and GravelRoad opened the third day of the All Tomorrow's Parties Festival, in New York over Labor Day weekend, 2010, curated by American independent film-maker Jim Jarmusch. GravelRoad backed Ford on his 2010 and 2011 albums, The Ladies Man and Taledragger, both released by Alive Naturalsound Records. 

Ford suffered a second stroke in the summer of 2012 that limited his public appearances. However, he was able to perform at that year's King Biscuit Blues Festival in October. On July 16, 2013, Fat Possum announced that Ford died at home in Greenville of respiratory failure, after a prolonged illness. The Mount Zion Memorial Fund, organised the placing of a headstone for Ford at Green Lawn Memorial Gardens Cemetery, near Greenville, Mississippi. The ceremony was on May 31, 2014. 

(Edited from Wikipedia & Tony Russell @ The Guardian)

 

3 comments:

  1. For “T-Model Ford – Bad Man (2002 Fat Possum)” go here:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/cDu63

    1. Ask Her For Water
    2. Everything's Gonna Be Alright
    3. Yes, I'm Standing
    4. Bad Man
    5. Somebody's Knockin'
    6. Let The Church Roll On
    7. Black Nanny
    8. Backdoor Man
    9. The Duke
    10. Sallie Mae

    Backing Vocals – Tate County Singers (tracks: 6)
    Drums – Spam
    Guitar – Jim Mize (tracks: 4)
    Guitar, Vocals – T-Model Ford
    Organ – Robert Chaffe (tracks: 9)
    Piano – Jojo Hermann (tracks: 9)

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  2. Thank you for sharing. Many great musicians of the Northern Mississippi Hill Country blues but my favorite's T-Model Ford.

    The wild man just worked that hypnotic drone groove w/the nastiest intentions.

    Down & dirty blues @ its best!

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