Saturday, 14 December 2024

Judy Roderick born 14 December 1942

Judith Allen Roderick (December 14, 1942 – January 22, 1992) was an American folk and blues singer and songwriter, described by Allmusic as: "One of the finest white folk/blues singers of the early to mid-'60s." 

She was born in Wyandotte, Michigan to Howard and Emily Roderick, and grew up in Elkhart, Indiana. She attended the University of Colorado in Boulder, and began singing blues, folk and country music and playing guitar in clubs, starting in the Attic which was in the thick of the folk revival, there she encountered Michael Bloomfield, a very short collaboration with David Crosby which turns up on European bootlegs, and migrated to San Francisco where she was singing the "basket-house" circuit with other young singers - Boz Skaggs and Janice Joplin among others. 

Judy Roderick played the Philly Folk Festival in 1962, and was heard by manager Lee Silberstein, who secured her a record deal with Columbia Records. Her first album, Ain't Nothin' But The Blues, produced by Bobby Scott, was released in 1964. Described at Allmusic as "an eclectic mix of traditional acoustic folk tunes and large arrangements of blues tunes", it featured John Hammond Jr. on harmonica. She performed at the 1964 Newport Folk Festival, and at many leading club venues in the eastern United States, developing a loyal following, but a second album for Columbia was never completed after Roderick and Scott disagreed on the direction it should take. 

                                     

Roderick played/sang blues like no other up and down the east coast, in folk venues from Boston to Coconut Grove, including some of the major blues shows at Cafe au Gogo. She was signed for Vanguard Records by Maynard Solomon, and recorded her second and best-regarded album, Woman Blue, released in 1965. 

Again a mixture of blues and folk material, from a variety of sources, it featured musicians Artie Traum, Dick Weissman, Russ Savakus, Todd Sommer and Paul Griffin. The song "Woman Blue" was a folk song recorded by many artists, usually titled "I Know You Rider", and made more popular by the Grateful Dead. The album was issued by Fontana in the UK in 1966, and Roderick went to Britain to promote the record. 

She began writing songs in collaboration with Bill Ashford, and returned to Colorado in 1969, forming a new band, 60,000,000 Buffalo. Their album of original material, Nevada Jukebox, produced by Bill Szymczyk, was released on the Atco label in 1972. However, the band broke up the following year. 

The Big Sky Mudflaps

Roderick moved to Hamilton, Montana, where she continued to perform, often with partner Dexter Payne in his swing band, The Big Sky Mudflaps; she sang some of the songs on two of the band's albums. In 1982, she and Payne formed a new band, Judy Roderick & The Forbears, and recorded a self-titled album with musicians including Mac Rebennack (Dr. John). The album received a limited independent release on cassette only in 1984. Dexter Payne, turned out to be her partner in love and in music for her last 16 years. 

A diabetic since childhood, Judy Roderick died of a heart attack from complications due to the disease on January 22, 1992 at the age of 49. 

The album Woman Blue was remastered and reissued by Vanguard in 1993. One of Roderick and Ashford's songs, "Floods of South Dakota", was later recorded by Tim and Mollie O'Brien; their performance was nominated for a Grammy. The cassette album Judy Roderick & The Forbears, with an additional track of  Judy singing a solo version of Floods of South Dakota, recorded in MT (1976) was remastered for digital release and issued on CD by Dexofon Records, in 2008. 

(Edited from Wikipedia & Bandcamp notes)

2 comments:

boppinbob said...

For ”Judy Roderick – Woman Blue (2005 Vanguard / Ace)” go he

https://krakenfiles.com/view/NrGc3nFkMe/file.html

1 Someone To Talk My Troubles To 2:40
2 Born In The Country 4:21
3 Rock Me Baby (Rockin' And Rollin') 4:35
4 Walking Slow Behind You 2:05
5 Young Girl's Dream 2:52
6 Mistreated 4:28
7 Louisville Lou 2:23
8 Country Girl Blues 3:34
9 Contemporary Blues 4:00
10 Black And Blue 2:35
11 You Were On My Mind 3:24
12 Two Hoboes 2:47
13 Woman Blue 5:39
Bonus Tracks
14 Jelly Roll Lord 2:47
15 Me And My Chaffeur 2:51
16 Mama Keeps Her Man At Home 2:25
17 Long Old Road 5:00

A big thank you goes to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday singer and for the loan of above album.
Here’s my contribution…..For her other two albums found on the usual streamers @ 192 go here:

https://krakenfiles.com/view/hUoHfUxcjr/file.html

Judy Roderick – Ain't Nothin' But The Blues (1964 Columbia)

1. Wild Women Don't Sing The Blues 2:21
2. Come Back, Baby 2:39
3. Brother, Can You Spare A Dime? 3:35
4. Mama Goes Where Papa Goes (Or Papa Don't Go Out Tonight) 2:49
5. Baltimore Oriole 2:34
6. Miss Brown To You 2:26
7. He Was A Friend Of Mine 2:05
8. Blues On My Ceiling 3:22
9. I'm Going To Live The Life I Sing About In My Song 2:32
10. Things About Going My Way 3:20
11. Don't Let The Sun Catch You Crying 3:17
12. Moanin' Low 3:28

Harmonica – John Hammond, Jr
Piano, Organ - Bobby Scott
Trombone – Lou McGarity
Trumpet – Sidney DeParis
Vocals, Guitar – Judy Roderick

Judy Roderick & The Forbears – When I'm Gone (2008 Dexofon)

1. Gone To Memphis/Sweet Southern 4:43
2. I'm So Glad 4:12
3. Queen Of The Street 2:48
4. Surprises 3:09
5. When I'm Gone 3:38
6. Live In Love 3:33
7. Your Eyes Remind Me 4:50
8. (American) Money Blues 5:36
9. Denver To Dallas 3:47
10. Dream Of You 3:58
11. Shout Sister Shout 3:08
12. Flods Of South Dakota 4:09

Bass – Tim Martin
Drums – Eugene Smith
Guitar – Don DeBacker
Organ – Mac Rebennack
Percussion – Washboard Chaz
Piano – Mac Rebennack
Saxophone – Dexter Payne
Trumpet – Forrest Means
Reissue of a 1984 cassette release.

Don Dan said...

Hello Bob,
You posted the best of Judy. A really great, sadly underrated.
Here is one more to be complete

Roderick Judy (1942-1992) @ 60000000 Buffalo 1972 Nevada Jukebox
https://krakenfiles.com/view/aiB6XHLjO1/file.htmlHave fun !

Don Dan
https://www.youtube.com/c/DonDanMusicChannel

ps: She sings also on two albums by the "The Big Sky Mudflaps" but I never could get them.
If someone has them…

in 1979 Armchair Cabaret
in 1983 Sensible Shoes
Here are the covers https://krakenfiles.com/view/7Zz5ALZ0n8/file.html