Home / Tag Archives: Arthur “Big Boy”

Tag Archives: Arthur “Big Boy”

Sonny Boy Williamson I

Easily the main harmonica player from the prewar era, John Lee Williamson nearly single-handedly made the humble mouth organ a worthy lead instrument for blues bands — at the forefront for the amazing innovations of Small Walter and a platoon of others to check out. If not really for his …

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G.L. Crockett

There is a lone dark and white publicity photo of G.L. Crockett that appears like many an R&B performer picture from your middle-1960s; a sleepy-eyed countenance wedded from what is apparently a smirk, hands on chin, a gleaming match and an immaculate pompadour “conk work” hairdo to total the picture. …

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Doctor Ross

Isaiah “Doc” Ross was a throwback to a bygone period; a genuine one-man music group, he performed harmonica, classical guitar, bass drum, and hi-hat concurrently, making a mighty racquet harking back again to the itinerant country-blues players wandering the Delta area during the previously many years of the 20th hundred …

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Jesse Fortune

Chicago vocalist Jesse Fortune’s voice is really as large as his discography is little. A mere couple of 45s going by his 1963 common “WAY TOO MANY Cooks” along with a 1993 record on Delmark constitute his whole catalog — but as a dynamic artist over the Windy Town circuit, …

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J.B. Lenoir

Beginners to his considerable legacy could possibly be forgiven for questioning J.B. Lenoir’s gender upon initial hearing his rocking waxings. Lenoir’s extremely high-pitched vocal range is really a fooler, nonetheless it only increases the singular selling point of his music. His politically billed “Eisenhower Blues” allegedly triggered a variety of …

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Four Clefs

The 4 Clefs were an organization located in Chicago comprising drummer/vibraphonist William Marshall, pianist Wayne Marshall, guitarist Johnny “Happy” Green, and bassist Melvin “Chappie” Chapman. All of these sang, though William Marshall was the business lead singer plus some of their information feature Marshall as single vocalist; still others are …

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Sonny Boy Williamson II

Sonny Young man Williamson was, in lots of ways, the best blues legend. By enough time of his loss of life in 1965, he previously been around very long enough to get used Robert Johnson in the beginning of his profession and Eric Clapton, Jimmy Web page and Robbie Robertson …

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Paul “Hucklebuck” Williams

Saxophonist and bandleader Paul Williams scored among the initial big hits from the R&B period in 1949 with “The Hucklebuck,” an adaption of Charlie Parker’s “Now’s enough time.” The tune topped the R&B graphs for 14 weeks in 1949, and was among three TOP and five various other Best 20 …

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