Home / Tag Archives: Jimmy Witherspoon

Tag Archives: Jimmy Witherspoon

Pat Bowie

Vocals. Decent ballads, blues and pre-rock vocalist who produced series of great, not excellent recordings in the ’60s. Her greatest was program with Charles McPherson.

Read More »

Bob “Catfish” Hodge

Blues rocker Bob “Catfish” Hodge was created and raised in Detroit, so that as a teenager frequently snuck into Motown Information’ Hitsville studio room to catch classes featuring the 4 Tops, the Supremes as well as others. By the end from the 1960s he created the music group Catfish, debuting …

Read More »

Charles Brown

Tenor sax. Not really the popular blues and R&B pianist, but a journeyman tenor saxophonist whose instant of glory was included with a 1972 Soaring Dutchman recording. He was better referred to as Charlie Dark brown, and performed off his name for record whose name was takeoff of previous Coaster’s …

Read More »

Tony Drake

One of spirit music’s esteemed program guitarists, Tony Drake spent some time working with a number of the genre’s best artists. An associate of blues and R&B rings led by Johnnie Taylor, Ronnie Dyson, and T-Bone Walker in the 1960s, as well as the Checkmates from 1981 until 1985, he …

Read More »

Vernon Alley

This bassist is among the few jazz musicians to emerge from Winnemuca, NV — which is a dusty place a person truly does emerge from. He’s also among the just players whose last name answers the query of where in fact the sidemen should fulfill for a smoke cigarettes break. …

Read More »

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 …

Read More »

Wynonie Harris

Zero blues shouter embodied the rollicking memories that he sang of that can compare with raucous shouter Wynonie Harris. “Mr. Blues,” as he was not-so-humbly known, joyously related risque stories of sex, booze, and countless celebrations in his brand raspy tone of voice over a number of the jumpingest horn-powered …

Read More »

Harry “Fats” Crafton

Harry Crafton was among the better — and, ultimately, unfairly neglected — guitarists to emerge from the postwar period. He carved a little but special market for himself in Philadelphia starting soon after Globe War II, reducing for the string of indepedent brands with a electric guitar audio that was …

Read More »

Arthur Prysock

Arthur Prysock was perfectly in the home performing jazz, blues, or R&B, but his smooth-as-silk baritone produced him a superbly effective (and underappreciated) pop crooner in the way of his key impact, Billy Eckstine. Prysock was created January 2, 1929, in Spartanburg, SC, and was the sibling of saxophonist Crimson …

Read More »

McCoy Tyner

It really is to McCoy Tyner’s great credit that his profession after John Coltrane continues to be definately not anti-climatic. Along with Costs Evans, Tyner continues to be the most important pianist in jazz of days gone by 50 years, along with his chord voicings getting adopted and employed by …

Read More »