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Mittwoch, 14. Dezember 2016

14.12. DeFord Bailey, Judy Roderick, Linda Hopkins, Tracy K Mastaler, Ulrich Ellison * Dinah Washington, Oscar "Buddy" Woods +









1899 DeFord Bailey*
1924 Linda Hopkins*
1942 Judy Roderick*
1955 Oscar "Buddy" Woods+
1963 Dinah Washington+
1980 Ulrich Ellison*
Tracy K Mastaler*

 

 

Happy Birthday

 

DeFord Bailey  *14.12.1899

 



DeFord Bailey (* 14. Dezember 1899 in Carthage im Smith County in Tennessee; † 2. Juli 1982 in Nashville in Tennessee) war ein schwarzer, US-amerikanischer Old-Time-Musiker.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Leben
DeFord Bailey wurde 1899 in Carthage im US-Bundesstaat Tennessee geboren. Durch eine Lähmungserkrankung im Kindesalter litt er an Kleinwüchsigkeit. Von seinem Vater und seinem Onkel erlernte er die Instrumente Banjo, Gitarre und Mundharmonika. 1925 entdeckte ihn der Mundharmonikaspieler Dr. Humphrey Bate und brachte ihn an die Grand Ole Opry in Nashville. Dort wurde er, obwohl Afroamerikaner, als "harmonica wizard", als "Hexenmeister der Harmonika" gefeiert. Besonders berühmt war sein "Pan America Blues", bei dem er mit der Mundharmonika eine Lokomotive nachahmte. 1927 und 1928 nahm er einige Platten auf.
Im Jahr 1941 kam die Kündigung von der Grand Ole Opry. Der offizielle Opry-Standpunkt lautet, dass der Musiker aufgrund seiner Faulheit entlassen wurde. Angeblich weigerte er sich, neue Stücke in sein Repertoire aufzunehmen. Laut DeFord Bailey und seinen Anhängern waren aber rassistische Gründe - er wurde in seinen späteren Jahren nur noch als Maskottchen angekündigt und seine Auftrittszeit wurde immer mehr verkürzt - sowie DeFords finanzielle Forderungen - er verdiente pro Auftritt nur fünf Dollar - für die Kündigungen verantwortlich. Nach seiner Entlassung aus der Grand Ole Opry schlug sich DeFord Bailey als Schuhputzer in Nashville durch. Nur noch bei wenigen Gelegenheiten, etwa wenn es ein Special von Countrystars aus den frühen Tagen dieser Musik in der Grand Ole Opry gab, trat er öffentlich auf. DeFord Bailey starb am 2. Juli 1982 in Nashville. Zu seinem Begräbnis erschienen viele alte Countrystars, etwa Roy Acuff oder Bill Monroe. DeFord Bailey gilt als Wegbereiter schwarzer Countrymusiker wie Charley Pride, Stoney Edwards und O.B. McClinton. Bill Monroe, der Vater der Bluegrass-Musik zählte DeFord Bailey stets zu seinen großen Vorbildern.
Pan American Blues wurde 2007 in die Grammy Hall of Fame aufgenommen. 2005 ist Bailey in die Country Music Hall of Fame aufgenommen worden.

DeFord Bailey (December 14, 1899 – July 2, 1982) was an American country music and blues star from the 1920s until 1941. Bailey was both the first performer to be introduced as playing on the Grand Ole Opry and also the first African-American performer on the show. He played several instruments but is best known for his harmonica tunes.
Career
A grandson of slaves,[3] Bailey was born near the Bellwood community in Smith County, Tennessee,[4][5] and learned to play the harmonica at the age of three[3][5] when he contracted polio (or as it was called at the time 'infantile paralysis').[5] During his year-long confinement to bed he developed his distinctive style of playing.[6] In 1918, he moved to Nashville performing locally as an amateur. His first documented radio appearance was June 19, 1926 on WSM in Nashville. On December 10, 1927, he premiered his trademark number, "Pan American Blues" (named for the Louisville and Nashville Railroad's Pan-American) on a show then known as the "WSM Barn Dance". At that time "Barn Dance" aired after NBC's classical music show, the "Music Appreciation Hour". While introducing Bailey, WSM station manager and announcer George D. Hay exclaimed on-air: “For the past hour, we have been listening to music largely from Grand Opera, but from now on, we will present ‘The Grand Ole Opry.’”[4]
Bailey also had several records issued in 1927-1928, all of them harmonica solos. In 1927 he recorded for Brunswick records in New York City,[7][8] while in 1928 he recorded eight sides[2] for Victor in Nashville,[7][8] of which three were issued on several labels, including Victor, Bluebird and RCA. Emblematic of the ambiguity of Bailey's position as a recording artist is the fact his arguably greatest recording, John Henry, was released separately in both RCA's 'race' and 'hillbilly' series.[9]
Bailey was a pioneer member of the WSM Grand Ole Opry, and one of its most popular performers, appearing on the program from 1927 to 1941.[10] During this period he toured with many major country stars, including Uncle Dave Macon, Bill Monroe, and Roy Acuff.[11] Like other black stars of his day traveling in the South and West, he faced many difficulties in finding food and accommodation because of the discriminatory Jim Crow laws.[12]
Bailey was fired by WSM in 1941 because of a licensing conflict with BMI-ASCAP, which prevented him from playing his best known tunes on the radio.[13] This effectively ended his performance career, and he spent the rest of his life shining shoes and renting out rooms in his home to make a living. Though he continued to play the harp, he almost never performed publicly. One of his rare appearances occurred in 1974, when he agreed to make one more appearance on the Opry. This became the occasion for the Opry's first annual Old Timers' Show.[4] He died on July 2, 1982 in Nashville. [2][14] and is buried in Greenwood Cemetery there.[15]
In 2005, Nashville Public Television produced the documentary DeFord Bailey: A Legend Lost.[16] The documentary was broadcast nationally through PBS. Later that year, Bailey was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame on November 15, 2005. Joining him in the 2005 class were country-pop superstar Glen Campbell and the band Alabama.[10] On June 27, 2007, the DeFord Bailey Tribute Garden was dedicated at the George Washington Carver Food Park in Nashville.[17] The Encyclopedia of Country Music called him "the most significant black country star before World War II." 

DeFord Bailey - Fox Chase 
DeFord Bailey - Fox Chase (From "National Life Grand Ole Opry" 1967) 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_e7VBJTHWxo 








Judy Roderick  *14.12.1942

 



Judith Allen "Judy" 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.[2] She attended the University of Colorado in Boulder, and began singing blues, folk and country music and playing guitar in clubs there and in Denver.[1][3]
After moving to New York in the early 1960s, she was heard by manager Lee Silberstein, who secured her a record deal with Columbia Records.[4] 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,[2] and at many leading club venues in the eastern United States, developing a loyal following,[1] but a second album for Columbia was never completed after Roderick and Scott disagreed on the direction it should take.[3][5]
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.[6] 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.[7] The album was issued by Fontana in the UK in 1966, and Roderick went to Britain to promote the record.[4] She was also featured on an album of Newport Folk Festival performances issued by Vanguard.[1][2] However, by the time of the Vanguard releases, her style of music was being overtaken by the emergence of folk rock, and sales of her records were disappointing.[3][5]
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.[8] However, the band broke up the following year.[1]
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.[4][2]
A diabetic since childhood, Judy Roderick died of a heart attack from complications due to the disease in 1992 at the age of 49.




Judy Roderick - Country Girl Blues (by EarpJohn) 









Linda Hopkins  *14.12.1924



Linda Hopkins (* 14. Dezember 1924 in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA) ist eine US-amerikanische Blues- und Gospel-Sängerin. Linda Hopkins wurde als Elfjährige von Mahalia Jackson entdeckt und bereits zu Lebzeiten zur Legende. Sie war der Star vieler musikalischer Revuen; in den 1990er Jahren tourte sie mit Maxine Weldon in der Show Wild Women Blues.

Linda Hopkins (born December 14, 1924)[2] is an African American actress and blues and gospel singer. She has recorded classic, traditional, and urban blues, and performed R&B and soul, jazz, and show tunes, all with distinction and style since the 1950s.[1]
Biography
Born Melinda Helen Matthews in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States,[2] the second child of the Reverend Fred Matthews, Sr. and Hazel Smith, Hopkins grew up in the section of New Orleans known by the locals as "Zion City". She went to school in "Gert Town" which bordered the Xavier University of Louisiana.
Known as "Lil Helen Matthews" as a child, she was discovered at the age of eleven by Mahalia Jackson when she persuaded Jackson to perform at a fundraiser at her home church, St. Mark's Baptist Church. Lil Helen opened the children's fundraising program with a rendition of Jackson's gospel hit, "God Shall Wipe Your Tears Away". Jackson was reportedly so impressed by Helen's determination and talent that she arranged for the young girl to join the Southern Harp Spiritual Singers in 1936. Hopkins remained with the group for a decade.
She first saw Bessie Smith perform Empty Bed Blues at The New Orleans Palace Theatre in 1936. Hopkins greatly admired Smith and later won critical plaudits for her rendition of Smith in the 1959 theatrical presentation Jazz Train.[1] Matthews left New Orleans in the 1950s, and, in 1951, began performing at Slim Jenkin's Night Club in the Oakland/Richmond area. There she met Johnny Otis and Little Esther Phillips who created her stage name, Linda Hopkins.[2] In 1952, Hopkins toured Hawaii and Japan for two years which included a stint with Louis Armstrong at The Brown Derby in Honolulu. She recorded for the Crystalette, Forecast, Federal and Atco labels and often appeared at the Apollo Theatre in Harlem.[2]
In 1960, Hopkins first toured Europe in the Broadway Express, the restaged production of Jazz Train. She recorded "Shake a Hand" with Jackie Wilson on the Brunswick label, which is her sole hit single reaching #21 on the US Billboard R&B chart.[1] She also attended Stella Adler's Acting School in New York City.[2]
During the 1970s, Hopkins performed in the Broadway musical, Purlie, and with Sammy Davis, Jr. for nine months. In addition, she performed at President Jimmy Carter's inaugural ball. In 1972 she was awarded a Tony and Drama Desk Award for her performance in Inner City.[2]
Hopkins starred in Me and Bessie, a one-woman show paying homage to blues singer Bessie Smith, conceived and written by Hopkins and Will Holt. The world premiere was in Washington, D.C. in 1974. After a run in Los Angeles it transferred to the Ambassador Theatre on Broadway. The critically acclaimed show ran for thirteen months and 453 performances, and Hopkins was nominated for the Drama Desk Award for Unique Theatrical Experience.[2]
In 1985, Black and Blue, written by Claudio Segovia and Hector Orezzoli, premiered in Paris at the Théâtre Musical Paris. The musical revue opened on Broadway in 1989 and ran for 829 performances. Hopkins received a Tony Award nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a Musical. Wild Women Blues, conceived by Hopkins and produced by Mel Howard, premiered in Berlin in 1997. In 1998 Hopkins celebrated 50 years in show business.
In 2005, Motherin' The Blues: Linda Hopkins - The Continuing Legacy of The Blues Woman, researched and written by Erany Barrow-Pryor, Ph.D. through the Department of English at UCLA, was published.[3]
In October 2005, Hopkins received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.


Linda Hopkins-Me and Dirty Blues 









Tracy K Mastaler  (Tracy K) *14.12.

 


In a business where safety nets are non existent and successful female harmonica players are a rarity, you have to admire the plucky and positive spirit of Tracy K. She’s a terrific entertainer with a committed sense of purpose. Through shear determination and talent she has indelibly stamped her versatility on the Canadian blues/roots scene with her singing, songwriting, and playing that little tin biscuit which has become her trademark asset. She’s a gifted award-winning writer whose broad catalogue includes songs for a Hollywood movie, for CBC's "Canada Reads, Ontario Rocks", and themed originals for festival workshops. 

Tracy K immerses herself into the audience at every live show, with fiery passion and an engaging energy that sets her apart as a performer. She’s shared stages with today's 'A-list' international blues performers and hires first rate players who give her music the professional edge. Among her personal reinventions is her contemporary blues band, wherein Tracy K kicks it up a notch with amplified harp and tests the limits of her throaty rasp inspired by vocal benchmarks Bonnie Raitt and Koko Taylor. Her acoustic Blues Duo with partner Jamie “Snakeman” Steinhoff reflects some of Tracy's fondest musical influences. Jamie's mastery on acoustic, dobro and lap steel guitars derives from his well-informed history of early blues and folk. 'Snakeman's Canned Heat Salsa' and 'Tracy K's Stolen Apple Jelly' sold at their shows create the homey vibe that you'd find at Chicago's legendary Maxwell Street Market back in the day. With their five-star rated album "Canned Heat" they tour house concerts and soft seaters, and have opened for Ramblin' Jack Elliot and shared a double bill with John Sebastian. Tracy K’s rarer forays into jazz range from single guitar accompaniment to a Billie Holiday tribute given the most lavish treatment with the Thunder Bay Symphony Orchestra.

Tracy K has always been sought out for her harmonizing skills over the years for live work and sessions, recently recording harmonies on a project at Ardent Studios in Memphis in early 2015. In the late 1980s Tracy K worked as a live and session vocalist in Toronto. Years later she would be included to perform at the Toronto Blues Society's Harmonica Workshop and their prestigious Women's Blues Revue. Tracy K's gig history lists blues, jazz and folk festivals, concerts, various tributes, fundraisers and women-in-blues events. Her touring map spans Canada into North Dakota, Minnesota, and Montana to Tennessee and Mississippi, and as far south as the Caribbean. Tracy K has been booked multiple times by many events including the Winnipeg Jazz Fest, Saskatchewan Mid-Winter Blues Fest, Live from the Rock Fest, Red Rock, Ontario (headlining in 2014), Thunder Bay Blues Fest, Greatwoods Music Fest in Manitoba and the Winnipeg BBQ & Bluesfest. She’s opened for blues legend James Cotton and shared a playbill (and photo) with Koko Taylor.

Tracy K was unknown to locals at the inaugural Thunder Bay Blues Festival. An instant hit with her crowd-pleasing manner she was back for an encore in 2003. She moved to Thunder Bay in 2004 positively impacting the local music community over the coming years. She created and hosted a weekly Sunday Night Blues Jam at the local Legion where she was dubbed by fans as 'Tracy K Jr.' whenever she sat in on drums! Twice she won regional competitions to represent Thunder Bay at the International Blues Challenge in Memphis Tennessee, as a band and then as a duo. In 2015 Tracy returned to Memphis as one of the judges. 2014 also saw Tracy K included by invite on Ruf Records 'Harmonica Ladies' compilation album and on the globally popular Mary4Music's "Keeping the Blues Alive: Volume Six". She has now moved back to Manitoba and it’s renown music scene where she is recording her next release. Not bad for a musician doubling as mom to three kids - now an empty nester, time has come for this undeniable musician to soar herself.



AWARDS

International Blues Challenge Regional Winner/Memphis Participant - Thunder Bay 2013 band & 2014 duo

International Songwriting Competition Award Recipient BLUES and PERFORMANCE

Ontario Independent Music Award BEST BLUES SONG

Toronto Blues Society Talent Search First Runner Up

Winnipeg Blues.com HARMONICA PLAYER of the Year

Winnipeg Blues.com FEMALE VOCALIST of the Year

Nominee for Winnipeg Blues.com ELECTRIC ACT of the Year


Tracy K and Jamie Steinhoff"Diddy Wah So" 









Ulrich Ellison  *14.12.1980




Für E-Gitarren Fans nicht nur ein Leckerbissen, sondern ein Pflichttermin !

Austin, Texas ist bekannt als ein Mekka für Gitarristen in Sachen Blues und Rock.

Seit acht Jahren mischt mit Ulrich Ellison auch ein Europäer dort kräftig mit.
Geboren in Graz, wuchs er mit der Musik der Eighties wie Mike Oldfield, Peter Gabriel oder The Police auf, doch die Plattensammlung seiner Eltern enthielt auch Miles Davis, Django Reinhard und Booker T.
Ein Musikstudium brachte ihn nach Wien, wo er bald von den Granden der Wiener Studioszene entdeckt wurde. Bereits mit 23 Jahren spielt er für zahlreiche Stars des Austropop.

Aber die Wiener Pop-/Rockszene war erst der Anfang: Nach abgeschlossenem Jazzstudium ergatterte Ellison ein US Scholarship. 2007 folgt der Sprung in die amerikanische Szene.
Inzwischen konnte er dort drei der begehrten Downbeat-Jazzpreise abräumen und zählt zu Austin´s bekanntesten Musikern.
Gerade erst (19.03.2015) wurde er beim Austin Music Award als “Best Blues/Funk/Soul Band" gekrönt !

200+ Konzerte im Jahr, Fernseh- und Festivalauftritte zählen mittlerweile zum Alltag.
Jetzt ist der Gitarrist auf seiner zweiten Europatournee und stellt sein neues Album „Dreamchaser” vor, das deutlich rockiger und blueslastiger als die bisherigen Releases ausgefallen ist.

Der Musiker beeindruckt sein Publikum mühelos und kontinuierlich mit einem Gitarrenstil, der leicht mit den Besten in der Welt konkurrieren kann. Die Vielfalt von verschiedenen Stilen wie Blues Rock, Jam und Jazz, seine Stimme und sein Gitarrenspiel hinterlassen einen dauerhaften Eindruck.

Ulrich Ellison (born December 14, 1980) is an American singer, songwriter, guitarist and Music Producer from Austin, Texas.[1][2][3] He is the founder of the group “Ulrich Ellison and Tribe” , which won the 2015 Austin Music Award for “Best Funk/Soul/Blues” live band.[4][5]

Life and career

Ellison was born and raised in Graz, Austria. He originally started on classical piano and got admitted to the Johann Josef Fux Konservatorium. His career as a guitarist started after moving to Vienna where he studied music at the University of Music and Performing Arts, Vienna, while playing for several Austrian pop and rock acts. In 2007 Ellison came to the United States on a Fulbright scholarship and studied jazz guitar at the Sarah and Ernest Butler School of Music at the University of Texas at Austin. In his two years as a US student he won three of the International Downbeat Awards in the category “Blues/Rock/Pop soloist, college winner”. After graduation he became sideman for several notable Austin acts, including soul singer Nakia and Grammy-nominated singer Abra Moore. In 2010 he founded the “Ulrich Ellison Trio” and has since then progressed his sound in several formations and different lineups.[3][6][7][8][9][10]
Awards and recognition

    2008 Downbeat Student Award, Winner, “Blues/Rock/Pop Soloist”[11]
    2009 Downbeat Student Award, listed for Outstanding Performance, “Blues/Rock/Pop
    Soloist”[11][12]
    2010 Downbeat Award, “Blues/Rock/Pop Soloist”, outstanding performance[11][not in
    citation given]
    2014 Austin Music Award, “Best Funk/Soul/Blues” live band
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulrich_Ellison

Ullrich Ellison & Tribe: Live in Switzerland - FULL CONCERT 
SETLIST: (scroll down or click "show more" to see full list):
00:05 MACHETE
05:55 SLEEPLESS
12:15 CHANGE OF ONE MAN
17:32 I’LL BE ON MY WAY
25:00 THE TRAVELLER
32:30 RESCUE ME
37:27 ROLLIN + TUMBLIN
43:06 FEET BACK ON THE GROUND
47:18 RIVER OF LIFE
50:50 LITTLE WING
01:00:54 WAY DOWN ON THE GROUND
01:06:08 WAITING FOR A BETTER DAY
01:14:00 OUTTAKES - BONUS…

The concert took place April 22, 2016 at the NOIZZPRODUCTIONZZ Studios in Biel-Benken. Presented by RONS ROCKPALAST.

ULRICH ELLISON & TRIBE are:
ULRICH ELLISON - SABINE ELLISON - JOEL DUHON
check out here: http://ulrichellison.com
 



Ulrich Ellison Trio - Driftin Blues 
Ulrich Ellison - vocals, guitar

Brady Muckelroy - bass

David Sierra - drums









R.I.P.

 

Dinah Washington  +14.12.1963

 



Dinah Washington (* 29. August 1924 in Tuscaloosa, Alabama; † 14. Dezember 1963 in Detroit, Michigan; eigentlich Ruth Lee Jones) war eine US-amerikanische Sängerin des Swingjazz, Rhythm and Blues und der Popmusik.
Ihre Familie zog, als sie drei Jahre alt war, nach Chicago. Sie sang schon früh im Kirchenchor und wurde Mitglied in Salle Martin's Gospel Choir, der in der Umgebung von Chicago tourte. Als sie 15 Jahre alt war, gewann sie einen Amateurwettbewerb, der ihre Profikarriere einleitete. Ihre Aktivitäten teilten sich aber zunächst auf: Einerseits leitete sie den Kirchenchor, andererseits spielte sie Klavier in Clubs. Mit 18 Jahren wechselte sie vom Gospel zum Jazz.
1942 spielte sie in der Garrick Stage Bar, wo sie Joe Glaser hörte. Dieser empfahl sie an Lionel Hampton. Von 1943 bis 1946 sang sie in seiner Band; er veranlasste auch, dass sie ihren Namen in Dinah Washington änderte. Ihren ersten Hit hatte sie 1943 mit Evil Gal Blues, den Leonard Feather für sie schrieb und arrangierte. Begleitet wurde sie von Mitgliedern der Hampton-Band. Das Stück erschien bei dem kurzlebigen Label Keynote Records. In dieser Phase wurde ihr Gesang immer jazziger, wie auch Aufnahmen mit Lucky Thompson aus dem Jahr 1945 belegen.
Nach dem Ende des Keynote-Labels wechselte sie zu Mercury Records bzw. dessen Schwester-Label EmArcy. 1947 nahm sie ihre ersten R&B-Platten auf. Ihren ersten Hit in den Billboard-Charts hatte sie im Juni 1950 mit dem damals populären Johnny Green-Song I Wanna Be Loved (#22). Der nächste Erfolg gelang ihr im Dezember 1954 mit dem Song Teach Me Tonight von Gene De Paul und Sammy Cahn(#23).
1955 nahm sie ein Album mit dem Orchester von Quincy Jones auf (The Swingin' Miss D). 1957 trat sie beim Newport Jazz Festival auf. Ähnlich wie auch Ella Fitzgerald ließen ihre Produzenten sie auch Songbook-Alben aufnehmen; 1957 entstand das Fats Waller Songbook, 1958 nahm sie Songs von Bessie Smith auf. Ihren Durchbruch erlebte sie 1959 mit What a Diff'rence a Day Makes, der ihr bekanntester Titel werden sollte (Grammy Beste R&B-Darbietung). Ähnlich wie bei Nat King Cole oder bei Ray Charles veränderte sich ihr Songmaterial durch die Arrangements mehr zum künstlerischen Mainstream und zur populären Musik. So konzentrierte sie sich auf Balladen wie Unforgettable (1959) mit Streicherbegleitung. 1962 wechselte sie zu Roulette Records, wo sie bei ihren Platteneinspielungen von Studioorchestern begleitet wurde, jedoch das künstlerische Niveau der Mercury-Aufnahmen nicht halten konnte. Kurz vor ihrem Tod entstanden noch beachtliche Live-Aufnahmen von drei Radio-Mitschnitten aus dem Birdland-Club, bei denen sie unter anderem von Joe Zawinul begleitet wurde. Sie starb am 14. Dezember 1963 mit 39 Jahren an einer Überdosis aus Schlaftabletten und Alkohol.
Dinah Washington wurde 2003 in die Blues Hall of Fame aufgenommen. Drei ihrer Songs wurden bisher in die Grammy Hall of Fame aufgenommen: What a Diff'rence a Day Makes (1998), Teach Me Tonight (1999) und Unforgettable (2001).[1] Bekannt war sie als die Queen of Blues. In ihrem Gesang vereinte sie die Härte des Gospel-Shouting mit der Zärtlichkeit der gekonnt phrasierenden, kultivierten Balladensängerin. Sie beeinflusste mit ihrem Gesangsstil viele nachfolgende Künstler wie Nancy Wilson oder Diane Schuur.
Dinah Washington hatte ein turbulentes Privatleben und war sieben Mal verheiratet, unter anderem 1957 bis 1959 mit dem R&B-Saxophonisten Eddie Chamblee, der auch bei ihren Plattenaufnahmen dieser Zeit mitwirkte, und 1961 bis 1962 mit dem zwölf Jahre jüngeren Schauspieler Rafael Campos. Ihr letzter Ehemann war der American-Football-Profi Dick Lane, der sie auch leblos vorfand. Die Autopsie ergab eine letale Dosis von Secobarbital und Amobarbital.

Dinah Washington, born Ruth Lee Jones (August 29, 1924 – December 14, 1963), was an American singer and pianist, who has been cited as "the most popular black female recording artist of the '50s".[1] Primarily a jazz vocalist, she performed and recorded in a wide variety of styles including blues, R&B, and traditional pop music,[1] and gave herself the title of "Queen of the Blues".[2] She is a 1986 inductee of the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame,[3] and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1993.
Career
Ruth Lee Jones was born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and moved to Chicago as a child. She became deeply involved in gospel and played piano for the choir in St. Luke's Baptist Church while still in elementary school. She sang gospel music in church and played piano, directing her church choir in her teens and being a member of the Sallie Martin Gospel Singers. She sang lead with the first female gospel singers formed by Ms. Martin, who was co-founder of the Gospel Singers Convention. Her involvement with the gospel choir occurred after she won an amateur contest at Chicago's Regal Theater where she sang "I Can't Face the Music".[4]
After winning a talent contest at the age of 15, she began performing in clubs. By 1941-42 she was performing in such Chicago clubs as Dave's Rhumboogie and the Downbeat Room of the Sherman Hotel (with Fats Waller). She was playing at the Three Deuces, a jazz club, when a friend took her to hear Billie Holiday at the Garrick Stage Bar. Club owner Joe Sherman was so impressed with her singing of "I Understand", backed by the Cats and the Fiddle, who were appearing in the Garrick's upstairs room, that he hired her. During her year at the Garrick - she sang upstairs while Holiday performed in the downstairs room - she acquired the name by which she became known. She credited Joe Sherman with suggesting the change from Ruth Jones, made before Lionel Hampton came to hear Dinah at the Garrick.[5] Hampton's visit brought an offer, and Washington worked as his female band vocalist after she had sung with the band for its opening at the Chicago Regal Theatre.
She made her recording debut for the Keynote label that December with "Evil Gal Blues", written by Leonard Feather and backed by Hampton and musicians from his band, including Joe Morris (trumpet) and Milt Buckner (piano).[1][6][7] Both that record and its follow-up, "Salty Papa Blues", made Billboard's "Harlem Hit Parade" in 1944.[8]
She stayed with Hampton's band until 1946 and, after the Keynote label folded, signed for Mercury Records as a solo singer. Her first record for Mercury, a version of Fats Waller's "Ain't Misbehavin'", was another hit, starting a long string of success. Between 1948 and 1955, she had 27 R&B top ten hits, making her one of the most popular and successful singers of the period. Both "Am I Asking Too Much" (1948) and "Baby Get Lost" (1949) reached Number 1 on the R&B chart, and her version of "I Wanna Be Loved" (1950) crossed over to reach Number 22 on the US pop chart.[8] Her hit recordings included blues, standards, novelties, pop covers, and even a version of Hank Williams' "Cold, Cold Heart" (R&B Number 3, 1951). At the same time as her biggest popular success, she also recorded sessions with many leading jazz musicians, including Clifford Brown and Clark Terry on the album Dinah Jams (1954), and also recorded with Cannonball Adderley and Ben Webster.[1][7]
In 1959, she had her first top ten pop hit, with a version of "What a Diff'rence a Day Made",[9] which made Number 4 on the US pop chart. Her band at that time included arranger Belford Hendricks, with Kenny Burrell (guitar), Joe Zawinul (piano), and Panama Francis (drums). She followed it up with a version of Irving Gordon's "Unforgettable", and then two highly successful duets in 1960 with Brook Benton, "Baby (You've Got What It Takes)" (No. 5 Pop, No. 1 R&B) and "A Rockin' Good Way (To Mess Around and Fall in Love)" (No. 7 Pop, No. 1 R&B). Her last big hit was "September in the Rain" in 1961 (No. 23 Pop, No. 5 R&B).[8]
According to Richard S. Ginell at Allmusic:[1]
    "[Washington] was at once one of the most beloved and controversial singers of the mid-20th century - beloved to her fans, devotees, and fellow singers; controversial to critics who still accuse her of selling out her art to commerce and bad taste. Her principal sin, apparently, was to cultivate a distinctive vocal style that was at home in all kinds of music, be it R&B, blues, jazz, middle of the road pop - and she probably would have made a fine gospel or country singer had she the time. Hers was a gritty, salty, high-pitched voice, marked by absolute clarity of diction and clipped, bluesy phrasing..."
Washington was well known for singing torch songs.[10] In 1962, Dinah hired a male backing trio called the Allegros, consisting of Jimmy Thomas on drums, Earl Edwards on sax, and Jimmy Sigler on organ. Edwards was eventually replaced on sax by John Payne. A Variety writer praised their vocals as "effective choruses".[11]
Washington's achievements included appearances at the Newport Jazz Festival (1955–59), the Randalls Island Jazz Festival in New York City (1959), and the International Jazz Festival in Washington D.C. (1962), frequent gigs at Birdland (1958, 1961–62), and performances in 1963 with Count Basie and Duke Ellington.
Death
Early on the morning of December 14, 1963, Washington's seventh husband, football great Dick "Night Train" Lane, went to sleep with his wife, and awoke later to find her slumped over and not responsive. Doctor B. C. Ross came to the scene to pronounce her dead.[11] An autopsy later showed a lethal combination of secobarbital and amobarbital, which contributed to her death at the age of 39. She is buried in the Burr Oak Cemetery in Alsip, Illinois.


Dinah Washington - Long John Blues (w/ lyrics)
Written By Dinah Washington in 1948

LYRICS:
I've got a dentist who's over seven feet tall
Yes I've got a dentist who's over seven feet tall
Long John they call him, and he answers every call
Well I went to Long Johns office and told him the pain was killin'
Yes I went to Long Johns office and told him the pain was killin'
He told me not to worry, that my cavity just needed fillin'
He said "when I start drillin', I'll have to give you novocaine"
He said, "Yes, when I start drillin', I'll have to give you novocaine
Cause ev'ry woman just can't stand the pain"
He took out his trusted drill
And he told me to open wide
He said he wouldn't hurt me
But he'd fill my hole inside
Long John, Long John, you've got that golden touch
You thrill me when you drill me, and I need you very much
When he got through, he said "Baby that will cost you ten"
Yes when he got through, he said "Baby that will cost you ten
Six months from now, come back and see me again"
Say you're supposed to see your dentist
'Bout twice a year, that's right
But I think I feel it bobbin'
Yes I'll go back there tonight
Long John, Long John, don't ever move away
Say I hope I keep on achin' so I can see you every day.

 

 

Oscar "Buddy" Woods  +14.12.1955

 

 


Oscar "Buddy" Woods (c. 1895 – December 14, 1955)[1][2] was an American Texas blues guitarist, singer and songwriter.
Woods, who was an early blues pioneer in lap steel, slide guitar playing, recorded thirty-five tracks between 1930 and 1940. He recorded solo and as part of the duo, the Shreveport Home Wreckers, and with a six/seven piece group, the Wampus Cats. Early in his career he backed Jimmie Davis on some of his recordings. Woods's best known song was "Lone Wolf Blues", from which came his billing as 'The Lone Wolf'.[1]
Life and career
He was born around Natchitoches, Louisiana, United States, with the birth year variously listed as somewhere between 1892 and 1900. He relocated to Shreveport, Louisiana around 1925, where he started to work as a street musician and played for tips at juke joints.[1] Various sources claim that he learned the rudiments of playing a bottleneck slide guitar after watching an Hawaiian music ensemble, who toured Louisiana in the early part of the 1920s.[3] Woods teamed up with another guitar player, Ed Schaffer, and played billed as the Shreveport Home Wreckers at The Blue Goose Grocery and Market, which was a speakeasy in Shreveport.[4] In May 1930, the duo recorded for Victor Records in Memphis, Tennessee.[1]
In May 1932, the Shreveport Home Wreckers backed Jimmie Davis on four sides recorded in Dallas, Texas. They also recorded another two tracks on their own, and the released single saw them billed as 'Eddie and Oscar'. The significance of this mixed-race recording session spilled over into a joint tour - a unique sociological situation at that time in the South.[1]
Woods next recorded for Decca in March 1936 in New Orleans.[1] The tracks included Woods best known piece, "Lone Wolf Blues," and his first take of the self-penned "Don't Sell It, Don't Give It Away."[3] The releases sold well, and by the time Woods recorded again in October 1937, the Shreveport Home Wreckers had swelled in numbers to become the Wampus Cats. They backed both Woods, and a female singer and pianist, Kitty Gray,[5] on several tracks recorded in 1937 and the following year for Vocalion.[1]
In October 1940, Woods made his final five track recording for the Library of Congress.[1] Following the session, John Lomax wrote: "Oscar (Buddy) Woods, Joe Harris and Kid West are all professional Negro guitarists and singers of Texas Avenue, Shreveport.. The songs I have recorded are among those they use to cajole nickels and dimes from the pockets of listeners."[6] Local records suggest that Woods continued to live in Shreveport, and after his recording career was over, he played again as a street musician and at dances.[1]
Woods died in Shreveport in December 1955.[1]
Style and legacy
Woods played his guitar flat on his lap, in a similar manner to the Hawaiians, using a broken bottleneck slide technique. Lead Belly also used a slide technique, but held his guitar in the normal manner. It is suggested that the popularity of slide guitar playing in the Mississippi delta at that time, may have arisen from the appearance of Hawaiian musicians at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair.[7][8]
The Allmusic music journalist, Uncle Dave Lewis, noted of Woods, "in the style of lap steel, bottleneck blues slide guitar; some experts believe he may have been the primary force behind the creation of this whole genre".[1]
Woods guitar playing techiques were passed onto his protégé, Black Ace, who was approximately fifteen years younger than Woods, and had played with Woods around Shreveport.[6][7] The compilation album mentioned below, included both Woods and Black Ace tracks.[2]
The Shreveport Home Wreckers track, "Flying Crow Blues", was recorded in 1932. Robert Johnson used one set of its lyrics, almost word for word, for the final verse of his song, "Love in Vain" (1937).


Lone Wolf Blues........Oscar Buddy Woods 
Oscar Buddy Woods was the pioneer of lap steel bottleneck blues guitar.This was recorded in New Orleans for Decca on March 21 1936. He was a Louisiana street singer known as the Lone Wolf and this was his signature tune. 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M5iuGpLIK4c 

Freitag, 22. Januar 2016

22.01. Blind Willie Johnson, Christian Willisohn, Hammie Nixon, David Evans, Mary Everhart, Robert Elem, Eva Taylor * Big Leon Brooks, Tommy Tucker, Blind James Campbell, Judy Roderick +





1895 Eva Taylor*
1897 Blind Willie Johnson*
1908 Hammie Nixon*
1928 Robert Elem*
1944 David Evans*
1957 Todd Stewart Wolfe*
1962 Christian Willisohn*
1963 Mary Everhart*
1981 Blind James Campbell+
1982 Tommy Tucker+
1982 Big Leon Brooks+
1992 Judy Roderick+
Doug Duffey* 1)
 
Robert Collins*








Happy Birthday

 

Blind Willie Johnson  *22.01.1897



„Blind” Willie Johnson (* 22. Januar 1897; † 18. September 1945) war ein US-amerikanischer Sänger und Gitarrist, dessen Werk sowohl im Blues als auch im Spiritual wurzelte. Während seine Texte ausnahmslos religiösen Inhalts waren, leiteten sich seine musikalischen Ausdrucksformen aus beiden traditionellen Quellen ab.
Leben
Kindheit und Jugend
Nach einer später entdeckten Sterbeurkunde wurde Johnson 1897 in der Nähe von Brenham in Texas geboren. Vorher waren andere Geburtsorte (Waco, Temple) und auch ein späteres Geburtsdatum (um 1902) genannt worden. Seine Kindheit verbrachte er größtenteils in Marlin. Johnsons Mutter starb, als er noch ein kleines Kind war; sein Vater heiratete danach erneut. Er war nicht von Geburt an blind. Als er ungefähr sieben Jahre alt war, schüttete ihm seine Stiefmutter infolge eines Wutanfalls Lauge in die Augen. Als Johnson älter wurde, begann er auf der Straße Gitarre zu spielen, um sich Geld zu verdienen. Schon damals verwendete er die Slide-Technik, jedoch nicht mit einem abgebrochenen Flaschenhals, sondern mit einer Zange. Johnson hatte aber eigentlich nicht vor, Blues-Musiker zu sein, der bibelfeste junge Mann wollte lieber Gospel singen.
Karriere
1927 lernte er seine erste Frau Willie B. Harris kennen, zusammen mit ihr begann er um Dallas und Waco herum aufzutreten. Sie inspirierte ihn, alte Lieder des 19. Jahrhunderts mit in sein Repertoire aufzunehmen, unter anderem Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning und Praise God I’m Satisfied. Später war Johnson mit einer Frau namens Angeline verheiratet. Bis heute ist keine Heiratsurkunde oder dergleichen gefunden worden, die belegen, ob bzw. in welchen Zeiträumen Johnson verheiratet war. Es wird angenommen, dass er mit Willie B. Harris von 1926 (oder 1927) bis 1932 (oder 1933) verheiratet war. Seine zweite Frau überlebte ihn und arbeitete als Krankenschwester.
Am 3. Dezember 1927 nahm er in den Studios der Columbia Records seine ersten sechs Stücke auf, darunter sein wohl bekanntestes Dark Was The Night – Cold Was The Ground. Ein Jahr später hielt er mit seiner Frau erneut eine Aufnahme-Session ab; 1929 reisten die beiden mit Elder Dave Ross nach New Orleans, wo er für Columbia zehn Songs aufnahm, darunter das Gospel-Stück Let Your Light Shine On Me. Außerdem spielte er nur noch einmal Lieder ein, im April 1930. Wieder dabei war seine Frau Willie. Dies war das letzte Mal für Johnson, dass er Platten aufnahm. Fortan trat er auf der Straße auf, um sich seinen Lebensunterhalt zu verdienen.
1945, vielleicht auch erst 1947, brannte sein Haus nieder. Da Johnson jedoch sehr arm war, blieb im nichts anderes übrig, als weiterhin in der Ruine zu leben. Blind Willie Johnson verstarb danach an einer Lungenentzündung.
Johnsons Dark Was The Night, Cold Was The Ground ist auf der goldenen Schallplatte Voyager Golden Record enthalten, die sich an Bord der beiden interstellaren Raumsonden Voyager 1 und Voyager 2 befindet. Ebenso in der legendären Wireliste The Wire's "100 Records That Set The World On Fire (While No One Was Listening)".

"Blind" Willie Johnson (January 22, 1897 – September 18, 1945) was a gospel blues singer and guitarist. While the lyrics of his songs were usually religious, his music drew from both sacred and blues traditions and is distinguished by his slide guitar accompaniment and gravelly false-bass[clarification needed] voice, with occasional use of a tenor voice.
Life
Blind Willie Johnson, according to his death certificate, was born in 1897 near Brenham, Texas (before the discovery of his death certificate, Temple, Texas had been suggested as his birthplace).[1] When he was five, he told his father he wanted to be a preacher and then made himself a cigar box guitar. His mother died when he was young and his father remarried soon after her death.[2]
Johnson was not born blind, and, although it is not known how he lost his sight, Angeline Johnson told Samuel Charters that when Willie was seven his father beat his stepmother after catching her going out with another man. According to this account, the stepmother then blinded young Willie by throwing lye in his face.[2]
It is believed that Johnson married at least twice. He was married to Willie B. Harris. Her recollection of their initial meeting was recounted in the liner notes for Yazoo Records's "Praise God I'm Satisfied" album. He was later alleged to have been married to a woman named Angeline. Johnson was also said to be married to a sister of blues artist, L.C. Robinson.[citation needed] No marriage certificates have yet been discovered. As Angeline Johnson often sang and performed with him,[citation needed] the first person to attempt to research his biography, Samuel Charters, made the mistake of assuming it was Angeline who had sung on several of Johnson's records.[1] However, later research showed that it was Willie B. Harris.[1]
Johnson remained poor until the end of his life, preaching and singing in the streets of several Texas cities including Beaumont. A city directory shows that in 1945, a Rev. W.J. Johnson, undoubtedly Blind Willie, operated the House of Prayer at 1440 Forrest Street, Beaumont, Texas.[1] This is the same address listed on Johnson's death certificate. In 1945, his home burned to the ground. With nowhere else to go, Johnson lived in the burned ruins of his home, sleeping on a wet bed in the August/September Texas heat. He lived like this until he contracted malarial fever and died on September 18, 1945. (The death certificate reports the cause of death as malarial fever, with syphilis and blindness as contributing factors.)[1] In a later interview, his wife, Angeline said she tried to take him to a hospital but they refused to admit him because he was blind, while other sources report that his refusal was due to being black. And although there is some question as to where his exact grave location is, Blanchette Cemetery (which is the cemetery listed on the death certificate but location previously unknown) was officially located by two researchers in 2009. In 2010, those same researchers erected a monument to Johnson in the cemetery, but his exact gravesite remains unknown.[3]
Musical career
His father would often leave him on street corners to sing for money. Tradition has it that he was arrested for nearly starting a riot at a New Orleans courthouse with a powerful rendition of "If I Had My Way I'd Tear The Building Down", a song about Samson and Delilah. According to Samuel Charters, however, he was simply arrested while singing for tips in front of the Customs House by a police officer who misconstrued the title lyric and mistook it for incitement.[2] Timothy Beal argued that the officer did not, in fact, misconstrue the meaning of the song, but that "the ancient story suddenly sounded dangerously contemporary" to him.[4]
Johnson made 30 commercial recording studio record sides in five separate sessions for Columbia Records from 1927–1930. On some of these recordings Johnson uses a fast rhythmic picking style, while on others he plays slide guitar. According to a reputed one-time acquaintance, Blind Willie McTell (1898–1959), Johnson played with a brass ring, although other sources cite him using a knife. However, in enlargement, the only known photograph of Johnson seems to show that there is an actual bottleneck on the little finger of his left hand.[5] While his other fingers are apparently fretting the strings, his little finger is extended straight—which also suggests there is a slide on it as well.
Legacy
Several of Blind Willie Johnson's songs have been interpreted by other musicians, including "Jesus Make Up My Dying Bed", "It's Nobody's Fault but Mine", "Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground", "John the Revelator", "You'll Need Somebody on Your Bond", "Motherless Children" and "Soul of a Man".
"Dark Was the Night" was also included on the Voyager Golden Record, copies of which were mounted on both of the Voyager Project unmanned space probes. Carl Sagan, who was involved with the selection of the contents of the record, chose the song as he believed it properly encapsulated the essence of loneliness that mankind often faces. Voyager 1 has left the solar system and entered interstellar space, which Voyager 2 is expected to do around 2016.
Ry Cooder's slide guitar title song and soundtrack music of the Wim Wenders film Paris, Texas (1984) was based on "Dark Was the Night".
"Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground" was played in the TV series The West Wing (season 5) episode 13, The Warfare of Genghis Khan. "It's Nobody's Fault but Mine" was played in the TV series The Walking Dead (season 5) episode 4 Slabtown.

 
Blind Willie Johnson-The Soul Of A Man


 






Christian Willisohn  *22.01.1962

 



Christian Willisohn (* 22. Januar 1962 in München) ist ein deutscher Blues-Pianist und Sänger.
Beim Konzert am 50sten Geburtstag, Incontri, Rohrbach/Ilm
Leben und Werk
Leben mit der Musik
Seine musikalische Laufbahn begann 1980 in Münchener Clubs; 1986 gab er seinen Beruf als Steinmetz und Bildhauer auf. 1987 spielte er mit Zora Young zum ersten Mal in den USA. Seither spielte er mit vielen internationalen Blues-Musikern. Heute tritt er in ganz Europa auf mit Klassikern und Eigenkompositionen mit Texten seiner Frau, Alexandra Mayer.[1]
1988 begann die anwährende Zusammenarbeit mit Lillian Boutté, 1992 mit dem holländischen Saxophonisten Boris Vanderlek. 1995 produzierte er zusammen mit Prof. Herbert Wiedemann von der Hochschule der Künste Berlin ein Lehrbuch für Blues & Boogie-Piano. 1996 gründete er mit dem Klavierbaumeister Rainer Schmidt[2] das Label Art By Heart[3]. Konzertreisen auf der „Sea Cloud II“ 2008 von Hamburg nach St. Petersburg, 2009 von Neapel nach Venedig. Herbst 2010: Die Band “Southern Spirit” formiert sich um ihn neu mit Boris van der Lek (saxophone), Titus Vollmer (guitar, vocal); Peter Kraus (drums, vocal), Matthias Engelhardt (bass).
Er besitzt die seltene Fähigkeit, über beliebige, vom Publikum gestellte Themen zu improvisieren und damit eine Brücke vom Jazz bis in die Klassik und andere Musik zu schlagen.
Filmmusik
Filmscore für “Der Sonnenstratege” in Zusammenarbeit mit [Titus Vollmer]

1.Hamburger Blues und Boogie Festival 08 Christian Willisohn 
 Christian Willisohn
Aufgenommen am 8.8.1988 in der Fabrik in Hamburg


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


Christian Willisohn's ''Southern Spirit'' - Jazzwoche Burghausen 2014 



 

 

Hammie Nixon  *22.01.1908

 


Hammie Nixon (* 22. Januar 1908 in Brownsville, Tennessee; † 17. August 1984 in Jackson, Tennessee) war ein US-amerikanischer Blues-Musiker, einer der frühen Virtuosen auf der Mundharmonika.
Neben der Blues Harp spielte Nixon Kazoo, Gitarre und den Jug (siehe Jug-Band). Über 50 Jahre lang trat er immer wieder mit Sleepy John Estes auf. Ihre ersten gemeinsamen Aufnahmen machten sie 1929. Nixon machte auch Aufnahmen mit Little Buddy Doyle, Lee Green, Charlie Pickett und Son Bonds.
Hammie Nixon etablierte die Mundharmonika, die zuvor ein Soloinstrument war, als Begleit- und Rhythmusinstrument für Bands. Er selbst spielte bei zahlreichen Jug-Bands, z. B. in seinen späten Jahren bei der Beale Street Jug Band. Seine letzte Aufnahme machte er 1984 kurz vor seinem Tod.

Hammie Nixon (January 22, 1908 – August 17, 1984)[1] was an American harmonica player.
Life and career
Born Hammie Nickerson in Brownsville, Tennessee,[2] he began his music career with jug bands in the 1920s and is best known as a country blues harmonica player, but also played the kazoo, guitar and jug. He played with guitarist Sleepy John Estes for half a century, first recording with Estes in 1929 for the Victor Records label.[1] He also recorded with Little Buddy Doyle, Lee Green, Clayton T. Driver, Charlie Pickett and Son Bonds.[1]
During the 1920s Nixon helped to pioneer the use of the harmonica as a rhythm instrument in a band setting, rather than as a novelty solo instrument. After Estes died in 1979, Nixon played with the Beale Street Jug Band (also called the Memphis Jug Band). Nixon's last recording, "Tappin' That Thing" (Hmg Records), was recorded shortly before his death in 1984, in Jackson, Tennessee.

The Blues - Hammie Nixon, Sleepy John Estes 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kf-0xvj_NKs 


 

David Evans  *22.01.1944

 

http://www.thecountryblues.com/artist-reviews/dr-david-evans/

David Evans (* 22. Januar 1944 in Boston, Massachusetts) ist ein US-amerikanischer Blues-Musiker und -Forscher.
1961 bis 1965 studierte er Sprachwissenschaften an der Harvard-Universität. Während seines Studiums begann er sich für Folkmusik zu interessieren und begann Gitarre zu lernen. Sein Interesse verlagerte sich zunehmend auf Blues und andere afroamerikanische Volksmusiken und nach seinem Abschluss in Harvard schrieb er sich im Folklore und Mythologie-Programm der University of California in Los Angeles ein, wo er 1967 mit dem M.A. und 1976 mit dem Ph.D. abschloss.
Von 1965 betrieb er bis in die Mitte der 1970er Jahre darüber hinaus Feldforschung in den Südstaaten und sammelte dabei Aufnahmen und Interviews, die die Grundlage musikalischer und sachliterarischer Veröffentlichungen bildeten.
Ab 1969 lehrte Evans an der University of California, Los Angeles, seit 1978 ist er als Professor an der Rudi E. Scheidt School of Music der University of Memphis tätig, wo er den einzigen ethnomusikwissenschaftlichen Studiengang mit Schwerpunkt Volks- und Populärmusik der amerikanischen Südstaaten aufbaute.
Seine bekanntesten Buch-Veröffentlichungen sind Tommy Johnson von 1971 sowie ein biographischer Essay über Charley Patton 1987, der geringfügig überarbeitet 2001 im Materialband der Charley Patton-Werkausgabe neu veröffentlicht wurde und für den er 2003 den Grammy für die Best Album Notes erhielt. Seine Studie "Big Road Blues" aus dem Jahr 1982 wurde 1991 in die Blues Hall of Fame (Classics of Blues Literature) aufgenommen.[1]
1979 hat Evans die High Water Recording Company gegründet 

 

 David Evans is an ethnomusicologist and director of the Ethnomusicology/Regional Studies program at the Rudi E. Scheidt School of Music in the University of Memphis, where he worked since 1978[1]
As head of the university's High Water Recording Company, he made numerous recordings of performers in the Memphis area, some of whom were not previously documented. He has written or edited a number of books on the blues, alongside music releases' liner notes and booklets.[2] He won a Grammy in 2003 for "Best Album Notes" for the CD Screamin' And Hollerin' The Blues - The Worlds Of Charley Patton.[3]
Evans has also been performing in the US and elsewhere, both solo and with the Last Chance Jug Band. His discography includes Match Box Blues (Inside Sounds, 2002); I didn't Know about You (Heavywood, 2005);[4] Needy Times (Inside Sounds, 2007) and as player in Shake That Thing! (Inside Sounds: 2006).

David Evans / Big road blues 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7V0PBv21_30 



 

Mary Everhart  *22.01.1963



Mary(Duyugodv Ayosdi) Everhart is a professional Blues, Southern and Classic rock (Vocalist, Guitarist , composer, and recording artist) and very proud member of the Echota Cherokee Tribe of Alabama-Deer Clan. She was nominated and inducted in 2010 by Blues great, Jimmy Lloyd Rea, into the Blues Hall of Fame as a Great Blues Artist from Tallahassee, FL. The following year she was inducted again into the Blues Hall of Fame as the Ambassador to Tallahassee, FL.Mary was born and raised in Tallahassee, FL and has always had a passion for music and has been performing for over 30 years with various local and regional acts. A review of Mary's debut CD 'Rottweiler Blues' by Blues Revue magazine, compared her voice  to Koko Taylor and Lou Ann Barton. Singing throughout her childhood Mary also knew she wanted to learn to play guitar. She received her first guitar when she was 12 years old and began teaching herself to play with a Mel Bay book and by watching others play. It was not easy for a left handed person to play right handed but, Mary persevered.
She later moved to Atlanta. GA where she became part of the Great Atlanta Blues Revue and also, where she stood on the Capitol steps and sang and played to a local and National audience, both television and syndicated radio, as her part of helping the law to be changed in Georgia against paternity fraud.
http://www.maryeverhartblues.com/band_bio/  


https://www.reverbnation.com/maryeverhart 

Pete Karnes- Mary Everhart... End of the night Jam 




 

 

Robert Elem  *22.01.1928 



Robert „Mojo“ Elem (* 22. Januar 1928 in Itta Benna, Mississippi; † 5. Februar 1997) war ein US-amerikanischer Bluesmusiker. Er spielte Bass und Gitarre.
Elem wurde in Itta Bena geboren, er wuchs also in einer fruchtbaren Bluesgegend auf. Sein erstes Instrument war die Gitarre und er lernte sie, in dem er Gitarristen wie Robert Nighthawk und Ike Turner beobachtete.[1] Im Alter von 20 Jahren kam er nach Chicago, wo er bald als professioneller Musiker arbeitete. Er spielte Rhythmusgitarre in der Band von Arthur „Big Boy“ Spires mit dem Mundharmonikaspieler Lester Davenport. 1956 wechselte er zum damals in Chicago auftauchenden E-Bass, schon alleine, um sich von den vielen Gitarristen abzuheben, die ebenfalls Arbeit in den Clubs von Chicago suchten. Er gründete eine Band mit dem Harmonikaspieler Earl Payton und Freddie King als Gitarristen. Mit ihm spielte er auf Kings erster Single für das El-Bee Label Ende 1956. Nach Kings Erfolgen wurde dieser zum Bandleader und Elem blieb die nächsten acht Jahre in seiner Band. In den 1950er und 1960er Jahren spielte er auch oft in Klubs in Chicagos Westside, darunter mit Magic Sam, Junior Wells, Shakey Jake Harris, Jimmy Dawkins und Luther Allison. In der Band von Otis Rush spielte er auch kurz.[2] Als Bandleader nahm er nur wenige Alben auf, war aber immer ein gesuchter Begleitmusiker.

When talking about deep bluesmen who are also great entertainers, the conversation will eventually get around to the coolest bassman/singer/showman the Windy City has in its blues arsenal, Big Mojo Elem. As a singer, he possesses a relatively high-pitched voice that alternately drips with honey and malice. As a bassist, his unique approach to the instrument makes him virtually one of a kind. Unlike most bass players, Elem seldom plays standard walking bass patterns, instead using a single-note groove that lends to any band he's a part of a decidedly juke-joint groove. And as a showman, he possesses an energy that makes other performers half his age look like they're sitting down. Born in Itta Bena, Mississippi, Elem grew up in fertile blues territory. Originally a guitarist, he soaked up licks and ideas by observing masters like Robert Nighthawk and a young Ike Turner first-hand. By his 20th birthday, he had arrived in Chicago and was almost immediately pressed into professional service playing rhythm guitar behind Arthur "Big Boy" Spires and harmonica man Lester Davenport. By 1956, Elem had switched over to the newly arrived (in Chicago) electric bass, simply to stand out from the pack of guitar players searching the clubs looking for work. He formed a band with harp player Earl Payton and signed on a young Freddie King as their lead guitarist, playing on King's very first single for the El-Bee label in late 1956. After Freddie's success made him the bandleader, Big Mojo stayed with King off and on for the next eight years. The '50s and '60s also found him doing club work -- mostly on the West side -- with Magic Sam, Junior Wells, Shakey Jake Harris, Jimmy Dawkins, and Luther Allison, with a short stint in Otis Rush's band as well. Aside from a stray anthology cut and a now out of print album for a tiny European label, Elem's career has not been documented in much depth, but he remains one of the liveliest players on the scene.

Big Mojo Elem Talk To Your Daughter (1978) 








Eva Taylor  *22.01.1895

 


Eva Taylor (* 22. Januar 1895 in St. Louis als Irene Joy Gibbons; † 31. Oktober 1977 in Mineola, New York) war eine US-amerikanische Blues- und Jazzsängerin sowie Schauspielerin.

Leben und Wirken

Eva Taylor begann ihre Karriere bereits als Kinderstar in einer Revue-Tourneetruppe, die zwischen 1900 und 1920 auch Europa, Australien und Neuseeland bereiste.[1] Sie ging dann in den Vereinigten Staaten mit der Vaudeville-Truppe „Josephine Gassman and Her Pickaninnies“ auf Tournee. 1920 kam sie nach New York City, wo sie bald eine populäre Sängerin in den Nachtclubs von Harlem wurde. 1921 heiratete sie den Pianisten und Produzenten Clarence Williams; das Paar arbeitete dann an verschiedenen Projekten, zahlreichen Songs und einer Musik-Revue namens „Bottomland“ und an verschiedenen Radioprogrammen. 1922 entstanden Eva Taylors erste Aufnahmen für das afroamerikanische Label Black Swan, die sie als „The Dixie Nightingale“ vermarktete.[2] Sie wirkte dann in den 1920er und 1930er Jahren auf zahlreichen Blues-, Jazz- und populären Titeln von Okeh und Columbia Records mit und hatte 1925 erste Hits mit den Songs „Everybody Loves My Baby“ (#10) und „Cake Walkin’ Babies from Home“ (#13).

Als Leadsängerin war sie bei verschiedenen Aufnahmen von Williams' Formation Blue Five zu hören, wie auch bei dessen Sessions mit Louis Armstrong und Sidney Bechet 1924/25; dann 1929 bei Aufnahmen der Studioband The Charleston Chasers (Ain’t Misbehavin’) sowie bei Aufnahmen von Bluessängerinnen wie Sippie Wallace, Rosetta Crawford und Bessie Smith.[3] Obwohl sie zumeist unter ihrem Bühnennamen Eva Taylor auftrat, arbeitete sie gelegentlich auch unter ihrem Echtnamen als „Irene Gibbons and her Jazz Band“. 1927 trat Eva Taylor in dem Broadway-Stück Bottomland auf, das Williams geschrieben und produziert hatte und 21 Aufführungen erlebte.[4]

Ende der 1920er hatte Eva Taylor beim Sender NBC auch ihre eigene Radioshow[5] und gastierte in der Paul Whiteman Radio Show (1932).[6] Bis in die 1930er Jahre arbeitete sie mit Williams zusammen. Anfang der 1940er Jahre zog sie sich aus dem Musikgeschäft zurück und trat nur noch gelegentlich in Konzerten und Nachtclubs auf. Nach dem Tod ihre Mannes kehrte sie Mitte der 1960er Jahre ins Musikgeschäft zurück und ging auch in Europa auf Tourneen.

Eva Taylor (January 22, 1895 — October 31, 1977) was an American blues singer and stage actress.

Life and career

Born Irene Joy Gibbons in St. Louis, Missouri, on stage from the age of three, Taylor toured New Zealand, Australia and Europe before her teens.[1] She also toured extensively with the "Josephine Gassman and Her Pickaninnies" vaudeville act. She settled in New York by 1920. There she established herself as a performer in Harlem nightspots. Within a year she wed Clarence Williams, a producer (hired by Okeh Records), publisher, and piano player. The newlyweds worked together on radio and recordings. The couple recorded together through 1930s. Their legacy includes numbers made as the group Blue Five in the mid-1920s, which included jazz clarinetist/saxophonist Sidney Bechet, trumpet virtuoso Louis Armstrong, and such singers as Sippie Wallace and Bessie Smith.[2]

In 1922 Taylor made her first record for the African-American owned Black Swan Records, who billed her as "The Dixie Nightingale."[3] She would continue to record dozens of blues, jazz and popular sides for Okeh and Columbia throughout the 1920s and 1930s. Although she adopted the stage name of Eva Taylor, she also worked under her birth name in 'Irene Gibbons and her Jazz Band'.

She was part of The Charleston Chasers, the name given to a few all-star studio ensembles who recorded between 1925 and 1930. In 1927, Eva Taylor appeared on Broadway in Bottomland, a musical written and produced by her husband, lasted for twenty-one performances.[4] During 1929 Eva had her own radio show on NBC's Cavalcade,[5] then worked for many years on radio WOR, New York (guesting on Paul Whiteman's radio show in 1932).[6] Taylor stopped performing during the 1940s, but returned in the mid-1960s following her husband's death, touring throughout Europe.

Death

Eva Taylor died from cancer in 1977 in Mineola, New York. She was interred next to her husband, Clarence Williams, under the name of Irene Joy Williams in Saint Charles Cemetery, Farmingdale, New York.[7] Their son, Clarence Williams, Jr. (1923–1976), who predeceased his mother by one year, was the father of actor Clarence Williams III. Their daughter Joy Williams (1931-1970) was a singer-actress under stage name Irene Williams.










R.I.P.

 

Big Leon Brooks  +22.01.1982 

 

Big Leon Brooks

Big Leon Brooks’ deep voice and heavy harmonica tone harkened back to Chicago blues of the 1950s—his style having been preserved by a long hiatus from music. He was influenced very little by the funkier, guitar-driven blues of the ‘60s and ‘70s. Leon was quick to point out that there were better harmonica players years ago. “We had quite a few harmonica players back then that were pretty damn good…. they had more weight, more tone. You got to really blow from within; you’ve got to have that feeling for music, blues music. This is something you don’t find many harp players with today.”


“The Big Man,” as he was aptly called around his home (he often wore shirts with “Big” embroidered on the pocket instead of his name), began playing harp when he was six years old. Growing up in Sunflower, Mississippi, he had a chance to learn from the masters. Leon recalled meeting Sonny Boy Williamson (Rice Miller), Elmore James, Boyd Gilmore and Charlie Booker. “I was raised up around those guys,” he remembered, “but I really learned a lot from the radio, too.”

Moving to Chicago in the early 1940s, Leon began playing with “kids in the neighborhood, on the street and down in Jewtown” (the Maxwell Street outdoor market). There he met his future mentor, Little Walter Jacobs. “I started out in Rice Miller’s style, but Little Walter was really my idol on harmonica, and I followed him around a lot. He was my coach.”

Still a teenager, Leon began slipping into the blues clubs, hanging around mostly at The Zanzibar, where he sat in with the Muddy Waters band. During the early ‘50s, he played with Freddie King and Jimmy Lee Robinson, before forming his first band with guitarist Charles Pearson in 1953. The pair joined Jimmy Rogers’ band for a couple years, before Leon split off to form his own group again. He kept bands together off and on, and worked as a sideman with Willie Johnson, Kansas City Red, Floyd Jones, Otis Rush and Robert Nighthawk throughout the ‘50s.

Then, in the early ‘60s, disenchanted with the more guitar-dominated sound of modern blues, Leon retired from music. “It got to a point where we couldn’t get no gigs. I said ‘the hell with it’, and started strictly working, driving a truck. I didn’t even go to a club.” Nearly fifteen years passed before Leon, after repeated coaxing from the West Side singer called Tail Dragger, decided to re-enter music in 1976. Guitarist Paul Cooper soon brought Leon to the North Side, and in 1977 the harpist began a Sunday night gig at Kingston Mines that lasted almost a year. Then Leon returned to the West Side, working with Tail Dragger, Eddie Taylor and James Scott at Mary’s, The Golden Slipper and The Show & Tell. He was back on the North Side with Scott at the Broadway Night Club before being hospitalized in November 1979 with a heart condition.

He made his recording debut on Alligator’s Living Chicago Blues series in 1980, recording four tracks with an all-star band. He went on to cut a full album, Let’s Go To Town, for the small Blues Over Blues label. Leon died in 1982, at the age of 49, still known only to a small number of hard-core blues fans who love the sound of classic, 1950’s-style Chicago blues.

 
Big Leon Brooks - 13 Years In Prison


 


Tommy Tucker  +22.01.1982

 


Tommy Tucker (eigentlicher Name Robert Higginbotham) (* 5. März 1933 in Springfield (Ohio); † 22. Januar 1982 in Newark, New Jersey) war ein US-amerikanischer Blues-Sänger und Pianist.
Werdegang
Über das Leben des Bluessängers und Pianisten Tommy Tucker ist nicht viel überliefert. Tommy Tucker war der Kousin von Joan Higginbotham, einer Astronautin, die sich im Dezember 2006 an Bord der Space Shuttle Discovery aufhielt.
Er lernte Klavier ab 1941 und schloss sich dem Bobby Wood-Orchester an, aus dem 1953 die Doo Wop-Formation Cavaliers hervorging. In Woods Band lernte er den Trompeter Clarence LeVille kennen, mit dem er im Jahr 1951 eine Hausband im Farm Dell Club in Dayton/Ohio gründete. Sie begleiteten hier Bluesgrößen wie Big Maybelle, Billie Holiday, Little Walter, Jimmy Reed, Little Willie John oder Amos Milburn. Danach wechselte er häufig die Gruppen, tauchte 1955 mit LeVille bei den Belvaderes auf, mit dem er danach 1956 auch bei den Dusters spielte. Zwei erfolglose Singles von je einer dieser Formationen waren das Ergebnis. 1957 schließt sich Tucker der Hausband des The Frolic Night Club in Springfield/Ohio an.
Zusammen mit Atlantic Records-Inhaber Ahmet Ertegün verfasste er den Song My Girl (I Really Love Her So), den er 1961 erfolglos als Solist herausbrachte.
Einziger Hit
Tuckers einziger und größter Hit war die Eigenkomposition und spätere Mods-Hymne Hi Heel Sneakers mit der markanten Slide-Gitarrenarbeit im Bottleneck-Stil von Welton „Dean“ Young, der mit Tucker bereits in den fünfziger Jahren zusammengearbeitet hatte. Nach Veröffentlichung des Jimmy Reed-ähnlichen Stils beim Chess Records-Tochterlabel Checker Records am 13. Januar 1964 gelangte der Titel bis auf Rang 11 der Popcharts und gehörte mit rund 200 Versionen zu den viel gecoverten Songs. Die Aufnahme wurde wahrscheinlich noch im Gründungsjahr 1962 der A-1-Tonstudios von Herb Abramson produziert. Long Tall Shorty, geschrieben von Don Covay und Herb Abramson, war der erfolglose Nachfolgehit vom Mai 1964, gecovert von den Kinks (auf der gleichnamigen LP vom 2. Oktober 1964). Abramson produzierte auch 1966 That’s Life für sein eigenes Festival-Label, konnte jedoch den künstlerischen Niedergang Tuckers nicht aufhalten.
Ende der 1960er Jahre ließ er sich als Grundstücksmakler in East Orange (New Jersey) nieder und kehrte 1974 ins Tonstudio zurück, wo ihn Altrocker Bo Diddley auf Alben wie Mother Tucker oder The Rocks is My Pillow – the Cold Ground is My Bed begleitete. Die Alben scheiterten ebenso wie die meisten Singles zuvor.
Nicht verwechselt werden darf Tommy Tucker, dessen Künstlernamen auf einen professionellen Footballspieler zurückgeht, mit dem Rockabilly-Sänger Tommy Ray Tucker. Tommy Tucker starb am 22. Januar 1982 am Einatmen giftiger Dämpfe.

Tommy Tucker (born Robert Higginbotham; March 5, 1933 – January 22, 1982)[1] was an American blues singer-songwriter and pianist. He is best known for the 1964 hit song, "Hi-Heel Sneakers", that went to No. 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, and peaked at No. 23 in the UK Singles Chart.[2]
Biography
He was born Robert Higginbotham, to Leroy and Mary Higginbotham, the fifth of eleven children, in Springfield, Ohio, United States.
Tucker's follow-up release, "Long Tall Shorty", was less successful. Nevertheless, musicians that played on his albums included Louisiana Red, Willie Dixon and Donny Hathaway.
Tucker co-wrote a song with Atlantic Records founder executive Ahmet Ertegün, called "My Girl (I Really Love Her So)". Tucker left the music industry in the late 1960s, taking a position as a real estate agent in New Jersey. He also did freelance writing for a local newspaper in East Orange, New Jersey, writing of the plight and ignorance of black males in America, and the gullibility and exploitation of African Americans in general by the white-dominated media.[citation needed] Tucker currently has four albums selling in Europe and over the internet, through the Red Lightnin' record label.
Tucker was the father of up-and-coming blues artist Teeny Tucker (real name Regina Westbrook), and was the cousin of Joan Higginbotham, the U.S. female astronaut who launched in November 2006 on the Space Shuttle Discovery.[citation needed]
He was also friends with Davey Moore, the featherweight who died following a boxing contest with Sugar Ramos; and Johnny Lytle, the renowned vibraphonist.
Death
Tucker died in 1982 at the age of 48 at College Hospital in Newark, New Jersey, from inhaling carbon tetrachloride while refinishing the hardwood floors of his home; though his death has been alternatively attributed to food poisoning.

 
Tommy Tucker - Hi-Heel Sneakers (1964) 


 

 

 

 

 

Blind James Campbell   +22.01.1981 








Blind James Campbell (September 17, 1906 - January 22, 1981[1]) was an American blues singer and guitarist. He is mostly remembered for his 1962-63 recording for the Arhoolie label with his Nashville Street Band.
James Campbell was born in Nashville, Tennessee, on September 17, 1906. He later became known as Blind James Campbell after an accident at a fertilizer plant left him permanently blinded. In 1936 he formed a band and began playing folk, country, pop, jazz and blues music at parties, dances and for other local events. The Nashville Street Band consisted of fiddler Beauford Clay (born 1900) who was a great influence on Campbell's playing, second guitarist Bell Ray (born 1909), bass horn player Ralph Robinson (born 1885), and trumpeter George Bell.
Campbell and his band appeared to be quite content with the steady work they were receiving, and did not seem to have any desire to pursue a career in recording. However, Chris Strachwitz of Arhoolie Records became interested in the band after hearing a field recording of them made by a fellow blues fan, Donald Hill. Hill had recorded Campbell in the spring of 1959 and again in April 1961. Hill's recordings include Campbell singing country songs as well as blues. He also recorded Cambpell and his string band on a street corner in downtown Nashville and recorded him with Beauford Clay. Both the original tapes and digital copies of Hill's recordings have been deposited at Library of Congress as a part of the Hill/Mangurian collection of field recordings made between 1958 and 1961.
After listening to Hill's tapes, Strachwitz set off to Nashville to find and record Campbell and his band. After two recording sessions with Campbell and his band in 1962 and 1963, the Arhoolie LP Blind James Campbell And His Nashville Street Band (Arhoolie 1015) was released in 1963.
While these recordings never excelled Campbell into prominence, and the history of James Campbell and his band since the 1963 recordings is hazy, Strachwitz revisited these recordings and released them on CD in 1995, along with additional tracks from both recording sessions. Certainly, these recordings show evidence of a street band of considerable skill and quality, who were able to play American music from a variety of genres.
James Campbell died in Nashville, Tennessee, on January 22, 1981

Blind James Campbell & His Nashville Street Band - I Am So Blue When It Rains 


 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u0WZBEqcFns






Judy Roderick Todestag 22.01.1992

 



Judith Allen "Judy" 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.[2] She attended the University of Colorado in Boulder, and began singing blues, folk and country music and playing guitar in clubs there and in Denver.[1][3]
After moving to New York in the early 1960s, she was heard by manager Lee Silberstein, who secured her a record deal with Columbia Records.[4] 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,[2] and at many leading club venues in the eastern United States, developing a loyal following,[1] but a second album for Columbia was never completed after Roderick and Scott disagreed on the direction it should take.[3][5]
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.[6] 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.[7] The album was issued by Fontana in the UK in 1966, and Roderick went to Britain to promote the record.[4] She was also featured on an album of Newport Folk Festival performances issued by Vanguard.[1][2] However, by the time of the Vanguard releases, her style of music was being overtaken by the emergence of folk rock, and sales of her records were disappointing.[3][5]
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.[8] However, the band broke up the following year.[1]
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.[4][2]
A diabetic since childhood, Judy Roderick died of a heart attack from complications due to the disease in 1992 at the age of 49.



Judy Roderick