Saturday 10 February 2024

Big Joe Duskin born 10 February1921

Joseph L. "Big Joe" Duskin (February 10, 1921 – May 6, 2007)[1] was an American blues and boogie-woogie pianist. He is best known for his debut album, Cincinnati Stomp (1978), and the tracks "Well, Well Baby" and "I Met a Girl Named Martha". 

He was born Joseph L. Duskin in Birmingham, Alabama, the third youngest of 11 children. By the age of seven he had started playing the piano. He played in church, accompanying his father, the Rev. Perry Duskin. His family moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, and Duskin was raised near the Union Terminal train station, where his father worked. On the local radio station WLW, Duskin heard his hero Fats Waller play. He was also inspired to play in a boogie-woogie style by Pete Johnson's "627 Stomp". 

As a young man he played in clubs in Cincinnati and across the Ohio river in Newport, Kentucky, then an "open town" full of casinos. In later years he would reminisce about joints such as the Bucket of Blood, where an evening's playing might earn him two or three dollars in tips. He continued to play while serving in the army in the second world war, his engagements entertaining the US forces enabling him to meet his heroes Johnson, Albert Ammons and Meade Lux Lewis, then famous as the Boogie Woogie Trio. 

After his military service ended, Duskin's father caught him playing boogie in the church and made him promise to stop playing in that style while he was still alive. However, Rev. Duskin lived to the age of 105, and in the meantime, Joe found employment as a police officer and as a postal worker. Effectively in the middle of his career, he never played a keyboard for sixteen years. 

By the early 1970s Duskin had begun playing the piano at festivals in the U.S. and across Europe. By 1978, and with the reputation for his concert playing now growing, his first recording, Cincinnati Stomp, was released on Arhoolie Records. The album contained Duskin's cover version of "Down the Road a Piece"  and featured Jimmy Johnson and Muddy Waters's guitarist Bob Margolin. 

                                  

He subsequently toured Austria and Germany, and in 1987 he made his first visit to the U.K. The same year his part in John Jeremy's film Boogie Woogie Special, recorded for The South Bank Show, raised Duskin's profile. In 1988, accompanied by guitarist/producer Dave Peabody, Duskin recorded his third album, Don't Mess with the Boogie Man first released on Special Delivery Records. He was also a guest and invited to perform on the BBC program Bravo accompanied by the Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts. In the following decade, Duskin performed several times at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival and the Chicago Blues Festival.

Big Joe with Peter Frampton

His touring in Europe continued before he recorded his final album at the Quai du Blues in Neuilly, France. Several Duskin albums were issued on European labels in the 1980s and 1990s. It was 2004 before his third American release, Big Joe Jumps Again! (Yellow Dog Records) was issued; it was his first studio recording in sixteen years. It featured Philip Paul (drums), Ed Conley (bass), and Peter Frampton on guitar. 

Duskin's 84th birthday party was held on February 10, 2005, at The Fat Fish Blue, Newport, Kentucky, and included a gathering of musicians and friends including Larry Bloomfield, Larry Nager, Philip Paul, Ed Conley, James Ibold, Frank Lynch and more paying tribute. It helped record his final offering, a double CD album set for Cottage On The Hill Records. 

In 2000 Duskin received a Lifetime Achievement "Cammy" ("Cammy" was the nickname for The Cincinnati Enquirer Pop Music Award, which was presented annually to musicians identified with the tri-State area of Kentucky, Ohio, and Indiana). In 2004 Duskin was presented with a key to the city by the mayor of Cincinnati. The following year he was a recipient of a National Heritage Fellowship awarded by the National Endowment for the Arts, which is the U.S. highest honor in the folk and traditional arts. 

Suffering from the effects of diabetes, Duskin was on the eve of having legs amputated, when he died in May 2007, at the age of 86. The Ohio-based Big Joe Duskin Music Education Foundation keeps his musical ideals alive by producing in-school music presentations for public-school children. 

(Edited from Wikipedia & The Guardian)

Here's Big Joe in Canada, 1985

 

2 comments:

boppinbob said...

Big Joe Duskin - Cincinnati Stomp (1995 Arhoolie)

https://www.imagenetz.de/kHL6P

01. Mean Old Frisco
02. Roll 'Em Pete
03. Stormin' in Texas
04. Cincinnati Stomp
05. Little Red Rooster
06. The Tribute
07. Down the Road Apiece
08. Well, Well Baby
09. Honky Tonk Train
10. Beat Me Daddy, Eight to the Bar
11. Tender Hearted Woman
12. Stoop Down Baby
13. Betty and Dupree
14. Yancey Special
15. Slidell Blues
16. Dollar Bill Boogie
17. I Met a Girl Named Martha
18. Boogie Woogie Prayer

Bass – Truck Parham (tracks: 1, 4, 11, 12, 13)
Drums – Ben Sandmel (tracks: 1), S.P. Leary (tracks: 4, 11, 12, 13)
Guitar – Bob Margolin (tracks: 1, 11, 12, 13), Jimmy Johnson (8) (tracks: 1)
Harmonica – Steve Tracy (tracks: 18)
Vocals, Piano – Big Joe Duskin

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

Big Joe Duskin - Don't Mess With The Boogie Man (1988)**

https://pixeldrain.com/u/KP4fpNYB

1. Don't Mess With The Boogie Man
2. Down On My Bended Knees
3. Big Joe's Boogie Prayer
4. Oodle Addle
5. Mean And Evil
6. Dirty Rat Swing
7. Cuban Sugar Mill
8. Call My Job
9. Keep It To Yourself
10. Low Down Dog
11. C. C. Rider
12. So Long
13. Boogie Woogie On St. Louis Blues
14. Ida B
15. Yancey Special

Alto Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone – Paul Clarke
Drums – Mickey Waller
Guitar – Dave Peabody
Piano, Vocals – Big Joe Duskin
Tenor Saxophone – Alan Nicholls

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

Big Joe Duskin - Blues Rendez-Vous (1994)**

https://pixeldrain.com/u/BtsMN2Sd

1. Boogie Woogie On St-Louis Blues
2. Key To The Highway
3. 6th Avenue Express
4. My Little Kangaroo Girl
5. Sunrise Serenade
6. Mean And Evil Woman
7. Big Joe Duskin Boogie
8. Well Well Baby Blues
9. Betty And Dupree
10. Small Batch Of Knod
11. Leaving In The Morning
12. So Long
13. Call My Job
14. Four O' Clock In The Morning

Bass – Eddie Jones (tracks: 1 - 12)
Drums – Butch Miles (tracks: 1 - 12)
Guitar – Amar Sundy (tracks: 13, 14)
Piano – Big Joe Duskin

** Thanks to Very Last of a Dying Breed blog for the loan of above two CD’s
================================================

Big Joe Duskin – Big Joe Jumps Again! Cincinnati Blues Session (2004 Yellow Dog) @198

https://www.imagenetz.de/codVm

1 You're Gonna Miss Me 1:38
2 Every Day I Have The Blues 5:43
3 Get Out Of My Way 3:37
4 Down The Road A Piece 0:54
5 Betty And Dupree 3:38
6 One Dirty Rat 4:29
7 Mean & Strange 4:30
8 Key To The Highway 4:06
9 Sloppy Drunk Blues 3:30
10 Beer Drinking Woman 3:17
11 Black Mountain Blues 3:33
12 Miss Ida B. 4:19
13 North To Alaska 1:29
14 The Preacher And The Devil's Music 2:28
15 You're Gonna Miss Me (Part 2) 2:17
16 Just A Closer Walk With Thee 0:47

Guitar – Peter Frampton (tracks: 2, 8)
Guitar - William Lee Ellis (track 5)
Featuring - Shawna Snyder (track 11)
Piano, Vocals – Big Joe Duskin
Drums – Phillip Paul
Bass – Ed Conley

Aussie said...

nice one my friend thank you