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Samstag, 22. Oktober 2016

22.10., Stacie Collins, Leslie West,Torsten Buncher, Bert Halbwachs, Jackie Scott * Walter Davis, Carolina Slim, "Buddy" Griffin +






1945 Leslie West*
1953 Carolina Slim+
1962 Torsten Buncher*
1963 Walter Davis+
1981 Edward Ernest Griffin+
Stacie Collins*
Jackie Scott*
Chris Conz*

 


Happy Birthday

 

Stacie Collins   *22.10.

 


Stacie ist eine unvergleichlich powervolle Sängerin und Harpspielerin, die mit einer proffessionellen Band um ihren Mann Al Collins ( Jason & the Scorchers ) im Hintergrund alles gibt….Der Stage ist ihre Welt …

Stacie Collins ist bereits eine echte Hausnummer in den Staaten, wenn es um satten Roots Rock mit Southern Boogie, Blues und etwas Country geht, mit Sometimes Ya Gotta… sollte sie auch die Rock’n Roll-Herzen hier bei uns im Sturm erobern !.Die neue Live-DVD/CD Shinin` Live unterstreicht dies eindrucksvoll.

Die neue Blickrichtung heißt Southern Roots Rock in den Koordinaten Blues, Boogie, Rock’n Roll, Country Rock und die dreckige, rohe Seite von Americana !

Dan Baird, der natürlich auf Ewigkeit als Boss der legendären Georgia Satellites in den Rock Music-Annalen eingehen wird, gab dem neuesten Collins-Werk unverkennbar seine Produzenten-Handschrift: rumpelnd-frech, slow-swampig, Bayou-schwül oder acoustic country-rockig.

Stacie Collins selbst singt, schreit, gospelt sich die Seele aus dem Leib, pustet auf mehr als der Hälfte der Stücke in ihre Blues Harp, dass es noch weit über den Mississippi hinaus schallt. Das Ergebnis klingt laut, riffig, rockig, bad-ass Boogie.

http://www.wunderbar-weitewelt.de/events/stacie-collins-band-bluesrock-usa/ 

Stacie Collins hears it every night. Same thing. “Over and over I get, “I’ve never seen a girl do that,’” says Collins, who tends to smile sweetly and just say, “Thank you,” after finishing shows where she and her harmonica howl, moan, rock and roll through hours of high-intensity, table-jumping, rejuvenating, exhilarating, rock & roll music. “Imagine a late-night lock-in jam with Aerosmith, the Stones, and ZZ Top, fronted by the equivalent of Ronnie Van Zant, or maybe even Shania Twain with balls,” is how Classic Rock magazine described this thing that Collins does.

She’s a favorite of Dan Baird, a Chuck ’n’ duck rocker who took the Georgia Satellites to chart-topping heights. She’s a favorite of Warner E. Hodges and Jason Ringenberg of Jason & the Scorchers, who invented country-punk music. Her husband, co-writer, and producer, Al Collins, plays bass these days for the Scorchers, but Scorcher-dom isn’t cause for fandom. Warner and Jason don’t like her ‘cause she’s related. They like her ‘cause she’s badass.

The latest iteration of Collins’ badassery is Roll the Dice, her fifth album and the best-yet showcase for her exuberant, harmonica-drenched, cocktail of rock, blues, and Americana. For this one, Collins brought in her bass-playing husband, guitar slingers Baird and Audley Freed (The Black Crowes, Dixie Chicks, Jakob Dylan), drummer, Brad Pemberton (Ryan Adams, Patty Griffin, Willie Nelson), and other master musicians. “With players like that, the energy comes from the music, and it becomes all about heart,” she says. “You leave your brain somewhere else. I don’t know how to classify this stuff, but people say it’s unique and familiar at the same time.”

Collins was born in Muskogee, Oklahoma, the setting for her hero Merle Haggard’s best-known song. Like Haggard, she was raised in Bakersfield, California, moving there when she was five, in time to soak up that town’s considerable music history. Bakersfield is where Haggard cut his teeth, where Buck Owens developed his signature blend of hyper-twang aggression and down-home harmonies. “When I lived there, Buck was still in town,” Collins says. “My mom worked at a golf course, and he’d come out and play. She said he was really nice. Then Dwight Yoakam came along, singing with Buck about Bakersfield and helping that whole scene out. It was a great place to grow up. I feel like, man, I come by this shit honestly.”

She also comes by it unexpectedly. At age 30, she picked up a harmonica, started listening to Sonny Boy Williamson, and began blending Bakersfield-bred bluster with distorted Chicago blues. What emerged was transformative for Collins, and highly entertaining for audiences. Beat-up cowboy hat, blues harp, rock attitude… unique and familiar, at the same time.

Al and Stacie Collins moved to Nashville on Jan. 1, 2001, and she soon came to the attention of Music City’s patron carnie saint of indie music promoters, Billy Block. “I owe Billy Block, because he took my demo to Europe, gave it to promoters, and that allowed me a career overseas,” she says. “For the past six years, I’ve gone there three or four times a year, playing for everyone from little kids to 80-year-olds.”

Block is gone now. Cancer. Collins remains, and thrives. On Roll the Dice, she rocks with fury, then spreads out over an expansive roots music terrain. “I don’t know how people are going to perceive it,” she says. But, really, she knows. Every night, same thing, over and over. “I’ve never seen a girl do that.”
And once they do, they want to see it again.

http://www.staciecollins.com/biography-2015/   

 

 

http://mattizwoo.blogspot.de/2013/10/stacie-collins.html

 



STACIE COLLINS - MEDLEY "Baby Please Don't Go / Folsom Prison Blues / Radar Love" 



  Stacie Collins im Red River HN - Zugabe 10.06.2016 



 

 

 

 Leslie West  *22.10.1945

 

 

Leslie West (* 22. Oktober 1945 in New York als Leslie Weinstein) ist Gründer, Sänger und Gitarrist der Rockband Mountain.
West wurde in New York geboren und wuchs in Hackensack, New Jersey auf. Nach der Scheidung seiner Eltern änderte er seinen Nachnamen von Weinstein in West. Er lernte im Alter von 12 Jahren klassische Gitarre zu spielen. Später interessierten ihn besonders Cream und The Beatles. Er war zuerst Mitglied der Band The Vagrants, die im Jahr 1967 mit der Cover-Version des Songs Respect erfolgreich wurde. Die Veröffentlichungen der Band The Vagrants wurden teilweise von Felix Pappalardi produziert.
Mountain wurde im Jahr 1969 von West und Pappalardi gegründet. West hatte zuvor sein gleichnamiges erstes Soloalbum veröffentlicht. Mountain wurde oft mit Cream verglichen, mit der Pappalardi zusammengearbeitet hatte. Rolling Stone nannte Mountain „eine lautere Version von Cream“. Wests Gitarrenspiel wies jedoch immer Richtung Rock, während Eric Clapton zu dieser Zeit noch klar im Bluesrock verhaftet war. Nicht nur deshalb wurde Mountain oft auch als erste Hardrockband der Welt bezeichnet. Hierbei muss aber bedacht werden, dass Led Zeppelins Debütalbum auch 1969 erschien. Leslie West wurde später von einigen Gitarristen aus dem Hard&Heavy-Bereich wie Eddie Van Halen oder Zakk Wylde als Vorbild bzw. Jugendidol genannt.
Am Samstag, den 16. August 1969 trat die Band beim Woodstock-Festival auf, ergänzt durch den Keyboarder Steve Knight. Die Band hatte ihre größten Erfolge mit Mississippi Queen und dem von Jack Bruce geschriebenen Theme for an Imaginary Western.
Nach der Trennung von Mountain veröffentlichten West und Mountains Schlagzeuger Corky Laing zusammen mit Jack Bruce zwei Studio- und ein Livealbum unter dem Namen West, Bruce and Laing.
1974 kam es zur Reunion von Mountain, die aber nicht bis zum Ende des gleichen Jahres hielt. Es wurde in dieser Zeit das letzte unter Mitwirkung Pappalardis aufgenommene Studioalbum „Avalanche“ veröffentlicht. Mountain trat dann bis heute sporadisch immer mal wieder in Erscheinung.
West arbeitete musikalisch in den 1970er Jahren noch mit The Who auf ihrem Album „Who´s next“ und Bo Diddleys 1976 veröffentlichtem Album zusammen. Ende 1975 war West einige Zeit als Ersatz für den bei Lynyrd Skynyrd ausgestiegenen Ed King im Gespräch. Es folgten auch noch gemeinsame Veröffentlichungen bzw. Gastauftritte mit Joe Bonamassa und Ozzy Osbourne.
West zählt heute Eric Clapton zu seinen größten musikalischen Einflüssen.
Im Juni 2011 wurde West ein Teil des unteren rechten Beines aufgrund von lebensgefährlichen Komplikationen seiner Diabeteserkrankung amputiert.[1] Sein erster öffentlicher Auftritt bereits zwei Monate nach der Operation war das Rock 'N' Roll Fantasy Camp in den Gibson Studios am 13. August 2011 in New York.[2]
Equipment
Obwohl er im weiteren Verlaufs seines Lebens zahlreiche andere Instrumente und Verstärker benutzte, die seinen veränderten Klangvorstellungen entsprachen, wird Leslie West heute vor allem mit einer Gibson Les Paul Junior in Verbindung gebracht. Während der Mountain-Periode favorisierte er eine in dem Farbton „sunburst“ und eine in „TV Yellow“. Als Verstärker benutzte er zu der Zeit Sunn Amplifiers. Der Klang dieser Kombination wird heute in der Gitarrenszene direkt mit Leslie West assoziiert und ist sein Markenzeichen geworden. Von der Firma Dean Guitars gibt es ein Leslie-West-Signaturmodell, das bis auf den Tonabnehmer sehr stark an eine Les Paul Junior erinnert.

http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leslie_West   

Leslie West (born Leslie Weinstein; October 22, 1945) is an American rock guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter. He is best known as a founding member of the hard rock and heavy metal band Mountain.

Life and career

West was born in New York City, to a Jewish family. He grew up in Hackensack, New Jersey, and in East Meadow, New York, Forest Hills, New York and Lawrence, New York.[1] After his parents divorced, he changed his surname to West. His musical career began with The Vagrants, an R&B/Blue-eyed soul-rock band influenced by the likes of The Rascals that was one of the few teenage garage rock acts to come out of the New York metropolitan area itself (as opposed to the Bohemian Greenwich Village scene of artists, poets and affiliates of the Beat Generation, which produced bands like The Fugs and The Velvet Underground). The Vagrants had two minor hits in the Eastern US: 1966's "I Can't Make a Friend" and a cover of Otis Redding's "Respect" the following year.

Some of the Vagrants' recordings were produced by Felix Pappalardi, who was also working with Cream on their album Disraeli Gears. In 1969, West and Pappalardi formed the pioneering hard rock act Mountain, which was also the title of West's debut solo album. Rolling Stone identified the band as a "louder version of Cream".[2] With Steve Knight on keyboards and original drummer N. D. Smart, the band appeared on the second day of the Woodstock Festival on Saturday, August 16, 1969 starting an 11-song set at 9 pm.

The band's original incarnation saw West and Pappalardi sharing vocal duties and playing guitar and bass, respectively. New drummer Corky Laing joined the band shortly after Woodstock. They had success with "Mississippi Queen", which reached No. 21 on the Billboard charts and No. 4 in Canada. It was followed by the Jack Bruce-penned "Theme For an Imaginary Western". Mountain is one of the bands considered to be forerunners of heavy metal music.[3]

After Pappalardi left Mountain to concentrate on various production projects, West and Laing produced two studio albums and a live release with Cream bassist Jack Bruce under the name West, Bruce and Laing. Mountain reformed in 1973 only to break up again in late 1974. But since 1981 it has continued to reform, tour and record on a regular basis.

West, along with keyboard player Al Kooper of Blood, Sweat & Tears, recorded with The Who during the March 1971 Who's Next New York sessions. Tracks included a cover of Marvin Gaye's "Baby Don't You Do It," and early versions of "Love Ain't For Keepin'" and The Who's signature track "Won't Get Fooled Again". Though the tracks were not originally included on the album (recording restarted in England a few months later without West or Kooper), they appear as bonus tracks on the 1995 and 2003 reissues of Who's Next and on the 1998 reissue of Odds & Sods.

West also played guitar for the track "Bo Diddley Jam" on Bo Diddley's 1976 20th Anniversary of Rock 'n' Roll all-star album.

Leslie West teamed up with Ian Gillan of Deep Purple fame, to co-write and play guitar on the song "Hang Me Out To Dry" from the Gillan album "ToolBox," released in Europe in 1991.

Leslie West and Joe Bonamassa recorded Warren Haynes' "If Heartaches Were Nickels" together. West released it on Guitarded (2005), and Bonamassa on A New Day Yesterday (2000).

West contributed the music and co-wrote the lyrics to the song "Immortal" on Clutch's 2001 album Pure Rock Fury, which was a reworked cover of the song "Baby I'm Down" on Leslie West's first album.

In 2005 he contributed to Ozzy Osbourne's Under Cover album, performing guitar on a remake of "Mississippi Queen"

In addition to fronting Mountain, West continues to record and perform on his own. His latest solo album, entitled Blue Me, was released in 2006 on the Blues Bureau International label. In 2007 Mountain released Masters of War on Big Rack Records, an album featuring 12 Bob Dylan covers that sees Ozzy Osbourne providing guest vocals on a rendition of the title track.

West was inducted into the Long Island Music Hall of Fame on October 15, 2006.[4]

West married his fiancée Jenni Maurer on stage after Mountain's performance at the Woodstock 40th anniversary concert in Bethel, New York (August 15, 2009). Over 15,000 people were present and the couple walked through a bridge of guitars held by Levon Helm, Larry Taylor and Corky Laing among others. West now lives in New Jersey.[5]

Johnny Ramone, a fan of West, has called him, "one of the top five guitar players of his era".[6]

West continues to make occasional appearances on radio, notably on Howard Stern's radio show.[2]

In May 1987, West played the band leader in a series of late night pilot shows for Howard Stern on the FOX network. He taped a total of five shows with Stern, which never aired. Stern went on to form a new show dubbed the Channel 9 show without Leslie.

West was affectionately nicknamed "The King of Tone" by his legions of fans, referring to his influential and world-renowned guitar tone. West was also nicknamed "The Fattest Fingers in Rock N' Roll", due to his large build.

On June 20, 2011 West had his lower right leg amputated as a result of complications from diabetes.[7] Leslie made his first public appearance after his surgery on August 13, 2011[8]

Equipment

West is renowned for helping popularize use of the Gibson Les Paul Jr. guitar with P-90 pickups, along with the use of Sunn Amplifiers, to create a tone which became his trademark sound.

Guitars

West frequently used two Les Paul Juniors, one "TV Yellow" and the other a sunburst.[9] West also used a modified Gibson Flying V, with the neck pickup removed (he used the hole for an ashtray) and a P-90 pickup fitted at the bridge position, West also had a two-pickup Flying V which he used after the ash tray vee broke (the s/n of that flying V is s/n 906965).[clarification needed] West also used a plexiglass Electra guitar, which is a Japanese copy of the better known Ampeg made Dan Armstrong guitar, for slide. He threw one of these into the audience at a Holyoke Massachusetts show during his "Wild West" tour in the 1970s, tossing it into the air and shooting blanks at it from a pistol, then catching it and throwing it off the stage.[10][unreliable source?][not in citation given]
Photo of an Electra Plexiglass guitar of the type West used for slide guitar during the 1970s. This guitar was often mistaken for the nearly identical Dan Armstrong from which it was copied

West also played a Westone Pantera guitar. The only evidence for this guitar being associated with West is a previously unknown photograph of him playing it.[citation needed] From 1977 to 1982, he used a signature on-board effects MPC model guitar, created by the Japanese company Electra.[9] He currently uses a signature model from Dean Guitars, the USA Soltero Leslie West Signature model,[9] fitted with a custom-designed Dean pickup called "Mountain of Tone." Based on an endorsing contract in the Seventies, West played British made Burns guitars.

West has also long favored "headless" guitars, and can be seen playing them on some of the videos he has appeared in. In an interview segment on "Night of the Guitars – Live!" West stated that he had narrowed his commonly played instruments down to two: an off-the-shelf Steinberger and an Ed Roman LSR with DiMarzio pickups. So impressed was he with the LSRs that he agreed to serve as spokesperson and de facto salesman, the specific styles with his name on them available only directly from Ed Roman or else from West himself.[11]

Amplifiers

In 2005, West received a sponsorship with Carlsbro amplifiers, and could frequently be seen playing through "Carlsbro 50 Top" valve heads. His studio amplifier is a Marshall JMP. Live, he used Marshall JCM 900s. He started endorsing and using Budda Amplification in 2008.[9] He was also associated with Sunn amplifiers, and used a Sunn Coliseum PA head, when it was shipped to him by accident. He claims that this is the amp that gave him his signature sound in this Gibson Interview with West.

Effects

West uses octaver, chorus and delay effects.


Rare Johnny Winter and Leslie West jam - Red House. 


LESLIE WEST Of MOUNTAIN - Mississippi Queen 


 

 

Torsten Buncher, Bert Halbwachs, Torsten U Bert aka Mister Blues   *22.10.1962

 

 

Mister Blues, das sind die Zwillingsbrüder Torsten Buncher (Harp, Bass, Gesang) und Bert Halbwachs (Gitarre, Gesang). Unzertrennlich verbunden mit den "Kuh-Senks" Locke Habich (Schlagezug) und Chris Beuthner (Bass) Lipper, die seit "Jahrenden" unter dem Einfluss der lippischen Frauen stehen. Die Jungs hatten eine schwere Kindheit.
Im Schatten des Brakenberges aufzuwachsen heißt:

    von der Welt abgeschnitten zu sein
    von Müttern erzogen zu werden, die Brüder waren
    in einem Vorkriegskinderwagen zu liegen
    den Tipps von Tante Tilde folgen zu müssen
    mitten im Hotten-Totten-Verein zu leben
    der Schwarm aller Mädchen aus dem Dorf zu sein
    Baumwollplantagen? - Nee, wir haben Erdbeerfelder

Das ist Blues in Reinkultur. Da geht nix mehr, außer Blueser zu werden.

Bert Halbwachs and Torsten Buncher, guitar and harp players respectively, play the blues the way it was played in the beginning.
The duo tell stories about work, women, wine and life's hardships in general.
Always with tongue in cheek they maintain a strong relation with their audience.
Captive word play, innuendo, intimation and allusion play an important role in their texts never crossing the line into using profanity.
The twins from Brakenberg, a hamlet in Lippe, have suffered tremendously during their deprived childhood in postwar Germany.
Being disadvantaged is a good topsoil.
Bert and Torsten have been on the road for a number of years both nationally and internationally.
Locke Habich (dr) and Chris Beuthner (bass) complete the band for a Chicago sound if needed.


Mister Blues - Kamasutra Kati 




Mister Blues - Ich bin Lipper 








Jackie Scott  *22.10.




Jackie Scott & The Housewreckers have local roots that make Hampton Roads home.  Coming from varied backgrounds  and influences makes  for a hot combination of blues and r&b packed with soul when you encounter and fall under the power of Jackie Scott & The Housewreckers.

Jackie has spent the last few years honing her craft as a vocalist and her quest lead her to the steamy windows of  Chicago's blues scene.  It was in Chicago that Jackie received her baptism into the blues.  Musicians and performers, great and small, all freely shared in their wealth of skill, time and talent to help her grow as a blues entertainer.  Nellie Travis, Chicago blues woman and westside bluesman and Howlin' Wolf sidekick,  Eddie Shaw, played a major part in mentoring her into the blues Chicago style.

Opening for the likes of BB King, Keb Mo, Taj Mahal, Lyle Lovett and many more has definitely been a plus .   Touring trips and festivals across the country have all played a part in making Jackie Scott & The Housewreckers the ultimate entertainment machine







 

 

 

R.I.P.




Walter Davis   +22.10.1963

 

 


Walter Davis (* 1. März 1912 in Grenada, Mississippi; † 22. Oktober 1963 in St. Louis, Missouri) war ein US-amerikanischer Blues-Pianist und -Sänger.
Walter Davis war in den 1930ern einer der führenden Vertreter des St.-Louis-Blues, zusammen mit Roosevelt Sykes und Henry Townsend. Zwischen 1931 und 1941 nahm Davis über 160 Titel auf. Von 1946 bis 1952 folgten etliche weitere Aufnahmen.
Zu den bekanntesten Stücken von Walter Davis gehören Come Back Baby (das Ray Charles 1950 zu einem Top-Hit machte), Angel Child (1949 ein Hit für Memphis Slim), Think You Need A Shot, Pet Cream Blues und Ashes In My Whiskey. Titel von Davis wurden von B. B. King, Fred McDowell, Eddie Boyd, Champion Jack Dupree und anderen bearbeitet.
Nach einem Schlaganfall in den 1950ern war Davis als Prediger aktiv. Er starb 1963 in St. Louis. 2005 wurde er in die Blues Hall of Fame aufgenommen.

Walter Davis (March 1, 1911 – October 22, 1963) [1][2] was an African American blues singer and pianist. Born in Grenada, Mississippi, United States, he died in St. Louis, Missouri.

Davis had a rich singing voice that was as expressive as the best of the Delta blues vocalists. His best-known recording, a version of the train blues standard "Sunnyland Blues", which he released in 1931, is more notable for the warmth and poignancy of his singing than for his piano playing.[3] Two more of his best known songs were "Ashes In My Whiskey" and "Blue Blues".[2]

He was also billed as 'Hooker Joe'.[2]

Career

Davis was born on a farm in Grenada, Mississippi, United States,[2][4] and ran away from home at about 13 years of age, landing in St. Louis, Missouri. During the period from the late 1920s through the early 1950s he played club dates in the South and the lower Midwest, often with guitarist Henry Townsend and fellow pianist Peetie Wheatstraw, and recorded prolifically. He was accompanied by Roosevelt Sykes on his first recordings (1930–33).[5]

He recorded around 180 singles between 1930 and 1952. In 1940, he had a hit with his recording of "Come Back Baby".[6] Some of his material has been covered by other performers.[5]

Davis appears to have stopped performing professionally around 1953. Suffering from health problems, primarily a stroke, he settled in St. Louis, Missouri, supporting himself as a night clerk at a hotel and as a preacher.[7] He died in St. Louis in 1963, aged 52.[7]

He was posthumously inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 2005.

In October 2012, the Killer Blues Headstone Project, a nonprofit organization, placed a headstone on Davis's unmarked grave at Greenwood Cemetery in Hillsdale, Missouri.[8] The stone was unveiled at the 2012 Big Muddy Blues Festival in St. Louis, Missouri.

Davis is no relation to the jazz pianist, Walter Davis, Jr.

 Walter Davis - Ashes In My Whiskey 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3wD2kov8FA 






 Carolina Slim   +22.10.1953

 

http://www.wirz.de/music/carosfrm.htm

Edward P. Harris (* 22. August 1923 in Leasburg, North Carolina; † 22. Oktober 1953 in Newark, New Jersey), bekannt geworden unter dem Namen Carolina Slim, war ein US-amerikanischer Blues-Gitarrist und Sänger. Seine Schallplatten wurden auch unter den Pseudonymen Jammin' Jim, Lazy Slim Jim, Country Paul und Paul Howard veröffentlicht.
Viele Details seines Lebens sind unbekannt, doch glaubt man, dass Harris das Gitarrespiel von seinem Vater gelernt hat. In seiner Zeit als Wandermusikant nahm er auch Einflüsse von Musikern außerhalb des Piedmont-Gebietes auf. Um 1950 zog er nach Newark, New Jersey, dort nahm er unter dem Namen Carolina Slim seine erste Platte für das Savoylabel auf. Bis 1953 nahm er 27 Songs unter verschiedenen Namen und für verschiedene Labels auf. [1] [2]
1953 begab er sich wegen eines Rückenleidens in ein Krankenhaus in Newark, starb aber während der Operation an einem Herzanfall.

Carolina Slim (August 22, 1923 – October 22, 1953)[3] was an American Piedmont blues guitarist and singer.[2] His best known tracks were "Black Cat Trail" and "I'll Never Walk in Your Door".[3] He used various pseudonyms during his relatively brief recording career, including Country Paul, Jammin' Jim, Lazy Slim Jim and Paul Howard.[4] In total he recorded 27 songs, but details of his life outside of his music career are scant, and the exact reasons concerning the usage of differing names are also unclear.[2]

Biography

Carolina Slim was born Edward P. Hughes in Leasburg, North Carolina, United States. He learned to play the guitar from his father, and was influenced by Lightnin' Hopkins and Blind Boy Fuller.[2][5] He later found work as an itinerant musician around Durham, North Carolina.[6]

In 1950, he relocated to Newark, New Jersey, and made his recording debut for the Savoy label, billed as Carolina Slim.[2] His first single was "Black Chariot Blues" b/w "Mama's Boogie", recorded on July 24, 1950, and released on Acorn Records (Acorn 3015), a subsidiary of Savoy.[4] In 1951 and 1952, he recorded eight tracks for the King label in New York, this time using the name of Country Paul.[2][7] Henry Glover met Slim at these recordings, and later commented that Slim was "a very sickly young man at the time".[7] Slim's style blended Piedmont blues, prominent in songs such as "Carolina Boogie" and his cover version of Fuller's "Rag Mama Rag", with the influence of Hopkins meaning that he increasingly veered towards Texas blues.[6] Occasionally, Slim incorporated a washboard as well as his more regular guitar, as if to emphasise his Carolina rootstock.[6]

His recordings were not hugely popular, but sold in sufficient amounts for him to retain his recording contract. In June 1952, Slim recorded four more tracks for Savoy, but these were to be his final offerings.[6]

Carolina Slim died in Newark, New Jersey, from a heart attack suffered whilst undergoing surgery for a back complaint. He was 30 years old.[2]

In 1994, Document released a compilation album, Complete Recorded Works 1950-1952, which incorporated all of his 27 tracks.

 
Carolina Slim Blues Knocking At My Door (1951) 










Edward Ernest Griffin   +22.10.1981

"Buddy" Griffin
James Rudolph Griffin born ca. 1921
Griffin Brothers

 

http://www.allmusic.com/album/blues-with-a-beat-vol-2-mw0000774423

The Griffin Brothers were an American rhythm and blues band from Norfolk, Virginia, sometimes credited on record as the Griffin Brothers Orchestra. They made successful recordings with singer Margie Day, and had a no.1 hit on the Billboard R&B chart in 1951 with "Weepin' and Cryin'", featuring Tommy Brown.
The group was formed by brothers Jimmy (born James Rudolph Griffin, Virginia, c.1921) and "Buddy" Griffin (born Edward Ernest Griffin, Elizabeth City, North Carolina, October 5, 1919–October 22, 1981).[1]
By 1920, the family lived in Norfolk, Virginia.[1] Both Jimmy and Buddy studied music at the Juilliard School; another brother, Wilbur, was a member of the Progressive Four gospel group.[2][3] Jimmy played trombone, and Buddy played piano. The band was completed by Wilbur Dyer (alto saxophone), Virgil Wilson (tenor saxophone), Jimmy Reeves (bass), and Emmett "Nab" Shields (drums). In the late 1940s they played local clubs in Washington, DC, as well as Virginia and North Carolina, and added a singer, Margie Day. In early 1950 the band recorded as back-up to Roy Brown on the session for DeLuxe Records that yielded his no.1 R&B hit, "Hard Luck Blues".[4][5]
Local music promoter Lillian Clairborne won them a recording contract with the newly formed Dot Records, established by Randy Wood. Their first record, credited to Margie Day with the Griffin Brothers Orchestra, "Street Walkin' Daddy" / "Riffin' With Griffin", became a no.7 hit on the Billboard R&B chart in late 1950, with sales reportedly reaching over 15 thousand a week.[3][4] The follow-up record, "Little Red Rooster", not directly related to the Willie Dixon song but drawing on the same folk traditions, reached no.5 on the R&B chart in early 1951. Wilson, Reeves and Shields were replaced by Noble Watts (tenor sax), Wilbur Little (bass), and Belton Evans (drums).[2] The Griffin Brothers toured widely in 1951 and 1952 with Amos Milburn, Paul Williams and others, and continued to record both with Margie Day, and with singer Tommy Brown. They had two R&B hits with Brown, "Tra-La-La" which reached no.7, and "Weepin' and Cryin'" which reached no.1 in January 1952.[2][5]
Day left the band for a solo career in late 1952, and was replaced on some appearances by Claudia Swann (née Swanson). The Griffin Brothers continued to tour with such artistes as The Orioles, Chuck Willis, and Faye Adams, and recorded for the Dot label until early 1954 when their contract ended and Jimmy Griffin left to form his own band.[6] He later recorded briefly and unsuccessfully for Atco Records in New York.[4]
Buddy Griffin signed for Chess Records in Chicago, and had a minor R&B hit in 1955, "I Wanna Hug Ya, Kiss Ya, Squeeze Ya", with Claudia Swann, credited as Buddy & Claudia with the Buddy Griffin Orchestra.[7] The band members were "Silly Willie" Wilson (trombone), Chuck Reeves (alto and baritone saxes), Earl Swanson (tenor sax), Lawrence Burgan (bass), and Courtney Brooks (drums). Griffin and Swann married; their later recordings were credited to Buddy and Claudia Griffin, and some featured The Moonglows as backing vocalists.[6] Buddy Griffin worked in real estate in New York for thirty years before his death in 1981.

the griffin brothers & margie day - little red rooster 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=47Ipvmp063k 


Dienstag, 1. März 2016

01.03. Walter Davis, Johnny Drummer, Jay Gaunt, Manfred Pokrandt * George "Wild Child" Butler, Lucille Hegamin, Odie Payne +











1912 Walter Davis*
1938 Johnny Drummer*
1970 Lucille Hegamin+
1989 Odie Payne+
1994 Jay Gaunt*
2005 George "Wild Child" Butler+

Manfred Pokrandt*


 

Happy Birthday

 

Walter Davis  *01.03.1912




Walter Davis (* 1. März 1912 in Grenada, Mississippi; † 22. Oktober 1963 in St. Louis, Missouri) war ein US-amerikanischer Blues-Pianist und -Sänger.
Walter Davis war in den 1930ern einer der führenden Vertreter des St.-Louis-Blues, zusammen mit Roosevelt Sykes und Henry Townsend. Zwischen 1931 und 1941 nahm Davis über 160 Titel auf. Von 1946 bis 1952 folgten etliche weitere Aufnahmen.
Zu den bekanntesten Stücken von Walter Davis gehören Come Back Baby (das Ray Charles 1950 zu einem Top-Hit machte), Angel Child (1949 ein Hit für Memphis Slim), Think You Need A Shot, Pet Cream Blues und Ashes In My Whiskey. Titel von Davis wurden von B. B. King, Fred McDowell, Eddie Boyd, Champion Jack Dupree und anderen bearbeitet.
Nach einem Schlaganfall in den 1950ern war Davis als Prediger aktiv. Er starb 1963 in St. Louis. 2005 wurde er in die Blues Hall of Fame aufgenommen.

Walter Davis (March 1, 1911 – October 22, 1963) [1][2] was an African American blues singer and pianist. Born in Grenada, Mississippi he died in St. Louis, Missouri.
Davis had a rich singing voice that was as expressive as the best of the Delta blues vocalists. His best-known recording, a version of the train blues standard "Sunnyland Blues", which he released in 1931, is more notable for the warmth and poignancy of his singing than for his piano playing.[3] Two more of his best known songs were "Ashes In My Whiskey" and "Blue Blues".[2]
He was also billed as 'Hooker Joe'.[2]
Career
Davis was born on a farm in Grenada, Mississippi, United States,[2][4] and ran away from home at about 13 years of age, landing in St. Louis, Missouri. During the period from the late 1920s through the early 1950s he played club dates in the South and the lower Midwest, often with guitarist Henry Townsend and fellow pianist Peetie Wheatstraw, and recorded prolifically. He was accompanied by Roosevelt Sykes on his first recordings (1930–33).[5]
He recorded around 180 singles between 1930 and 1952. Some of his material has been covered by other performers.[5]
Davis appears to have stopped performing professionally around 1953. Suffering from health problems, primarily a stroke, he settled in St. Louis, Missouri, supporting himself as a night clerk at a hotel and as a preacher.[6] He died in St. Louis in 1963, aged 52.[6]
He was posthumously inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 2005.
In October 2012 the Killer Blues Headstone Project, a nonprofit organization, placed a headstone on Davis's unmarked grave at Greenwood Cemetery in Hillsdale, Missouri. The stone was unveiled at the 2012 Big Muddy Blues Festival in St. Louis, Missouri.
Davis is no relation to the jazz pianist, Walter Davis, Jr.

 
Walter Davis - Ashes In My Whiskey 











http://johnnydrummermusic.com/



Johnny Drummer - Briggs Farm1.AVI 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BmadZ46lqHw 





Jay Gaunt  *01.03.1994

 


Jay Gaunt began playing harmonica at the age of 12, developing a passion for blues music. One of Jay’s first exposures to blues was The Blues Brothers movie and shortly thereafter he went to see Dan Aykroyd (in full Elwood mode) at the Opus Theater in West Nyack, NY, at which time Dan called up Jay to sit in for the encore. The moment he stepped on stage and played the Mississippi sax, Jay was hooked. Since then he has been hungrily seeking out everything he can find that relates to harmonica, blues and roots music.
While Jay’s favorite music is the blues, he is not limited to just one genre. He also plays jazz, funk, rock and pop. Jay’s main influences on harmonica are James Cotton, Jason Ricci, Little Walter, Dennis Gruenling, Paul Butterfield, Chris Michalek, Sonny Boy Williamson, Kim Wilson, and Junior Wells. However, Jay does not only listen to harmonica players, but also draws influences from an array of musicians as diverse as Jimi Hendrix, John Coltrane, and Donny Hathaway.
Jay has shared the stage with Dan Aykroyd, Honeyboy Edwards, the James Cotton Blues Band, Tab Benoit, Kenny Brown, Keith Sykes, Jason Ricci & New Blood, Bob Margolin, Dave Fields, Rich DelGrosso, Eric McFadden, Zac Harmon, Jimmy Hall, Mark Hummel, Jon Paris, Rob Paparozzi, Michael Powers, Richie Canata, Victor Wainwright, Davis Coen, Treasa Lavasseur and Mike Zito.
In addition to performing at B.B. King’s Clubs in New York and Memphis, Terra Blues and The Cutting Room in NYC, Jay has also gigged at Ground Zero Blues Club, Rum Boogie and New Daisy in Memphis, and Biscuits & Blues in San Francisco. Festival performances include The Greeley Blues Fest (2008 & 2009) and Blues from the Top (2008 & 2009) in CO as well as the Cape May Jazz Festival (2009) in NJ. In December 2009 he undertook his first European dates performing with Knut Reiersrud and The Alabama Lovesnakes in Oslo, Norway.
Gaunt has studied with Dennis Gruenling, David Barrett, Jason Ricci, Chris Michalek, Mark Hummel, Jon Paris and Michael Peloquin. He is presently studying music composition with Dr. Pedro Da Silva of NYU.
He is a regular attendee and performer at the annual SPAH conventions and is featured in the spring 2010 issue of Harmonica Happenings. A recent interview with Jay is posted at www.harmonica411.com. Late fall 2009 he appeared in a New Jersey Network State of the Arts TV program and earlier this year Jay was the featured artist on a CBS Sunday Morning segment about Harrison Harmonicas, both videos of which are posted on his YouTube channel.
In 2008 he released his debut album, Blown Away, recorded in San Francisco. His 2010 release, Harmonicopia, was recorded at Royal Studios, Memphis, TN and produced by Lawrence \"Boo\" Mitchell and Charley Burch.
 Jay Gaunt plays Harrison Harmonicas.


Ronnie Shellist, Jay Gaunt, Todd Edmunds at SPAH 2010 









Manfred Pokrandt  *01.03.1956

 


Der Musiker: Pokrandt wurde am 1. März 1956 in Cottbus geboren - am Gründungstag der Nationalen Volksarmee. Daher hat er seinen 20. Geburtstag auf dem Appellplatz verbringen müssen: "Das war nicht so schön." Musikalisch ausgebildet wurde er unter anderem am Konservatorium Cottbus. Seit 26 Jahren spielt er Rock und Blues in der Band Engerling, die seit 1994 die deutsche Begleitband der US-Musikers Mitch Ryder ist. Pokrandt hat zwei Kinder und lebt in Berlin.

Was Google nicht zuwege bringt, schüttelt Manne Pokrandt locker aus dem Ärmel? Ein in die Jahre gekommener Rocker mit DDR-Vita, der seit 26 Jahren mit demselben ostdeutschen Bluesrock-Quartett namens Engerling durch die Clubs und Säle der Republik zieht? Ost-Rockmusiker, sind das nicht mehrheitlich Gestalten, die gemeinsam mit ihrem allmählich vergreisenden Publikum vermeintlich besseren Zeiten hinterherweinen?

Wer so denkt, ist dem Mann noch nie begegnet. Denn wenn es darum geht, jemanden zu finden, der mit offenen Augen durch Welt und Zeit geht, die richtigen Fragen stellt und aus den Antworten seinen Lebenslauf schmiedet, dann ist Pokrandt eine gute Wahl. Eine Mischung aus Neugier, Lebenslust, Können und mitunter an Sturheit grenzende Beharrlichkeit führte den einstigen Mathematiker, der seine Diplomarbeit über die Lösung steifer Differenzialgleichungen mit dem kombinierten Simulationssystem Simkom S/80 irgendwo zu Hause herumliegen hat, zu den Stationen seines Lebens.

Nachdem ein Berufsmusiker ihm während der Armeezeit erzählt hatte, was selbst in der DDR hinter der Bühne so alles los ist, war ihm klar: Ich werde Musiker. Das Schlagzeugspiel lernte er, weil seine damalige Band dringend einen Trommler brauchte und weil er es leid war, auf Familienfeiern "La Paloma" auf dem Akkordeon zu spielen. Zum Bass kam er, weil der etatmäßige Basser ein paar Stunden vor dem Auftritt hingeworfen hatte. "Du weißt doch, wo die Töne sind", sagten die Kollegen zu Manne. Und als eines Tages, irgendwann in den Achtzigern, ein Bekannter anfragte, ob er fürs Stadttheater Anklam vielleicht die Hymne "O Anklam meine Perle" aufnehmen könne, legte er den Grundstein für sein privates Aufnahmestudio, zu DDR-Zeiten fast ein Unding, das er seit damals erfolgreich betreibt. Jedes Mal stellte er sich die gleichen Fragen: "Geht das eigentlich? Kann ich das?"

Engerling - Narkose Blues - Apfeltraum Renft - Ring Of Fire - Heiligen Mühle - Erfurt 2013 
Besetzung:
Wolfram Boddi Bodag (Gesang, Keyboard, Harp)
Heiner Witte (Gitarre)
Manne Pokrandt (Bass) -- seit 1986
Hannes Schulze (Schlagzeug) -- seit 2005




Mitch Ryder feat. Engerling - Soul Kitchen / Schwarzer Adler Rheinberg 2014 Germany
Band :
Mitch Ryder - vocals (Gesang)
Heiner Witte - guitar (Gitarre)
Pitti Piatkowski - guitar (Gitarre)
Manne Pockrandt - Bass Guitar (Bass Gitarre)
Ronny Dehn - drums (Schlagzeug)
Boddi Bodag - keys (Piano)















R.I.P.

 

George "Wild Child" Butler  +01.03.2005



 George „Wild Child“ Butler (* 1. Oktober 1936 in Autaugaville, Alabama, Vereinigte Staaten; † 1. März 2005 in Winsor, Ontario, Kanada) war ein US-amerikanischer Blues-Mundharmonikaspieler und Sänger.
Biografie
Geboren als jüngstes von 9 Kindern in Autaugaville, Alabama, erhielt Butler schon als Kleinkind den Spitznamen „Wild Cild“. Er verbrachte einen Teil seiner Jugend in Alabames Hauptstadt Montgomery, wo er mit Big Mama Thornton, einer Freundin der Familie, Mundharmonika spielte.[1][2]
Der Farmarbeit zog er ein Leben als Musiker vor. Zeitweise hielt er sich in Chicago und Detroit auf, wo er mit Größen wie Big Walter Horton, Sonny Boy Williamson II. und Sunnyland Slim auftrat. Mitte der 1960er arbeitete er in Texas und Louisiana. 1966 nahm er unter der Leitung von Willie Dixon sein erstes Album auf. Es sollten im Laufe der Zeit sechs weitere Alben folgen.[1]
Zu den bekannten Kollegen, mit denen Butler zusammen arbeitete, zählen Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, Jimmy Rogers, Sam Lay, Big Jack Johnson und andere. Zuletzt lebte George Butler in Windsor, Ontario, wo er 2005 im Alter von 68 Jahren starb.[1]

George "Wild Child" Butler (October 1, 1936 – March 1, 2005) was an American blues guitarist, harmonica player, and vocalist.
Butler was born in Hernando, Mississippi,[1] or Autuagaville, Alabama, United States,[2] and began playing blues music in bands from the late 1950s, but it was not until 1966 that he began to receive notice, after moving to Chicago and signing with Jewel Records.[3] His early sessions were recorded with Willie Dixon, Cash McCall and Jimmy Dawkins as sidemen.[1][3] He recorded an album for Mercury Records in 1969.[3]
In 1981, Butler moved to Ontario, Canada, where he played regularly.[1] In the 1990s, he began recording with record producer Mike Vernon in England, which resulted in two albums released on Bullseye Blues.[1]
Butler died on March 1, 2005 in Windsor, Ontario, of a pulmonary embolism, at the age of 68.

 
George "Wild Child" Butler Put It All In There (1967) 


 

 

 

 

 

Lucille Hegamin  +01.03.1970





Lucille Hegamin (* 29. November 1894 als Lucille Nelson in Macon, Georgia; † 1. März 1970 in New York City) war eine US-amerikanische Blues-Sängerin. Sie war 1920 die zweite Afroamerikanerin nach Mamie Smith, die Bluesaufnahmen machte.
Bereits im Alter von 15 Jahren war Lucille Nelson mit Minstrel-Shows im Süden der USA unterwegs. Sie wurde als „the Georgia Peach“ (der Georgia-Pfirsich) bekannt. 1914 ließ sie sich in Chicago nieder, wo sie mit Tony Jackson und Jelly Roll Morton arbeitete und den Pianisten Bill Hegamin heiratete. 1918 zog das Ehepaar Hegamin nach Los Angeles, im Jahr darauf nach New York. Bill Hegamin leitete die Begleitband seiner Frau, die „Blue Flame Syncopators“. Im August 1920 nahm Lucille Hegamin die Titel The Jazz Me Blues und "Everybody's Blues" für Arto Records auf; diese Aufnahmen verkauften sich gut. 1921 spielte sie, ebenfalls mit den Blue Flame Syncopators den Arkansas Blues und I'll Be Good But I'll Be Lonesome ein, eine der populärsten Schallplatten des Jahres. Im selben Jahr tourte sie in Pennsylvania, West Virginia und Ohio. Es folgten in den nächsten Jahren weitere Plattenaufnahmen, teilweise unter dem Pseudonym The Cameo Girl; mit He May Be Your Man, But He Comes to See Me Sometimes landete sie 1922 einen weiteren Hit. Im selben Jahr sang sie weiterhin in der New Yorker Aufführung von Shuffle Along.
Ab 1926 trat Hegamin in verschiedenen Revuen auf; 1928 nahm sie (begleitet von J. Russel Robinson) Always Be Careful Mama und Reckless Men auf. 1929 hatte sie eine Radiosendung in New York. Um 1934 zog sie sich aus dem Musikgeschäft zurück und arbeitete als Krankenschwester. Erst 1961 und 1962 machte sie wieder Aufnahmen. Lucille Hegamin starb 1970 in New York. Sie ist in Brooklyn beigesetzt.

Lucille Nelson Hegamin (November 29, 1894 – March 1, 1970) was an American singer and entertainer, and a pioneer African-American blues recording artist.
Life and career
Lucille Nelson was born in Macon, Georgia, United States, the daughter of John and Minnie Nelson.[1] From an early age she sang in local church choirs and theatre programs.[1] By the age of 15 she was touring the US South with the Leonard Harper Minstrel Stock Company.[2] In 1914 she settled in Chicago, Illinois, where, often billed as "The Georgia Peach", she worked with Tony Jackson and Jelly Roll Morton before marrying the pianist-composer Bill Hegamin.[3] She later told a biographer: "I was a cabaret artist in those days, and never had to play theatres, and I sang everything from blues to popular songs, in a jazz style. I think I can say without bragging that I made the "St. Louis Blues" popular in Chicago; this was one of my feature numbers."[4]
The Hegamins moved to Los Angeles, California in 1918, then to New York City the following year.[5] Bill Hegamin led his wife's accompanying band, called the Blue Flame Syncopators; Jimmy Wade was a member of this ensemble.
In November 1920, Hegamin became the second African-American blues singer to record, after Mamie Smith.[6] Hegamin made a series of recordings for the Arto record label through 1922, and then a few sides for Paramount in 1922. One of her biggest hits was "Arkansas Blues", recorded for Arto and soon released on no fewer than nine other labels, including Black Swan.[5] Hegamin recorded one of Tom Delaneys' earliest compositions, "Jazz Me Blues", in 1921, and it went on to become a jazz standard.[7] Lucille Hegamin subsequently played theatre dates but did not tour extensively.[5]
On January 20, 1922, she competed in a blues singing contest against Daisy Martin, Alice Leslie Carter and Trixie Smith at the Fifteenth Infantry's First Band Concert and Dance in New York City. Hegamin placed second to Smith in the contest, which was held at the Manhattan Casino.[8]
From 1922 through late 1926 she recorded over forty sides for Cameo Records; from this association she was billed as "The Cameo Girl".[9] After her marriage to Bill Hegamin ended in 1923, her most frequent accompanist was pianist J. Cyrill Fullerton.[10] In 1926, Hegamin recorded with Clarence Williams' band for the Columbia label. She performed in Clarence Williams' Revue at the Lincoln Theater in New York, then in various revues in New York and Atlantic City, New Jersey through 1934. In 1929 she appeared on the radio show "Negro Achievement Hour" on WABC, New York.[11] In 1932 she recorded two sides for Okeh Records.
About 1934 she retired from music as a profession, and worked as a nurse. She came out of retirement in 1961 to record four songs, accompanied by a band led by Willie "The Lion" Smith, on the album Songs We Taught Your Mother[12] for the Bluesville Records label. In 1962 she recorded an album, Basket of Blues for the Spivey label. She performed at a Mamie Smith Benefit concert at the Celebrity Club in New York City in 1964.[11]
Lucille Hegamin died in Harlem Hospital in New York on March 1, 1970,[13] and was interred in the Cemetery of the Evergreens in Brooklyn, New York.[11]
Style
Lucille Hegamin's stylistic influences included Annette Hanshaw and Ruth Etting.[14] According to Derrick Stewart-Baxter, "Lucille's clear, rich voice, with its perfect diction, and its jazz feeling, was well in the vaudeville tradition, and her repertoire was wide."[15] Like Mamie Smith, Hegamin sang classic female blues in a lighter, more pop-tune influenced style than the rougher rural-style blues singers such as Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith who became more popular a few years later.



Wabash Blues - Lucille Hegamin And Her Blue Flame Syncopators (Bell Record)1921 




 

Odie Payne  +01.03.1989



 Odie Payne (* 27. August 1926 in Chicago, Illinois; † 1. März 1989 ebd.) war ein US-amerikanischer Schlagzeuger. Seine Musik war der Chicago Blues. Im Laufe seiner Karriere hat er mit vielen bekannten Bluesmusikern zusammengespielt, darunter Sonny Boy Williamson II., Muddy Waters, Jimmy Rogers, Eddie Taylor, Little Johnny Jones, Tampa Red, Elmore James, Otis Rush, Yank Rachell, Sleepy John Estes, Little Brother Montgomery, Memphis Minnie, Magic Sam, Chuck Berry, Buddy Guy und viele mehr.
Schon als Kind war Payne begeistert von der Musik, ohne sich auf eine besondere Spielrichtung festzulegen. Sein Musikstudium wurde durch den Krieg unterbrochen, als er zum Militärdienst eingezogen wurde. Nach dem Krieg beendete er sein Schlagzeugstudium mit Auszeichnung.[1]
1949 trommelte er für den Pianisten Johnny Jones, als er Tampa Red kennenlernte und zu dessen Band wechselte. 1952 gingen Payne und Jones zu Elmore Jamesʼ Band The Broomdusters. Payne blieb drei Jahre bei James, begleitete ihn jedoch bis 1959 bei Aufnahmen. Zu hören ist er auf 31 Singles von Elmore James.[1]
In der zweiten Hälfte der 1950er Jahre wurde Payne ein begehrter Sessionmusiker. Sein innovativer Stil beeinflusste zahlreiche Schlagzeuger.[1]

Odie Payne (August 27, 1926 – March 1, 1989)[2] was an American Chicago blues drummer. Over his long career Payne worked with a range of musicians including Sonny Boy Williamson II, Muddy Waters, Jimmy Rogers, Eddie Taylor, Little Johnny Jones, Tampa Red, Otis Rush, Yank Rachell, Sleepy John Estes, Little Brother Montgomery, Memphis Minnie, Magic Sam, Chuck Berry, and Buddy Guy.[2]
Biography
He was born Odie Payne Jr. in Chicago, Illinois.[1] Payne was interested in music from an early age, and did not restrict himself to a narrow musical genre. He studied music in high school and later drafted into the Army, but upon his discharge, Payne graduated from the Roy C. Knapp School of Percussion. By 1949 Payne was playing along with the pianist Little Johnny Jones, before meeting Tampa Red and enlisting into his band. The association lasted for around three years before, in 1952, Payne and Jones joined Elmore James's band, the Broomdusters.[1]
Payne played with the Broomdusters for another three years, although his recording association with them lasted through to 1959. In total he recorded thirty one singles with them, including "The Sky Is Crying". By this time Payne had become a favored session musician appearing through that decade on the Cobra label, with Otis Rush, Magic Sam, and Buddy Guy. His playing also can be heard on various Chess records, including the Chuck Berry hit singles "Nadine", "You Never Can Tell", "Promised Land" and 1964's "No Particular Place to Go."[1] All appeared on the Berry's 1982 compilation album, The Great Twenty-Eight.
Noted for his usage of the cowbell, bass drum pedal, and extended cymbal and drum rolls, Payne's double shuffle drumming technique was much copied and utilised by both Fred Below and Sam Lay.[1] The technique called for Payne to use both his hands to effect the shuffle effect.[3]
Payne appears to have a songwriting credit to his name for the song "Say Man," which was recorded by both Bo Diddley and Willie Mabon; although Payne's name certainly did not appear on every version published.[4][5]
Odie Payne died in Chicago in March 1989, at the age of 62.

The Sky Is Crying - Hound Dog Taylor, Little Walter, Dillard Crume, Odie Payne