Ottilie Patterson (31 January 1932 – 20 June 2011) was a Northern Irish blues singer best known for her performances and recordings with the Chris Barber Jazz Band in the late 1950s and early 1960s. She has been called the godmother of British blues and the greatest of all British blues singers, often surprising audiences with her large soulful voice and instinctive feeling for the genre.
Born Anna Ottilie Patterson in Comber, County Down, Northern Ireland, on 31 January 1932, she was the youngest child of four. Her father, Joseph Patterson, was from Northern Ireland, and her mother, Jūlija Jēgers, was from Latvia. They met in southern Russia. Ottilie's name is an Anglicised form of the Latvian name "Ottilja". Both sides of the family were musical, and Ottilie trained as a classical pianist from the age of nine, but never received any formal training as a singer. Aged 11, she wowed American troops at the nearby Clandeboye camp with a rendition of 'Boogie woogie bugle boy'.
After the family moved to Avondale Gardens, Newtownards, County Down, Ottilie was educated locally at the Model Primary School and the Regent House School. She had a talent for drawing, and in 1949 won a scholarship to study art at Belfast Municipal College of Technology, where a fellow student, Derek Martin, introduced her to Bessie Smith, 'Empress of the Blues', Jelly Roll Morton, and Meade Lux Lewis and taught her to play boogie-woogie piano.
In 1951, she began singing with Jimmy Compton's Jazz Band, and in August 1952 she formed the Muskrat Ramblers with Al Watt and Derek Martin. In the summer of 1954, while holidaying in London, Ottilie met Beryl Bryden, who introduced her to the Chris Barber Jazz Band. She joined the Barber band full-time on 28 December 1954, and her first public appearance was at the Royal Festival Hall on January 9, 1955.
Between 1955 and 1962 Ottilie toured extensively with the Chris Barber Jazz Band and issued many recordings: those featuring her on every track include the EPs Blues (1955), That Patterson Girl (1955), That Patterson Girl Volume 2 (1956), Ottilie (1959), and the LP Chris Barber's Blues Book (1961); she also appeared on numerous Chris Barber records. She and Barber were married in 1959.
Sister Rosetta Tharpe & Ottilie
When famous American blues artists toured the UK in this period, it was often the Chris Barber band that would accompany them. Patterson would thus sing with, for example, Muddy Waters, Sonny Boy Williamson, Big Bill Broonzy, and Sister Rosetta Tharpe. In 1959, when on tour with the band in the USA, Patterson said that the night she sang, with Muddy Waters’ band at Smitty’s Corner, was her proudest moment. After a stunning set, a member of the rapturous African American audience called out: 'Hey lady, you sing real pretty. How come you sing like one of us?'
In 1962, she performed with Barber's band at President Kennedy's Washington Jazz Festival. Touring and performing hundreds of gigs per year however, eventually took its toll on Patterson's health and marriage. In October 1962 had a nervous breakdown and began to suffer throat problems and mental health difficulties and ceased to appear or record regularly with Chris Barber, officially retiring from the band in 1973. During this period she recorded some non-jazz/blues material such as settings of Shakespeare (with Chris Barber) and in 1969 issued a solo LP 3000 years with Ottilie which is now much sought after by collectors. In 1964, she sang the theme tune for the British horror film, Where Has Poor Mickey Gone? starring Warren Mitchell. Patterson and Barber divorced in 1983.
She divorced Chris Barber in 1981 but in early 1983, she and Barber gave a series of concerts around London, which were recorded for the LP, Madame Blues and Doctor Jazz (1984). She sang her last engagement in the spring of 1991. Although another tour was arranged, Ottilie decided to quit as the travelling involved was too exhausting. Erratic health kept her off the scene since that time, living quietly in St Albans. After a fall in 2007, her health declined and she moved in 2008 to the Rozelle Holm Farm Care Home in Ayr, where she spent her final years living in anonymity until her death on 20 June 2011.
Ottilie is buried in Movilla Abbey Cemetery, Newtonards, Northern Ireland in the Patterson family grave. Her gravestone, marked Ottilia Anna Barber, is by the wall adjacent to the car park. In Feb 2012 a plaque marking her birthplace in a terraced house in Comber was unveiled and the same evening a sell-out musical Tribute was performed at the La Mon Hotel, Comber.
(Info
edited from Wikipedia & Dictionary of Irish Biaography)
14 comments:
For “Ottilie Patterson – The First Lady Of British Blues (2018 Jasmine)” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/h9mo6
1 I Hate A Man Like You (Live)
2 Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out
3 Beale St. Blues
4 Kay Cee Riders
5 I Love My Baby
6 Mean Mistreater (Live)
7 Lowland Blues (Live)
8 When The Saints Go Marching In (Live with Sister Rosetta Tharpe)
9 When Things Go Wrong (Live)
10 Moonshine Man (Live)
11 Georgia Grind (Live)
12 Strange Things Happening Every Day (Live)
13 Trombone Cholly
14 As Long As I'm Moving
15 Bad Spell Blues
16 Kid Man Blues
17 Four Point Blues
18 It's All Over
19 Mama He Treats Your Daughter Mean
20 Tell Me Why
21 Me And My Chauffeur Blues
22 Lordy Lordy It Hurts So Bad
23 Only The Blues
24 Can't Afford To Do It (Live)
25 Weeping Willow Blues (Live)
26 I Hate Myself (For Being So Mean To You)
27 T'aint Nobody's Business If I Do (with Louis Jordan)
By far the outstanding, most powerful female British Blues/R&B singer of her era, former Belfast art teacher Ottilie Patterson sang with Chris Barber's band between 1955-73. Although the slight, demure Ottilie looked like a shy Irish coleen, she sang like a white Bessie Smith, as Louis Armstrong once famously observed. She recorded prolifically, both as a solo artiste and as an ensemble band member, and this compilation is drawn from both sources.
Includes a handful of solo singles, plus seven sides from her critically-acclaimed 1961 solo LP, 'Blues Book Vol.1', alongside tracks from The Chris Barber Band's three biggest-selling albums, 'In Concert, Vols 1, 2 & 3'. Features duets with Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee and Louis Jordan. Ottilie was an exceptional live performer, and 10 of these sides are either from official Live albums or gigs which Barber recorded professionally, but were unreleased at the time. A half-dozen or so of these twenty-seven sides are virtually impossible to find elsewhere on CD.(Jasmine notes)
For “Ottilie Patterson – Easy Easy Baby
-More Of The First Lady Of British Blues (2021 Jasmine)” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/m92dz
01 - Ottilie Patterson - St Louis Blues (Live).mp3
02 - Ottilie Patterson - Reckless Blues (Live).mp3
03 - Ottilie Patterson - I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate.mp3
04 - Ottilie Patterson - Poor Man's Blues.mp3
05 - Ottilie Patterson - Ugly Child.mp3
06 - Ottilie Patterson - Jailhouse Blues.mp3
07 - Ottilie Patterson - Shipwreck Blues.mp3
08 - Ottilie Patterson - T'ain't No Sin.mp3
09 - Ottilie Patterson - Bearcat Crawl.mp3
10 - Ottilie Patterson with Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee - How Long Blues (Live).mp3
11 - Ottilie Patterson - There'll Be A Hot Time In The Old Town Tonight.mp3
12 - Ottilie Patterson - T'ain't Nobody's Business.mp3
13 - Ottilie Patterson - Squeeze Me.mp3
14 - Ottilie Patterson - Easy, Easy, Baby (Live).mp3
15 - Ottilie Patterson - Kansas City Blues.mp3
16 - Ottilie Patterson - Trixie's Blues.mp3
17 - Ottilie Patterson - Too Many Drivers (Live).mp3
18 - Ottilie Patterson - Heavenly Sunshine (Live).mp3
19 - Ottilie Patterson - Blueberry Hill.mp3
20 - Ottilie Patterson - I'm Crazy 'Bout My Baby.mp3
21 - Ottilie Patterson - Basin Street Blues.mp3
22 - Ottilie Patterson - T'ain't What You Do.mp3
23 - Ottilie Patterson - I Can't Give You Anything But Love.mp3
24 - Ottilie Patterson - Come On Baby.mp3
The companion set to the earlier Jasmine release, this compilation is drawn once again from her repertoire between 1955 and 1962, comprising A and B-sides, EP and LP tracks, and a couple of live rarities, including a duet with Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee. Ottilie was an exceptional live performer, and six of these sides are either from official live albums or gigs which Barber recorded professionally, but were unreleased at the time. A half-dozen of these twenty-four sides are difficult to find elsewhere on CD.(Jasmine notes)
A big thank you to Dusty & SummerSouvinir for the loan of above 2 albums.
Thanks for these Bob.
Many Thanks. I know her name but I've never heard anything from her so I'm glad to discover her
Thanks, Bob.
Ottilie Patterson
Jasmine Records, JASMCD 2732, UK, 2021
Discography
Tracks 01-12:
All tracks Ottilie Patterson vocal.
[Irishrock.org Discography. Artist index: Ottilie Patterson;
Discogs, Ottilie Patterson Discography; Chris Barber’s
discography]
01: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine,
cl / Lonnie Donegan, bjo / Jim Bray, b / Ron Bowden, d.
Live, at The Royal Festival Hall, London, 09/01/1955
[Decca Jazz, 78 rpm, F-J 10724, UK, 1956]
02: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine,
cl / Lonnie Donegan, bjo / Micky Ashman, b / Ron Bowden, d.
Debut solo, live, at The Royal Festival Hall, London, 09/01/1955
[Decca, single, 45 rpm, F10472, UK, 1955]
03-04: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine,
cl / Lonnie Donegan, bjo / Jim Bray, b / Ron Bowden, d.
London, 09 & 03/03/1955
[“That Patterson Girl, vol 1”, EP, Pye Nixa, NJE
1012, UK, 1956]
05: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine,
cl / Lonnie Donegan, bjo / Jim Bray, b / Ron Bowden, d.
At The Royal Festival Hall, London, 09/03/1955
[“Ottilie Patterson with C.B.J.B, 1955.1958”, Lake
Records, LACD30, UK, 1993]
06 & 08: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine,
cl / Dick Bishop, bjo / Dick Smith, b / Ron Bowden, d.
London, 09/07/1956
[“That Patterson Girl, vol 2”, EP, Pye Nixa, NJE
1023, UK, 1956]
07: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Ottilie Patterson, p / Dick Bishop, g / Chris Barber, b.
London, 09/07/1956
[“Ottilie Patterson with C.B.J.B, 1955.1958”, Lake
Records, LACD30, UK, 1993]
09: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Ottilie Patterson, p solo
Live, concert at The Royal Festival Hall, London, 15/12/1956
[“Chris Barber live at the Royal Festival Hall”, London,
Jazz, Smith & Co, 2015]
10: Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee
Ottilie Patterson (voc) with Sonny Terry (harm) & Brownie
McGhee (g).
Recorded live at The Free Trade Hall, Manchester, England,
April 1958
[Chris Barber, “The blues legacy, Lost and Found”, vol 1,
Classic Studio, CD, T-5067X, UK, 2008]
11: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp /Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine, cl /
/ Eddie Smith, bjo / Dick Smith, b / Graham Burbidge, d.
20/01/1959 [“Ottilie”, EP, 45 rpm, Columbia, SEG7915,
UK, 1959]
12: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Ottilie Patterson, p & voc.
03/02/1959 [“Ottilie”, EP, 45 rpm, Columbia, SEG7915,
UK, 1959]
Ottilie Patterson
Jasmine Records, JASNCD 2732, UK, 2021
Discography
Tracks 13-24:
13: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Ottilie Patterson, p & voc.
03/02/1959 [“Chris Barber Band Box, vol. 1”, Columbia,
Vinyl LP 33 SX 1158, UK, 1959]
14: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine,
cl / Eddie Smith, bjo / Dick Smith, b / Graham
Burbidge, d.
Live, recorded at the Deutschlandhalle, West Berlin,
23/05/1959 [“Barber in Berlin”, Light Music Club,
Vinyl LP LM-91, Australia, 1961]
15-16: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine,
cl / Eddie Smith, bjo / Dick Smith, b / Graham
Burbidge, d.
July 1960 [“Chris Barber’s Blues Book”, vol 1, Columbia,
vinyl LP, SCX 3384, UK, 1960]
17: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Ian Wheeler, cl /
Eddie Smith, bjo / Dick Smith, b / Graham Burbidge, d.
Live, recorded at the London Palladium, concert,
March 1961 [“Chris Barber International”, vol.3, Columbia,
vinyl LP 33 SX 1346, UK, 1961]
18: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Same, same
Live [“Chris Barber, A life in the road. In retrospect·,
Upbeat Records, URCD 302, UK, 2020]
19-20: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Ian Wheeler, cl, as /
Eddie Smith, bjo / Malcom Cecil, b / Graham Burbidge, d.
Recorded at the Falconer Center, Copenhagen,
Denmark, 17/09/1961 [Columbia, “Landsdowne Jazz
Series”, single, 45 rpm, 45-DB 4760, UK, 1962]
21-23: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Ian Wheeler, cl, as /
Eddie Smith, bjo, g / Dick Smith, b / Graham Burbidge, d.
London, 07/09/1962 (21/23) & 10/06/1962 (22) [“Chris Barber
Bandbox”, vol 3, Columbia, vinyl LP, SCX 3431, UK, 1962]
24: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Ian Wheeler, ss /
Eddie Smith, bjo, g / Dick Smith, b / Graham Burbidge, d.
May 1962 [“Touring Musically with The Chris Barber Jazzband”,
Metronome, vinyl LP, MLP 15098, Denmark, 1962]
A very big thank you to jazzing for the discography of both albums.
Sorry Bob.
This discography is only for the 2nd CD (Jasmine Records, JASMCD 2732, UK, 2021).
The 1st CD on hold.
Thank you.
Ooops, No need to be sorry jazzing as it is my apology that is needed. I see now that you had to put the discography in two parts due to the comments word number restrictions.
Ottilie Patterson
"The first lady of British blues"
Jasmine Records JASMCD 2657, UK, 2018
Discography (tracks 01 to 14):
All tracks Ottilie Patterson vocal.
[Irishrock.org Discography. Artist index: Ottilie Patterson;
Discogs, Ottilie Patterson Discography; Chris Barber’s
discography]
01: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine,
cl / Lonnie Donegan, bjo / Micky Ashman, b / Ron Bowden, d.
Live, at The Royal Festival Hall, London, 09/01/1955
[Decca, Jazz, 78 rpm, F10472, UK, 1955]
02: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine,
cl / Lonnie Donegan, bjo / Jim Bray, b, tuba / Ron Bowden, d.
Studio recording, London, 10/03/1955 [Decca F10621]
03: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, c / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine,
cl / Dick Bishop, bjo / Dick Smith, b / Ron Bowden, d.
Studio recording, London, 09/07/1956 [“That Patterson
Girl”, vol 2, Pye Jazz, EP, NJE1023].
04: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine,
cl / Dick Bishop, bjo / Dick Smith, b / Ron Bowden, d.
Studio recording, London, 09/07/1956 [Pye-Nixa, 7N, 15109].
05: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, c / Eddie Smith, bjo / Dick Smith, b /
Ron Bowden, d.
Studio recording, London, 26/08/1957 [Pye-Nixa, 7N, 15109]
06: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Ian Wheeler, cl, as
/ Eddie Smith, bjo / Malcom Cock, b / Graham Burbidge, d.
Live, recorded at Royal Festival Hall, concert, London,
December 1956 [“In Concert”, vol 1, vinyl LP, NJL6, 1957]
07: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Ottilie Patterson, p / Johnny Duncan, g / Chris Barber, b.
Live, recorded at Royal Festival Hall, concert, London,
December 1956 [“In Concert”, vol 1, vinyl LP, NJL6, 1957]
08: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Ottilie Patterson (voc) & Sister Rosetta Tharpe (g, voc).
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine, cl
/ Eddie Smith, bjo / Dick Smith, b / Graham Burbidge, d.
Recorded live at The Free Trade Hall, Manchester,
England, 09/12/1957 [“Chris Barber Jazzband with Sister
Rosetta Tharpe-Historical concerts”, 1957, Lake Records,
LACD130, UK, 2000]
09: Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee
Ottilie Patterson (voc) with Sonny Terry (harm) & Brownie
McGhee (g).
Recorded live at The Free Trade Hall, Manchester, England,
April 1958 [Chris Barber, “The blues legacy, Lost and
Found”, vol 2, Classic Studio, CD, T-5067X, UK, 2008]
10: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine, cl.
Recorded live at Birmingham Town Hall, 31/01/1958
[“Chris Barber in Concert”, vol. 2, Metronome, vinyl LP,
MLP15011, Denmark, 1958]
11: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine, cl.
/ Eddie Smith, bjo / Dick Smith, b / Graham Burbidge, d.
Recorded live at The Dome, Brighton 01/03/1958
[“Chris Barber in Concert”, vol. 3, vinyl LP, NJL17, 1958]
12: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Same, same
13: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Chris Barber, trb / Eddie Smith, bjo / Dick Smith, b /
Graham Burbidge, d.
Studio recording, London, 23/01/1958 [Pye Jazz, vinyl LP,
7NJ, 2025, 1958]
14: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine, cl.
/ Eddie Smith, bjo / Dick Smith, b / Graham Burbidge, d.
Recorded in London, September 1959 [“Ottilie Patterson.
The first lady of the blues”, Jasmine, JASMCD 2657, UK]
Ottilie Patterson
"The first lady of British blues"
Jasmine Records JASMCD 2657, UK, 2018
Discography (tracks 15 to 27):
All tracks Ottilie Patterson vocal.
15-21: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Same, London, July 1960 [“Chris Barber’s Blues Book”,
vol. 1, EMI Records, vinyl LP, 33SX 1333, 1961]
22: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Keith Scott, p / Alexis Korner, g / Dick Smith, b / Graham
Burbidge, d.
London, 22/09/1961 [“Ottilie Patterson. Back In The Old
Days”, Timeless Historical, The Chris Barber Coll., vinyl
LP, CBJBLP 4001, 1988]
23: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Eddie Smith, g / Dick Smith, b / Graham
Burbidge, d.
London, 22/09/1961 [“Ottilie Patterson. Back In The Old
Days”, Timeless Historical, The Chris Barber Coll., vinyl
LP, CBJBLP 4001, 1988]
24: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Ian Wheeler, cl, as /
Eddie Smith, bjo / Dick Smith, b / Graham Burbidge, d.
Live, c. 1961-1962 [“Chris Barber at the BBC”, vol.1 Coll.
of the BBC Broadcast 1961-1962 (Live). Upbeat Jazz,
URCD 146, 2002]
25: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Same
Live, c. 1961-1962 [“Chris Barber at the BBC”, vol 2. Coll. of
the BBC Broadcast 1961-1962 (Live). Upbeat Jazz,
URCD 177, 2002]
26: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Monty Sunshine, cl, ss /
Ian Wheeer, cl, as / Eddie Smith, bjo, g / Dick Smith, b /
Graham Burbidge, d.
Recorded in London, 16/04/1962 [Columbia, 45 rpm,
Lansdowne Jazz Series, DB 4834, UK. Remastered
“In Barber’s Chair”, Lake Records, LACD185, UK, 2003]
27: Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
Pat Halcox, tp / Chris Barber, trb / Ian Wheeer, cl /
Eddie Smith, bjo / Dick Smith, b / Graham Burbidge, d.
Recorded in London, 21/12/1962 [“At the Jazz Band
Ball 1962”, Upbeat Recordings, URCD 188, UK, 2001]
Hello jazzing, Thanks again for your time and effort with these discographies. They are very much appreciated. Regards, Bob.
A documentary from last year about the life and work of Ottilie Patterson is still available on BBC iPlayer:
My Name Is Ottilie
Soul singer Dana Masters traces the story of Ottilie Patterson, who for a dazzling few years in the late 1950s and early 1960s was a pioneer of British music. https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m001ht97/my-name-is-ottilie
many thanks!
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