John Lee Curtis "Sonny Boy" Williamson (March 30, 1914 – June 1, 1948) was an American blues harmonica player and singer-songwriter. He is often regarded as the pioneer of the blues harp as a solo instrument. He played on hundreds of recordings by many pre–World War II blues artists. Under his own name, he was one of the most recorded blues musicians of the 1930s and 1940s and is closely associated with Chicago producer Lester Melrose and Bluebird Records. His popular songs, original or adapted, include "Good Morning, School Girl", "Sugar Mama", "Early in the Morning", and "Stop Breaking Down".

Williamson's harmonica style was a great influence on post-war performers. Later in his career, he was a mentor to many up-and-coming blues musicians who moved to Chicago, including Muddy Waters. In an attempt to capitalize on Williamson's fame, Aleck "Rice" Miller began recording and performing as Sonny Boy Williamson in the early 1940s, and later, to distinguish the two, John Lee Williamson came to be known as Sonny Boy Williamson I or "the original Sonny Boy".
Williamson was born in Madison County, Tennessee, near Jackson, in 1914. His original recordings are in the country blues style, but he soon demonstrated skill at making the harmonica a lead instrument for the blues and popularized it for the first time in a more urban blues setting. He has been called "the father of modern blues harp". While in his teens he joined Yank Rachell and Sleepy John Estes, playing with them in Tennessee and Arkansas. In 1934 he settled in Chicago.

Williamson first recorded in 1937, for Bluebird Records, and his first recording, "Good Morning, School Girl", became a standard. He was popular among black audiences throughout the southern United States and in Midwestern industrial cities, such as Detroit and Chicago, and his name was synonymous with the blues harmonica for the next decade. Other well-known recordings of his include "Sugar Mama", "Shake the Boogie", "Better Cut That Out", "Sloppy Drunk", "Early in the Morning", "Stop Breaking Down", and "Hoodoo Hoodoo" (also known as "Hoodoo Man Blues").
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| Sonny Boy & Big Bill Broonzy |
In 1947, "Shake the Boogie" made number 4 on Billboard's Race Records chart. Williamson's style influenced many blues harmonica performers, including Billy Boy Arnold, Junior Wells, Sonny Terry, Little Walter, and Snooky Pryor. He was the most widely heard and influential blues harmonica player of his generation. His music was also influential on many of his non-harmonica-playing contemporaries and successors, including Muddy Waters (who played guitar with Williamson in the mid-1940s) and Jimmy Rogers (whose first recording in 1946 was as a harmonica player, performing an uncanny imitation of Williamson's style). These and other artists, both blues and rock, have helped popularize his songs through subsequent recordings.
Williamson recorded prolifically both as a bandleader and as a sideman over the course of his career, mainly for Bluebird. Before Bluebird moved to Chicago, where it eventually became part of RCA Records, many early sessions took place at the Leland Tower, a hotel in Aurora, Illinois. The top-floor nightclub at the Leland, known as the Sky Club, was used for live broadcasts of big bands on a local radio station and, during off hours, served as a recording studio for Williamson's early sessions and those of other Bluebird artists. |
| Sonny Boy & Lacey Belle Williamson |
Williamson's final recording session took place in Chicago in December 1947, in which he accompanied Big Joe Williams. On June 1, 1948, Willia Williamson was killed in an apparent robbery on Chicago's South Side as he walked home from a performance at the Plantation Club, at 31st St. and Giles Avenue, a tavern just a block and a half from his home, at 3226 S. Giles. Williamson's final words are reported to have been "Lord have mercy". His killer was never traced. Williamson is buried at the former site of the Blairs Chapel Church, southwest of Jackson, Tennessee. In 1991, a red granite marker was purchased by fans and family to mark the site of his burial. A Tennessee historical marker, also placed in 1991, indicates the place of his birth and describes his influence on blues music. .jpg) |
| Rice Miller |
His legacy has been somewhat overshadowed in the post-war blues era by the popularity of the musician who appropriated his name, Rice Miller. The recordings made by Williamson between 1937 and his death in 1948 and those made later by Rice Miller were all originally issued under the name Sonny Boy Williamson. It is believed that Miller adopted the name to deceive audiences (and his first record label) into thinking that he was the "original" Sonny Boy. In order to differentiate between the two musicians, many later scholars and biographers have referred to John Lee Williamson (1914–1948) as Sonny Boy Williamson I and Miller (c. 1912–1965) as Sonny Boy Williamson II. To add to the confusion, around 1940 the jazz pianist and singer Enoch Williams recorded for Decca under the name Sonny Boy Williams and in 1947 as Sunny Boy in the Sunny Boy Trio. |
| Enoch Sonny Boy Williams |
Singer-songwriter Randy Newman included a song about Miller ripping off Williamson's name on his 2017 album Dark Matter - "Sonny Boy," in which Newman, singing from the original Sonny Boy Williamson's perspective, imagines Williamson encountering Miller in a concert hall and calling him out for impersonating him (in reality, the two bluesmen never met), before leaving the hall in a frenzy and being shot. Williamson, in Newman's song, laments being "the only bluesman in heaven" because he did not live long enough to sin. He also resents how Miller went on to fame and fortune using Williamson's name, though he adds that Miller eventually went to England to "teach those English boys the blues . . . and it killed him".(Edited from Wikipedia)
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For "Sonny Boy Williamson I – Complete recorded Works 1938-1945 Vols 1-5 (1991 Document)" go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/zZmJxNsv
Volume 1 (May1937-June1938)
01 - Good morning, school girl
02 - Blue bird blues
03 - Jackson blues
04 - Got the bottle up and gone
05 - Sugar mama blues
06 - Skinny woman
07 - Up the country blues
08 - Worried me blues
09 - Black gal blues
10 - Collector man blues
11 - Frigidaire blues
12 - Suzanna blues
13 - Early in the morning
14 - Project highway
15 - My little cornelius
16 - Decoration blues
17 - You can lead me
18 - Moonshine
19 - Miss Louisa blues
20 - Sunny land
21 - I'm tired trucking my blues away
22 - Down south
23 - Beauty parlor
24 - Until my love come down
25 - Honey bee blues
Volume 2 (June 1938- July1939)
01 - My baby I've been your slave
02 - Whiskey headed blues
03 - Lord, oh lord blues
04 - You give an account
05 - Shannon Street blues
06 - You've been foolin' round town
07 - Deep down in the ground
08 - Number five blues
09 - Christmas morning blues
10 - Susie-Q
11 - Blue bird blues - part 2
12 - Little girl blues
13 - Low down ways
14 - Goodbye Red
15 - The right kind of life
16 - Insurance man blues
17 - Rainy day blues
18 - Bad luck blues
19 - My little baby
20 - Doggin' my love around
21 - Little low woman blues
22 - Good for nothing blues
23 - Sugar mama blues no. 2
24 - Good gravy
Volume 3 (July 1939-April 1941)
01 - T. B. blues
02 - Something going on wrong
03 - Good gal blues
04 - Joe Louis and John Henry blues
05 - Thinking my blues away
06 - I'm not pleasing you
07 - New jail house blues
08 - Life time blues
09 - Miss Ida Lee
10 - Tell me, baby
11 - Honey bee blues
12 - I been dealing with the devil
13 - War time blues
14 - Train fare blues
15 - Decoration day blues no. 2
16 - New early in the morning
17 - Welfare store blues
18 - My little machine
19 - Jivin' the blues
20 - Western Union man
21 - Big Apple blues
22 - Springtime blues
23 - My baby made a change
24 - Shotgun blues
25 - Coal and iceman blues
Volume 4 (April 1941 - July 1945)
01 - Drink on, little girl
02 - Mattie Mae blues
03 - I'm gonna catch you soon
04 - Million years blues
05 - Shady grove blues
06 - Sloppy drunk blues
07 - She was a dreamer
08 - You got to step back
09 - Ground hog blues
10 - Black panther blues
11 - Broken heart blues
12 - She don't love me that way
13 - My Name Black Name
14 - I have got to go
15 - Love me, baby
16 - What's gettin' wrong with you?
17 - Blues that made me drunk
18 - Come on baby and take a walk
19 - Miss Stella Brown blues
20 - Desperado woman blues
21 - Win the war blues
22 - Check up on my baby blues
23 - G. M. & O. blues
24 - We got to win
25 - Sonny Boy's jump
26 - Elevator woman
Volume 5 (1945-1947)
01 - Early in the morning
02 - The big boat
03 - Stop breaking down
04 - You're an old lady
05 - Sonny Boy's cold chills
06 - Mean old highway
07 - Hoodoo hoodoo
08 - Shake the boogie
09 - Mellow chick swing
10 - Polly put your kettle on
11 - Lacey Belle
12 - Apple tree swing
13 - Wonderful time
14 - Sugar gal
15 - Willow tree gal
16 - Alcohol blues
17 - Little girl
18 - Blues about my baby
19 - No friend blues
20 - I love you for myself
21 - Bring another half a pint
22 - Southern dream
23 - Rub a dub
24 - Better cut that out
A big thanks goes to bluesever for the loan of above collection.
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