Thursday 16 May 2024

Big George Brock born 16 May 1932

George Brock (May 16, 1932 – April 10, 2020), billed as Big George Brock, was an American blues musician. A native of Mississippi, he moved to Missouri in the 1950s and operated a series of nightclubs. He played alongside Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Jimmy Reed, and Albert King. Brock starred in the 2006 film Hard Times, a documentary about his life. 

Brock was born in Grenada, Mississippi on May 16, 1932. By the time he was eight, he was working as a sharecropper picking cotton. Brock was surrounded by blues music, and recalled, "the blues grew like grass out of the ground." His father taught him and his brothers how to play harmonica as a child. 

As a teenager he moved to Mattson, Mississippi. There he met Muddy Waters, and they performed together on weekends. In the late 1940s he moved to Walls, Mississippi. While working as a pipeliner on Highway 61, Brock met Howlin' Wolf. He became his roadie and performed with him. Brock also met Memphis Minnie in Walls and jammed with her at house parties. 

Brock moved to St. Louis in 1950 where he was an amateur boxer for a while. In 1952, boxer Sonny Liston was training at a gym alongside Brock. Liston challenged Brock to sparring match. Brock won the fight in the second round, recalling that "he'd just come out of the pen. He thought he was pretty tough." He focused on his music career because it was more lucrative, forming his own band Big George & the Houserockers. Blues guitarist Albert King played in Brock's band before forming his own. 


                       Here's "All Night Long" from above album.

                                   

In 1952, Brock opened his own nightclub, Club Caravan, near North Garrison and Franklin avenues. Brock worked as a bouncer and performed there with his band which at times featured King, Big Baddy Smitty, or Riley Coatie on lead guitar. The club hosted acts such as Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, Ike & Tina Turner, and Jimmy Reed. 

Big George & Muddy Waters 

In the early 1960s, Muddy Waters arranged for him to meet with the executives of Chess Records. Brock turned down the record deal because although he was offered a tour bus and proceeds from the shows he wouldn't have received any royalties from his recordings. He continued playing the club circuit, at one point he owned as many as three nightclubs at once. Brock closed the Club Caravan after his wife was killed during a shooting incident in 1970. He opened another Club Caravan at Delmar Boulevard and Taylor Avenue, but that closed in the late 1980s. 

In 2005, Brock signed to the label Cat Head Delta Blues & Folk Art. He put out the album Club Caravan which received favorable reviews and a Blues Music Award nomination for best comeback album. In 2006 he released the album Round Two, which received three Blues Music Award nominations. He was also featured in a documentary about his life titled Hard Times. In the film he visits the plantations where he worked as a child in Mississippi. 

In 2017, Brock was honored with a special concert at the National Blues Museum in St. Louis. Brock toured overseas in England, Italy, Switzerland and France. He continued to perform and regularly headlined various blues festivals, including the Bluesweek Festival and the Big Muddy Blues Festival. 

Brock was married three times and claimed to have forty-two children. He died after a long illness at home in St. Louis on April 10, 2020, at the age of 87. 

(Edited from Wikipedia)

 

2 comments:

boppinbob said...

A big thank you goes to egroj for suggesting today’s birthday blues musician. Here’s a few albums found on the streamers @192

Big George Brock & The Houserockers – Club Caravan (2005 Cat Head Delta Blues)

https://www.imagenetz.de/eWkRB

1 Houserocker Boogie 1:50
2 Call Me A Lover 4:14
3 Little Baby 3:01
4 M For Mississippi 3:09
5 Honest I Do 1:49
6 All Night Long 3:13
7 Nine Below Zero 2:56
8 Hard Times 3:29
9 Club Caravan 5:42
10 Louisiana Blues 3:44
11 Too Young 3:55
12 Down South 3:04

Big George Brock – Round Two (2006 Cat Head Delta Blues)

https://www.imagenetz.de/ddTp9

1 Intro 0:08
2 So Long 7:03
3 No No Baby 2:23
4 Poor Boy 3:26
5 Rockin' Chair 3:35
6 Mattson, Miss. 2:00
7 Mr. Wal-Mart 4:59
8 Shake For Me 3:22
9 Arkansas To Memphis 4:00
10 Round Two 3:48
11 Sugar Mama 4:15
12 Burden Down 3:43
Bonus Track
13 Call Me A Lover 1:57

Big George Brock – Live At Seventy Five (2007 Cat Head Delta Blues)

https://www.imagenetz.de/iJEro

1. Intro by KFFA's Sonny Payne 0:35
2. Cut You Loose 4:56
3. M For Mississippi 5:05
4. Fourty-Four Blues 5:15
5. All Night Long 6:35
6. Everything's Gonna Be Alright 6:35
7. No No Baby 4:25
8. Short Dress Woman 6:35
9. Bring The Blues Back Home 4:42
10. Call Me A Lover/Down South 5:45
11. Jody 6:01

Big George Brock – Heavyweight Blues (2007 APO)

https://www.imagenetz.de/jQRdk

1. Walking Thru the Park 2:55
2. Smokestack Lightning 3:49
3. Tiger in Your Tank 3:51
4. Still a Fool (Two Trains Running) 5:08
5. Trouble No More 4:07
6. Young Fashioned Ways 4:29
7. I Just Wanted to Make Love to You 4:11
8. Howlin' for My Darling 3:55
9. Tin Pan Alley 3:26
10. Evil2:42
11. Who's Been Talkin' 3:55
12. Can't Hold out Much Longer 3:41
13. You Don't Have to Go 3:33

Back cover, booklet and CD label all have the order of tracks 10 and 11 reversed from the actual audio. (Track times are correct, as printed, however.) Corrected in the Tracklist and Publishing info above (Discogs)

egroj.jazz said...

excellent as always
;)