Little Brother Montgomery (April 18, 1906* – September 6, 1985) was an American jazz, boogie-woogie and blues pianist and singer. Largely self-taught, Montgomery was an important blues pianist with an original style. He was also versatile, working in jazz bands, including larger ensembles that used written arrangements. He did not read music but learned band routines by ear.
Eurreal Wilford "Little Brother" Montgomery was born in Kentwood, Louisiana, United States, a sawmill town near the Mississippi border, across Lake Pontchartrain from New Orleans, where he spent much of his childhood. Both his parents were of African-American and Creek Indian ancestry. As a child he looked like his father, Harper Montgomery, and was called Little Brother Harper. The name evolved into Little Brother Montgomery, and the nickname stuck. He started playing piano at the age of four, and by age 11 he left home for four years and played at barrelhouses in Louisiana. His main musical influence was Jelly Roll Morton, who used to visit the Montgomery household.
Early in his career he performed at African-American lumber and turpentine camps in Louisiana, Arkansas, and Mississippi. He then played with the bands of Clarence Desdunes and Buddy Petit. He lived in Chicago from 1928 to 1931, regularly playing at rent parties and Chicago was where he made his first recordings in 1930 for Paramount. From 1931 through 1938, he led a jazz ensemble, the Southland Troubadours, in Jackson, Mississippi (also called the Collegiate Ramblers), that played in ballrooms throughout the South. They never recorded, but as a solo pianist or with only one accompanist, Montgomery cut twenty-two blues sides, all released on singles on the Bluebird label, in 1935-36, including the original versions of his standards “Shreveport Farewell” and “The First Time I Met the Blues.”
Montgomery, hailed in Down Beat magazine in 1940 as “the greatest piano man that ever invaded Dixie,” spent time in Yazoo City, Hattiesburg, and Beaumont, Texas, before permanently settling in Chicago in 1942. His graceful New Orleans-style swing and uncommonly wide repertoire that encompassed blues, boogie-woogie, ragtime, popular songs, and jazz standards, made him a popular pianist in traditional jazz groups. In 1948 he played in Kid Ory’s Dixieland band at Carnegie Hall. He also accompanied classic blues singer Edith Wilson, but he appeared most often as a solo performer or leader of his own groups.
Otis Rush benefited from his sensitive accompaniment on several of his 1957-1958 Cobra dates, while Buddy Guy recruited him for similar duties when he nailed Montgomery's "First Time I Met the Blues" in a supercharged revival for Chess in 1960. That same year, Montgomery cut a fine album for Bluesville with guitarist Lafayette "Thing" Thomas that remains one of his most satisfying sets.
Montgomery toured Europe several times in the 1960s and recorded some of his albums there. He appeared at many blues and folk festivals during the following decade and was considered a living legend, a link to the early days of blues in New Orleans. Among his original compositions are "Shreveport Farewell", "Farrish Street Jive", and "Vicksburg Blues". His instrumental "Crescent City Blues" served as the basis for a song of the same name by Gordon Jenkins, which in turn was adapted by Johnny Cash as "Folsom Prison Blues."
In 1968, Montgomery contributed to two albums by Spanky and Our Gang, Like to Get to Know You and Anything You Choose b/w Without Rhyme or Reason. His fame grew in the 1960s, and he continued to make many recordings, some of them on his own record label, FM Records, which he formed in 1969 (FM stood for Floberg Montgomery, Floberg being the maiden name of his wife).
In 1975, Folkways issued an album of Monrtgomery’s “Church Songs”, which enhanced his reputation for turning his hand and voice to many styles. This brought his output of albums to over 30. He gave many interviews about his life in the Blues and his endless stream of stories made him a one-man-repository of Blues history, as his remarkable memory gave us insights into the story of the Blues from it’s origins into the digital age.
Montgomery died on September 6, 1985, in Champaign, Illinois, and was interred in the Oak Woods Cemetery. In 2013 he was posthumously inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame.
(Edited from Wikipedia, All Music, Britannica, All About The Blues Music.com & Mississippi Blues Trail) (*birth year possibly a year or two later according to some documents)
6 comments:
Thanks Bob for Vocal Accompaniments & Early Post-War Recordings 1930-1954. I didn't have this one.
Thanks for this posting documenting the early works of the great Little Brother Montgomery. Remember seeing him in Switzerland in the mid sixties. Great musician.
Hey Bob, it appears you have the same link (the 1930-1954 set) for both releases.
Hi rev.b, Thanks for pointing out the error. I had been out all day and rushed to finish the post late in the evening evening when I should have been in bed! Here's the correct link.
For “Little Brother Montgomery – Complete Recorded Works
In Chronological Order 1930-1936 (1992Document)” (@192) go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/dxgyW
1 No Special Rider Blues 2:53
2 Vicksburg Blues 2:56
3 Louisiana Blues 3:28
4 Frisco Hi-Ball Blues 2:33
5 The Woman I Love Blues 3:38
6 Pleading Blues 2:53
7 Vicksburg Blues No. 2 2:58
8 Mama You Don't Mean Me No Good 3:12
9 Misled Blues 2:43
10 The First Time I Met You 2:46
11 A&V Railroad Blues 2:34
12 Tantalizing Blues 2:48
13 Vicksburg Blues, Part 3 3:10
14 Louisiana Blues, Part 2 2:56
15 Santa Fe Blues 2:33
16 Something Keeps A-Worryin' Me 2:47
17 Out West Blues 2:46
18 Leaving Town Blues 3:00
19 West Texas Blues 2:50
20 Never Go Wrong Blues 3:07
21 Sorrowful Blues 2:57
22 Mistreatin' Woman Blues 3:08
23 Chinese Man Blues 2:45
24 Farish Street Jive 2:34
25 Crescent City Blues 2:36
26 Shreveport Farewell 2:36
Guitar – Minnie Hicks (tracks: 3,4), Walter Vinson (tracks: 5 to 8)
Speech – Jesse "Monkey Joe" Coleman (tracks: 5 to 8)
Vocals, Piano – Little Brother Montgomery
Tracks 1,2 recorded Grafton, Wisconsin September 1930
Tracks 3,4 recorded Chicago, Illinois January 1931
Tracks 5 to 8 recorded New Orleans, Louisiana August 1935
Tracks 9 to 26 New Orleans, Louisiana, October 1936
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For “Little Brother Montgomery – Vocal Accompaniments & Early
Post-War Recordings 1930-1954 (1993 Document)” (@192) go here
https://www.imagenetz.de/by3Yu
1. Good Grinding (Irene Scruggs)
2. Borrowed Love (Irene Scruggs)
3. Must Get Mine In Front (Irene Scruggs)
4. Back To The Wall (Irene Scruggs)
5. Monkey Man Blues (Minnie Hicks)
6. Sweet Rider (Minnie Hicks)
7. Black Pony Blues (Annie Turner)
8. Deceived Blues (Annie Turner)
9. Workhouse Blues (Annie Turner)
10. Hard On You (Annie Turner)
11. Goodbye, Good Luck To You ("Creole" George Guesnon)
12. El Ritmo
13. Swingin' With Lee
14. Long Time Ago
15. Woman That I Love
16. Vicksburg Blues
17. A & B Blues
18. After Hours Blues
19. Little Brother Stomp
20. Mule Face Blues
21. Cow Cow Blues
22. Vicksburg Blues
23. Crescent City Blues
24. Home Again Blues
Recorded in Grafton, Wis., c. September 1930 (tracks 1 to 6)
Recorded at St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans, La., 16 October 1936 (tracks 7 to 11)
Recorded in Chicago, 1947 (tracks 12 to 15), 19 April 1949 (tracks 16 to 19), and c. 1954 (tracks 20 to 24)
Track 24 is mistitled "Winding Ball Blues" on release.
“LITTLE BROTHER” MONTGOMERY
Vocal Accompaniments & Early Post-War
Recordings, 1930-1954
[Document Records, DOCD-6034, Vienna,
Austria, 1993]
Discografía
01-04: Irene Scruggs
Voc. acc. by L. B. Montgomery, p.
Grafton, WI., c. September 1930.
05-06: Minnie Hicks
Voc. acc. by Eurreal “Little” Montgomery, p.
Grafton, WI., c. September 1930 [Brian Rust: probably ?
Hicks [singer’s husband], g.
Chicago, 05/01/1931].
07-10: Annie Turner
Voc. acc. by L. B. Montgomery, p / Walter
Vincson, g.
St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans, LA, 16/10/1936
11: “Creole” George Guesnon
Voc. acc. by L. B. Montgomery, p.
St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans, LA, 16/10/1936
12-15: Little Brother Montgomery Quintet
Lee Collins, tp / Oliver Alcorn, cl, ts / L. B. Montgomery, p /
Ernest Crawford, b / Jerome Smith, d.
Chicago, ILL, 1947
16-19: Little Brother Montgomery
Piano solo.
Chicago, ILL, 19/04/1949
20-24: Little Brother Montgomery
Piano solo (voc. on 21)
Chicago, ILL, c. 1954.
Thanks for the links and posts of the last month.
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