Thursday, 26 June 2025

St. Louis Jimmy Oden born 26 June 1903

St. Louis Jimmy Oden (June 26, 1903 – December 30, 1977) was an American blues musician and songwriter with a dry, laconic vocal style and is remembered now more for his songwriting talents than for his records. 

James Burke "St. Louis Jimmy" Oden was born in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. His parents were Henry Oden, a dancer, and Leana West, although both had died before their son reached the age of eight. He sang and taught himself to play the piano in childhood. In his teens, he left home for St. Louis, where piano-based blues was prominent, to make his fortune with his fingers. 

He developed his vocal talents and began performing with the pianist Roosevelt Sykes. After more than ten years playing in and around St. Louis, in 1933 he and Sykes moved to Chicago. In the 20s, on the busy circuit of speak-easies, clubs and parties in that ‘wide-open’ city, he met another pianist Roosevelt Sykes, and Jimmy began to focus on singing and songwriting in their work together. For more than ten years, Jimmy and Roosevelt were at the centre of the scene in St.Louis where the Blues piano of Peetie Wheatstraw, Walter Davis and Speckled Red made the city almost synonymous with tinkling ivories.

                                    

In Chicago, he was nicknamed St. Louis Jimmy and had a solid performing and recording career for the next four decades. Chicago became his home, but Oden traveled with blues players throughout the United States. He recorded many records, his best-known being the 1941 Bluebird release "Goin' Down Slow". It was a great song, delivered in Jimmy’s typical downhearted style, and a regional hit, but when America joined WWII his recording career, like so many others, hit the buffers. 

After the War, Jimmy cut some tracks for the Bullet label, and in 1948 he cut ‘Florida Hurricane’ for Aristocrat Records, which was about to become Chess. His side-men on those sessions included pianist Sunnyland Slim and Muddy Waters on slide-guitar, and Muddy later recorded several of Jimmy’s compositions including ‘Soon Forgotten’ and ‘Take the Bitter with the Sweet’. In 1949 Jimmy and his partner Joe Brown set up their own JOB label, but within a year Jimmy had pulled out. His own records appeared throughout the 50s on the Savoy and Parrot labels, and with Roosevelt on Duke Records. 

Muddy Waters, Jimmy Oden, Chris Barber, Ottilee Patterson

He spent less time performing after being in a car crash in 1957. Songs written later in his career include "What a Woman!" Oden released the album Goin' Down Slow on Prestige-Bluesville in 1960. It had ten of his own compositions, including the title track. That same year he performed as a vocalist on three songs recorded for an Otis Spann session in 1960. 

Jimmy continued to record sporadically for several labels in the 60s, but failing health was catching up with him. Jimmy had retired from performing by the end of the decade, and passed away in Chicago on  December 30, 1977 from  bronchopneumonia at the age of 74. He was interred in Restvale Cemetery, in Alsip, Illinois, near Chicago. 

(Edited from Wikipedia & All About Blues Music)

1 comment:

boppinbob said...

For “St. Louis Jimmy Olden – Complete Recorded Works in Chronological Order 1932- 1955” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/KUHbzJYY

Volume 1 -- 1932-1944 (1994 Document)
1. I Have Made Up My Mind – St Louis Jimmy Oden (as by Jimmie Oden)
2. Sitting Down Thinking Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden (as by Jimmie Oden)
3. Patrol Wagon Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden (as by Jimmie Oden)
4. Warning Spirit Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden
5. My Dream Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden
6. Six Feet In The Ground – St Louis Jimmy Oden (as by Old Man Oden)
7. Pipe Layin’ Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden (as by Old Man Oden)
8. Some Sweet Day – St Louis Jimmy Oden (as by Old Man Oden)
9. Silk Worm Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden (as by Old Man Oden)
10. The Road To Ruin – St Louis Jimmy Oden
11. Thick And Thin – St Louis Jimmy Oden
12. Monkey Face Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden
13. Come Day Go Day – St Louis Jimmy Oden
14. Lost Ball Blues – St Louis Jimmy
15. Going Down Slow – St Louis Jimmy Oden
16. Old Vets Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden (as by Poor Boy Burke)
17. St. Louis Woman Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden
18. Poor Boy Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden
19. Back On My Feet Again – St Louis Jimmy Oden
20. Nothing But Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden
21. Soon Forget You – St Louis Jimmy Oden
22. Can’t Stand Your Evil Ways – St Louis Jimmy Oden
23. Strange Woman Blues (orig. copyright as Strange Woman) – St Louis Jimmy Oden
24. One More Break – St Louis Jimmy Oden
25. My Story Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden

1932 tracks 1-3, 1933 tracks 4-5, 1934 tracks 6-7, 1937 tracks 8-11, 1941 tracks 12-16
1942 tracks 17-22, 1944 tracks 23-25

Volume 2 (1944-1955) (1994 Document)
1. Bad Condition – St Louis Jimmy Oden
2. Dog House Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden
3. Yancey’s Blues – Jump Jackson And His Band
4. Going Down Slow – St Louis Jimmy Oden
5. My Trouble – St Louis Jimmy Oden
6. Sittin’ An’ Thinkin’ – St Louis Jimmy Oden
7. Now I’m Through – St Louis Jimmy Oden
8. Mr. Brown Boogie – St Louis Jimmy Oden
9. Biscuit Roller – St Louis Jimmy Oden
10. I’m Sorry Now – St Louis Jimmy Oden
11. Florida Hurricane – St Louis Jimmy Oden
12. So Nice And Kind – St Louis Jimmy Oden
13. Shame On You Baby – St Louis Jimmy Oden
14. I’ll Never Be Satisfied – St Louis Jimmy Oden
15. Jack L. Cooper – St Louis Jimmy Oden
16. Hard Work Boogie (Hard Luck Boogie) – St Louis Jimmy Oden
17. Your Evil Ways – St Louis Jimmy Oden
18. I Sit Up All Night – St Louis Jimmy Oden
19. State Street Blues – St Louis Jimmy Oden
20. Tryin’ To Change My Ways (Good Book Blues) – St Louis Jimmy Oden
21. Drinkin’ Woman – St Louis Jimmy Oden
22. Why Work – St Louis Jimmy Oden
23. Goin’ Down Slow – St Louis Jimmy Oden
24. Murder In The First Degree – St Louis Jimmy Oden

1944 track 1, 1945 track 2, 1946 track 3, 1947 tracks 4-8, 1948 tracks 9-12,
1949 tracks 13-15, 1949or50 tracks 16-20, 1953 tracks 21-22 1955 tracks 23-24

Available on the usual streamers @ 192