Jimmy Bryant (5th March 1925 - September 22, 1980) was an American country music guitarist. He is best known for his collaborations with steel guitarist Speedy West and his session work and was known as the Fastest Guitar in the Country.
Born John Ivy Bryant Jr., in Moultrie, he was a prodigy on the fiddle while growing up in Georgia and Florida. In 1943, Bryant would join the United States Army, serving in France and Germany. While fighting in Germany he was severely injured by a grenade, and would spend the rest of the war in a hospital, where he would meet Tony Mottola, who motivated him to begin playing the guitar. Once the war ended, Bryant would join the USO, where he would play until he was discharged.
After the war, he would drift around various states, including Georgia, Tennessee and Washington, D.C., where he played as ''Buddy'' Bryant. He then moved to Los Angeles county where he worked in Western films and played music in bars around L.A.'s Skid Row, where he met pioneering pedal steel guitarist Speedy West. West, who joined Cliffie Stone's popular Hometown Jamboree local radio and TV show, suggested Bryant be hired when the show's original guitarist departed. That gave Bryant access to Capitol Records since Stone was a Capitol artist and talent scout.
In 1950 Tex Williams heard Bryant's style and used him on his recording of "Wild Card". In addition, Bryant and West played on the Tennessee Ernie Ford-Kay Starr hit "I'll Never Be Free", leading to both men being signed to Capitol as instrumentalists. Bryant and West became a team, working extensively with each other. During this time Bryant was also one of the first musicians of note to play the electric Telecaster, a model that's become legendary and hugely influential in the sound of the electric guitar throughout popular music.
With steel guitar wizard Speedy West, guitarist Jimmy Bryant formed half of the hottest country guitar duo of the 1950s. With lightning speed and a jazz-fueled taste for improvisation and adventure, Bryant's boogies, polkas, and Western swing (recorded with West and as a solo artist) remain among the most exciting instrumental country recordings of all time. Bryant also waxed major contributions to the early recordings of singers like Tennessee Ernie Ford, Merrill Moore, Kay Starr, Billy May, and Ella Mae Morse, and has influenced country guitarists like Buck Owens, James Burton, and Albert Lee. While he enjoyed a career that spanned several decades, it was his sessions with Capitol Records in the early '50s that allowed him his fullest freedom to strut his stuff.
Bryant was a difficult musician to work with. By 1955 he left Hometown Jamboree (retaining his friendship with West) and after various clashes with his Capitol producer Ken Nelson, because of his heavy drinking, the label dropped him in 1956. In 1957 Jimmy Bryant was a part of one of the first integrated television shows featuring popular radio and television star Jimmie Jackson who hosted the show along with black jazz violinist and recording star, Stuff Smith and black jazz percussionist and recording star, George Jenkins. He continued working in Los Angeles and in the early 1960s he and his trio made an appearance in the Coleman Francis film The Skydivers.
During the 1960s he shifted into music production. But he did continue to play live and in the studio, doing quite a bit of obscure recordings in the 1960s in Hollywood and Nashville, mostly for the Imperial label. (A lot of his post-West material finally found wide circulation in 2003 with Sundazed's three-CD box set Frettin' Fingers: The Lightning Guitar of Jimmy Bryant. Waylon Jennings made a hit of his song "Only Daddy That'll Walk the Line". He can also be heard playing fiddle on the Monkees' "Sweet Young Thing".
In the early 1970s Bryant ran a recording studio in Las Vegas, but finally relocated to Georgia before settling in Nashville in 1975, the same year he reunited with Speedy West for a reunion album produced by Nashville steel guitarist Pete Drake. Bryant played in Nashville bars and did some recording work but his personality did not mesh well with Nashville's highly political music and recording industry. In 1978, in declining health, Bryant learned that he had lung cancer due to being a heavy smoker. He played his final performance in August, 1979 at a club in North Hollywood before he returned to his Georgia hometown.
He died in Moultrie in September 1980 at the age of 55 and is buried at Pleasant Hill Cemetery in Colquitt Georgia.
(Edited from Wikipedia & Rocky 52)
6 comments:
For “Jimmy Bryant – Frettin' Fingers The Lightning Guitar Of Jimmy Bryant (2003 Sundazed)” go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/XMGAps5Q
Disc 1
1 Bryant's Boogie
2 Red Headed Polka
3 Railroadin'
4 Stainless Steel
5 T-Bone Rag
6 Truck Driver's Ride
7 Liberty Bell Polka
8 Bryant's Shuffle
9 Yodeling Guitar
10 Georgia Steel Guitar
11 Pickin' The Chicken
12 Comin' On
13 Lover
14 Serenade To A Frog
15 Bryant's Bounce
16 Whistle Stop
17 Hometown Polka
18 Jammin' With Jimmy
19 Two Of A Kind
20 Old Joe Clark
21 Arkansas Traveler
22 Country Capers
23 Low Man On A Totem Pole
24 Cotton Pickin'
25 Sleepwalker's Lullaby
Disc 2
26 Stratosphere Boogie
27 Flippin' The Lid
28 Deep Water
29 Shuffleboard Rag
30 Caffeine Patrol
31 Pickin' Peppers
32 Chatterbox
33 Frettin' Fingers
34 Pushin' The Blues
35 Rolling Sky
36 The Night Rider
37 Hillcrest (Opus 3)
38 China Boy
39 Ha-So
40 Tobacco Worm
41 Strings (Previously Unissued)
42 Long Walk Home (Previously Unissued)
43 Frettin' Fingers (Previously Unissued)
44 Whistle Stop (Previously Unissued)
45 Peach Grove Express
46 Rattle Dance
47 Scottish Eagle
48 Julie's Gone
49 Buggy Ride
50 Blow Your Hat In The Creek
Disc 3
51 Fender Bender
52 Model 400 Buckboard
53 Laughing Guitar
54 Joy Ride
55 Corn Ball
56 In The Heart Of A Clown
57 Tabasco Road
58 Come Alive Polka
59 Lazy Guitar
60 Shinbone
61 Trevor's Theme
62 Liverpool (Previously Unreleased)
63 Boogie For Guitar
64 Steel Guitar Rag
65 12th Street Rag
66 Little Rock Getaway
67 Caravan
68 Down Yonder
69 Georgia Boogie
70 Tico Tico
71 Indiana (Back Home Again In Indiana)
72 Ten Wheels
73 Stumbling
74 Voxwagon
75 Sugar Foot Rag
Recorded 1950 - 1967
A big thank you goes to Bunny Braithwaite @ The Internet Archive for the loan of above 3CD set @ 192.
Here’s a few from my library….
For”Jimmy Bryant – Guitar Take-Off (1990 See For Miles)” go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/bHVgwu8m
1. Jimmy Bryant - Bryant's Boogie (2:21)
2. Jimmy Bryant - Letle Juan Pedro (2:17)
3. Jimmy Bryant - T-Bone Rag (2:13)
4. Jimmy Bryant - Liberty Bell Polka (2:15)
5. Jimmy Bryant - Okie Boogie (2:14)
6. Jimmy Bryant - Pickin' the Chicken (2:14)
7. Jimmy Bryant - Comin' On (2:12)
8. Jimmy Bryant - Jammin' With jimmy (2:28)
9. Jimmy Bryant - Deep Water (2:57)
10. Jimmy Bryant - Stratosphere Boogie (2:08)
11. Jimmy Bryant - Arkansas Traveller (2:04)
12. Jimmy Bryant - Low Man on a Totem Pole (2:35)
13. Jimmy Bryant - Catfish Boogie (2:11)
14. Jimmy Bryant – Country Capers (2:10)
15. Jimmy Bryant - Old Joe Clark (2:19)
16. Jimmy Bryant - Gotta Give Me Whatcha Got (2:12)
17. Jimmy Bryant - Whistle Stop (2:14)
18. Jimmy Bryant - Chatterbox (2:06)
19. Jimmy Bryant - Cotton Pickin' (2:25)
20. Jimmy Bryant - Sleepwalker's Lullaby (2:04)
For “ Speedy West & Jimmy Bryant – Stratosphere Boogie (1995 Razor & Tie)” go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/c9NGwhmw
1 Stratosphere Boogie
2 Blue Bonnet Rag
3 Cotton Pickin'
4 Old Joe Clark
5 Sleepwalker's Lullaby
6 Arkansas Traveler
7 The Night Rider
8 Low Man On A Totem Pole
9 Speedin' West
10 Comin On
11 Bryant's Bounce
12 Midnight Ramble
13 Pickin' Peppers
14 Shuffleboard Rag
15 Bustin' Thru
16 Flippin' The Lid
For “Speedy West & Jimmy Bryant – Swingin’ On The Strings (1999 Razor & Tie)” go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/7BKnPc35
1 Frettin' Fingers 2:02
2 Lover 2:19
3 Two Of A Kind 2:17
4 Yodeling Guitar 2:08
5 West Of Samoa 2:33
6 Opus 1 2:16
7 Truck Driver's Ride 2:12
8 T-Bone Rag 2:15
9 Skiddle-Dee-Boo 2:31
10 China Boy 6:22
11 Railroadin' 2:13
12 Jammin' With Jimmy 2:30
13 Deep Water 3:01
14 This Ain't The Blues 2:09
15 Rolling Sky 2:26
16 Whistle Stop 2:16
17 Hillcrest (Opus 3) 2:04
18 Pushin' The Blues 3:11
19 Swingin' On The Strings 2:18
20 Caffeine Patrol 1:49
Thanks, Bob - I love this guy (and Speedy West, too).
Great stuff, Bob, two of the all-time greats. Thanks for the complete offering. All good wishes! Iggy
Great to have (almost) all his recordings, from the first years! Thank you
Shame so many great musicians died quite young, but their music lives on.
thank you so much
Post a Comment