Big Bill Broonzy's 1930s recordings (reissued in full on this extensive series of Document CDs) are remarkably consistent and have an impressive amount of variety within the blues idiom. During the 11 months covered by this seventh volume, Broonzy recorded as part of three different trios with either Blind John Davis or Joshua Altheimer on piano and Fred Williams, Bill Settles or Ransom Knowling on bass; a "modern" quartet with tenorman Bill Owsley and the pioneering electric guitar of George Barnes (on Mar. 1, 1938); and with a few slightly expanded groups, including one with trumpeter Punch Miller. Broonzy was open to the influence of swing (thus the occasional horns) while sticking to his Chicago blues base. Such numbers as "Hattie Blues," "Somebody's Got to Go," "It's a Low Down Dirty Shame," "Unemployment Stomp," "Night Time Is the Right Time No. 2" and "W.P.A. Rag" show off his versatility and talents. Scott Yanow
Abridged from this albums original booklet notes. “I sold a one-eyed mule and I bought me an automobile” Big Bill Broonzy sang on his 1937 recording Good Boy. Metaphorically this had been true for several years as he had moved away from the simpler instrumentation and rural images of his earlier records into a world that was decidedly metropolitan. On his session of 1st March 1938 he augmented his basic piano, guitar, bass and drums line-up with the introduction of a tenor sax and the electric guitar of George Barnes. Barnes, a virtuoso who often performed as a duo with Jazzman Carl Kress, brought an entirely new sound to Sweetheart Land a rather trite song on which Bill calls to the sax player to “Play that thing” in a tone of voice that makes it sound as if he doesn’t even know what “that thing” is! The sound was edging towards what would come to be known as R & B. The pianist on the following session was Josh Altheimer who would fill the role of Big Bill Broonzy‘s premier accompanist up until his death on the 18th of February 1940. Altheimer, who was born in 1910, never had a record issued over his own name but was well known for his work with Lonnie Johnson, Jazz Gillum, Washboard Sam and John Lee “Sonny Boy” Williamson. He was never a hard boogie man either, though he could rock when called upon to do so, but preferred to work in a band setting where he would seldom take a solo but would hold everything together with his rolling style. Trumpet star Punch Miller was on hand again to liven up the 30th March 1938 session which produced Unemployment Stomp, a topical up-tempo number that made reference to Mr. Roosevelt’s unemployment cards, and Bill’s ode to his own sexual potency I Got To Get Ready Tonight. “Here come a train”, he calls, and his order for a pint of oysters and a dozen eggs indicates that although he intends to ride it won’t be down the I. C. track. At the same session, but without Miller, Bill cut a version of the Dirty Mother Fuyer theme as Truckin’ Little Woman. The stripped-down trio of piano, guitar and string bass was used on Bill’s next studio appointment when he cut It’s Your Time Now with his wry observation to his girl-friend “Men tell you that you’re beautiful (but) they don’t have to keep you that way”. The electric guitar and tenor sax were back for the next set, probably being played by Georges Barnes and Bill Owsley, who doubled on clarinet, respectively. Big Bill Broonzy used them to cash in on an extension of Roosevelt Sykes‘ Night Time hit, which had been recorded the previous year, and a version of Shake ‘Em On Down that was about as far removed from that of Bukka White as it could get. The last two tracks on this disc from a session labelled as being by Big Bill and The Memphis Five. This was a jazz date featuring both the trumpet and an alto sax. Let Me Dig It, a selection from the bawdy “butcher’s son” chain of verses, has what sounds like a twin trumpet lead while W. P A. Rag is a straight ahead jazz band work out. DOCD-5129
Tracklist :
1 Made A Date With An Angel [Take 2] (A) 3:07
2 Play Your Hand (A) 2:55
3 Hattie Blues [Take 3] (B) 2:42
4 Somebody's Got To Go (B) 2:56
5 Good Boy (B) 2:50
6 I Want You By My Side (B) 2:51
7 Border Blues (B) 2:49
8 Sweetheart Land (C) 2:46
9 It's A Low Down Dirty Shame (C) 2:53
10 Got To Get Ready Tonight (D) 2:54
11 Trucking Little Woman (D) 2:36
12 Unemployment Stomp (D) 2:35
13 Why Do You Do That To Me? (D) 2:56
14 It's Your Time Now (E) 2:48
15 I'll Start Cutting On You (E) 2:42
16 Sad Letter Blues (E) 2:48
17 The Mill Man Blues (E) 2:41
18 I'll Do Anything For You (F) 2:54
19 Sad Pencil Blues (F) 2:32
20 New Shake-em On Down [Take 2] (F) 2:52
21 Night Time Is The Right Time No. 2 (F) 2:47
22 Let Me Dig It (G) 2:35
23 W.P.A. Rag (G) 2:47
Credits :
(A) Big Bill Broonzy, vocal, guitar; Blind John Davis, piano; Fred Williams, drums. 13/10/1937
(B) Big Bill Broonzry, vocal, guitar; Blind John Davis, piano; Bill Settles, stand-up bass. 21/19/1937
(C) Big Bill Broonzy, vocal, guitar; accompanied probably by Bill Owsley, tenor sax; Blind John Davis, piano; George Barnes, electric guitar. 01/03/1938
(D) Big Bill Broonzy, vcl; acc. Punch Miller, trumpet; Joshua Altheimer, piano; Fred Williams. drums. 30/03/1938
(E) Big Bill Broonzy, vocal, guitar; Joshua Altheimer, piano; probably Ransom Knowling, stand-up bass. 05/04/1938
(F) Big Bill Broonzy, vocal, guitar; Bill Owsley, clarinet 19,20,21 / tenor sax on18,19; probably Joshua Altheimer, piano; probably George Barnes, electric guitar; Ransom Knowling, stand-up bass. 05/05/1938
(G) Big Bill And The Memphis Five: Big Bill Broonzy, vocal, guitar; accompanied by Walter Williams, trumpet; Buster Bennett, alto sax; Blind John Davis, piano; possibly Ransom Knowling, stand-up bass. 15/09/1938
6.1.25
BIG BILL BROONZY — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 7 • 1937-1938 | DOCD-5129 (1993) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
BIG BILL BROONZY — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 8 • 1938-1939 | DOCD-5130 (1993) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Abridged from this albums original booklet notes. It was probably no accident that Big Bill Broonzy should follow his W. P. A. Rag with Going Back To Arkansas. In the depressed northern cities of 1938 life in the south could take on a golden glow of a nostalgia that ignored the facts of the case. The world of collard greens, ham hock and the benign “boss” that Broonzy evokes was just a myth and he had no plans for returning. Maybe Vocalion recognized this feeling as being a fanciful fabrication of the truth. Arkansas nor I Believe I’ll Go Back Home from this session were issued at the time. There was certainly nothing countrified about the treatment afforded last track cut by The Memphis Five at this time where the instrumental sound of Louise approaches swing – and I believe that Bill was bluffing when he threatened, on Trouble And Lying Woman, to “get me a sissy man and let all you women go”. Just over a month later Bill was back in the studio capitalizing on his hit Trucking Little Woman with a No. 2. At the same time he failed to make an acceptable cut of Flat Foot Susie. He tried again in October but the result had to wait almost ten years before it was released. 1938 was a seminal year for both Big Bill Broonzy and the blues generally. For the first time the music was brought to the notice of the white public at large. The story of John Hammond‘s search for Robert Johnson to represent the blues on his Spirituals To Swing concert of December 1938 is well known. That, in his failure to locate Johnson alive, he should turn to Big Bill seems an odd course today, the similarities between the intense Johnson and the laid-back Broonzy being marked. Maybe the choice was made on the strength of Bill’s earlier recordings and his proficiency on the guitar; maybe it was just a panic reaction to fill out the program. Whatever, Bill, playing with support from Albert Ammons and Walter Page, charmed his audience, as can be heard from their reaction to Done Got Wise, and, almost inadvertently, set ajar a door for the blues that was to open further after the war and finally swing wide in the 1960s. When, in February of 1939 he cut a session with his stalwarts Josh Altheimer and Fred Williams, he included Done Got Wise and a statement of his personal philosophy in Whiskey And Good Times – “and a woman will do the rest”. Also on the sheets was that rarity a “gospel blues” on which Bill warns that “you may be having a good time with other women, but you may go to hell that way” and then qualifies his advice with the coda “don’t do as I do – just do as I tell you to”. The ironic Just A Dream was to become one of Bill’s best known songs and later, during his concert hall period, he converted it into a mild protest song that went down well with his liberal white audience. Five days after he cut Just A Dream Bill re-convened The Memphis Five using a trumpet, alto and a string bass along with the piano of Blind John Davis to produce the last five recordings on this disc, including the Mother Fuyer variant Fightin’ Little Rooster which was issued under his own name’. DOCD-5130
Tracklist :
1 Going Back To Arkansas (A) 2:49
2 Rider Rider Blues (A) 2:41
3 Living On Easy Street (B) 2:53
4 Good Time Tonight (B) 2:30
5 Trouble And Lying Woman (B) 2:36
6 I Believe I'll Go Back Home (B) 2:25
7 Flat Foot Susie With Your Flat Yas Yas (C) 2:57
8 Trucking Little Woman No. 2 (C) 2:43
9 Hell Ain't But A Mile And A Quarter (D) 2:54
10 Don't You Lay It On Me (D) 2:38
11 Done Got Wise (E) 2:37
12 Louise, Louise (E) 2:53
13 Spreadin' Snake Blues (F) 2:40
14 Baby Don't You Remember (F) 2:43
15 Whiskey And Good Time Blues (F) 2:52
16 Baby I Done Got Wise (F) 2:30
17 Preachin' The Blues (F) 2:41
18 Just A Dream (F) 2:34
19 Fightin' Little Rooster (G) 2:33
20 Mary Blues (G) 2:34
21 You Can't Sell 'em In Here (G) 2:37
22 Just Got To Hold You Tight [Take 1] (G) 2:30
23 Just Got To Hold You Tight [Take 2] (G) 2:32
Credits :
(A) Big Bill And The Memphis Five: Big Bill Broonzy, vocal, guitar; accompanied by Walter Williams, trumpet; Buster Bennett, alto sax; Blind John Davis, piano; possibly Ransom Knowling, stand-up bass. 15/09/1938
(B) Big Bill Broonzy, vocal, guitar; Joshua Altheimer, piano; unknown, stand-up bass. 15/09/1938
(C) Big Bill Broonzy, vocal, guitar; accompanied probably Walter Williams, trumpet on 7; probably Buster Bennett, drums on 8; probably Horace Malcolm, piano; probably Fred Williams, drums on, 8. 27/09/1938
(D) Big Bill Broonzy, vocal; accompanied by Joshua Altheimer, piano; unknown, guitar; Ransom Knowling, stand-up bass. 10/11/1938
(E) Big Bill Broonzy, vocal, guitar; Albert Ammons, piano; Walter Page, stand-up bass. 23/12/1938
(F) Big Bill Broonzy, vocal, guitar; Joshua Altheimer, piano; Fred Williams, drums. 10/02/1939
(G) Big Bill And His Memphis Five: Big Bill Broonzy, vocal, guitar; Walter Williams, trumpet; Buster Bennett, alto sax; Blind John Davis, piano; probably Ransom Knowling, stand-up bass. 10/02/1939
5.1.25
BIG BILL BROONZY — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 11 • 1940-1942 | DOCD-5133 (1993) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
The final of Document's prewar Big Bill Broonzy CDs (documenting all of his 1927-42 recordings) features Broonzy playing in a timeless style. Most of the performances could be considered goodtime music, with Broonzy sounding as if he were ready to party. On three of the four complete sessions that are included (plus "Rockin' Chair Blues," left over from the 1940 date otherwise included on Vol. 10), Broonzy is joined by either Memphis Slim, Horace Malcolm or Blind John Davis on piano, plus Washboard Sam (his half-brother) on washboard; Jazz Gillum sits in on harmonica during "Key to the Highway." The final set has Broonzy, pianist Memphis Slim and drummer Judge Riley joined by trumpeter Punch Miller and altoist Buster Bennett. Overall, this is a pretty strong program, with such numbers as "Sweet Honey Bee," "When I Been Drinking," "Key to the Highway," "Conversation With the Blues," "All By Myself," "I Feel So Good," "I'm Gonna Move to the Outskirts of Town" and "I'm Woke Up Now" being among the 25 selections. Big Bill Broonzy fans will want all of the releases in this remarkable series. Scott Yanow
Abridged from this album;s original booklet notes. The later thirties saw the first sign of economic recovery in America but Europe was in flames and it would only be a matter of time before the USA was drawn into the conflict. It was a time of turmoil but very little of it was reflected in the work of Big Bill Broonzy. He continued to produce good time music, proto R & B, personal blues and hokum with the occasional piece of nostalgia thrown in. After the death of his long-time associate Josh Altheimer, Bill utilized the piano playing talents of Horace Malcolm and the young Memphis Slim, usually filling out the sound with a string bass or his half-brothers washboard. Malcolm was on the date which produced the untypical Green Grass Blues a piece of nonsense about the rural bliss typified by windmills and wells, owls and roosters and log cabins with dirt chimneys; a never-never land where Bill could “make love on the grass with no bills to pay”. More in line with his usual philosophy is When I Been Drinking, a song much favoured, later, by Sunnyland Slim. It underlines Bill’s comment on the last page of his biography that “some blues singers can and do sing and don’t drink, but not Big Bill”. The last track cut on this session was a one-off on which Bill sang with the support of Jazz Gillum’s harmonica to produce the rural sounding and justly famous Key To The Highway, a song that was to be sung by just about everybody in the 1960’s. His next session produced two of his most successful songs in Double Trouble and All By Myself, the latter to become a standard in the repertoire of Memphis Slim who was responsible for the vigorous piano that appears on this jaunty up-tempo boast. Another Big Bill Broonzy standard, I Feel So Good was cut at the session of 2nd December 1941. At the same time Bill, who had been drafted in 1918, also sang about getting a letter from “a dear old uncle” on In The Army Now. Ironically this session took place just days before the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Two of the recordings made at this session would be featured on V-Discs supplied to the armed forces as a morale booster during the conflict that was about to begin. Big Bill’s last pre-war session was a date with his Chicago Five, a renamed Memphis Five involving the trumpet of Kid Punch Miller and the sometimes filthy alto sax of Buster Bennett. Bill seemed preoccupied by the subject of betrayal at this gig when he sang Casey Bill Weldon‘s Outskirts Of Town (he had played guitar on Casey Bill‘s 1936 recording) and I’m Woke Up Now where he says of his some-time friends “they will hide their hands, boys, – after they throw a brick”. Big Bill Broonzy would resume his career on record as soon as the war ended – at the same time starting a second career that would extend his popularity to make him one of the best-loved blues singers of all time. DOCD-5133
Tracklist :
1 Big Bill Broonzy– Rockin' Chair Blues 2:47
Big Bill Broonzy / Tommy McClennan
2 Big Bill Broonzy– Shine On, Shine On 2:57
3 Big Bill Broonzy– Green Grass Blues 2:59
Big Bill Broonzy
4 Big Bill Broonzy– My Little Flower 2:47
5 Big Bill Broonzy– Sweet Honey Bee 2:58
Big Bill Broonzy
6 Big Bill Broonzy– When I Been Drinking 2:50
Big Bill Broonzy
7 Big Bill Broonzy– Key To The Highway 3:01
Big Bill Broonzy / Charles Segar
8 Big Bill Broonzy– Double Trouble 2:46
9 Big Bill Broonzy– Going Back To My Plow 2:55
10 Big Bill Broonzy– I'm Having So Much Trouble 2:47
11 Big Bill Broonzy– Wee Wee Blues 2:57
Big Bill Broonzy
12 Big Bill Broonzy– Conversation With The Blues 2:34
Big Bill Broonzy
13 Big Bill Broonzy– All By Myself 2:26
Big Bill Broonzy
14 Big Bill Broonzy– Keep Your Hand On Your Heart 2:53
Big Bill Broonzy
15 Big Bill Broonzy– Why Should I Spend My Money? 2:49
16 Big Bill Broonzy– What's Wrong With Me? 2:35
Big Bill Broonzy
17 Big Bill Broonzy– I Feel So Good 2:45
Big Bill Broonzy
18 Big Bill Broonzy– In The Army Now 2:42
Big Bill Broonzy
19 Big Bill Broonzy– Bad Acting Woman 2:44
20 Big Bill Broonzy– Night Watchman Blues 2:48
Big Bill Broonzy
21 Big Bill Broonzy– She's Gone With The Wind 2:41
22 Big Bill And His Chicago Five– I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town 2:52
Andy Razaf / Will Weldon
23 Big Bill And His Chicago Five– Tell Me, Baby 2:55
Big Bill Broonzy
24 Big Bill And His Chicago Five– Hard Hearted Woman 3:00
Big Bill Broonzy
25 Big Bill And His Chicago Five– I'm Woke Up Now 2:58
All Credits :
BIG BILL BROONZY — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 12 • 1945-1947 | BDCD-6047 (1995) MONO | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Tracklist :
1 Bull Cow Blues No.3 [Alt. Take] 3:07
2 Married Life Is A Pain [Alt. Take] 2:53
3 Black Mare Blues [Alt. Take] 2:51
4 W.P.A. Blues [Alt. Take] 3:13
5 Oh Babe (Don't Do Me That Way) [Alt. Take] 3:04
6 Little Bug [Alt. Take] 2:50
7 (I'm A) Wanderin' Man 3:06
8 I Love My Whiskey 3:03
9 You've Been Mistreatin' Me 2:53
10 I Stay Blue All The Time 2:27
11 Water Coast Blues 2:49
12 Five Feet Seven 3:21
13 I Wonder 2:52
14 Keep Your Hands Off Her 2:55
15 Mindin' My Own Business 3:09
16 John Henry 3:24
17 In The Evening When The Sun Goes Down 4:46
18 I Feel So Good 2:55
19 Who's Sorry Now 3:04
20 Trouble In Mind 3:07
21 Keep Your Hands Off Her 3:32
22 Mama Don't Allow 5:10
23 When The Saints Go Marching In 2:55
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Buster Bennett (tracks: 5 - 12), Oett "Sax" Mallard (tracks: 13 - 16, 19 - 25)
Bass – John Levy (tracks: 1 - 4), Ransom Knowling (tracks: 13 - 18, 22 - 25)
Compiled By – Johnny Parth
Drums – Lawrence "Judge" Riley (tracks: 13 - 16, 19 - 25), Slick Jones (tracks: 1 - 4), Tyrell Dixon (tracks: 5 - 11, 17, 18)
Guitar, Vocals – Big Bill Broonzy
Piano – Big Maceo (tracks: 5 - 9), Bob Call (tracks: 19 - 25), Charles Belcher (tracks: 13 - 16), Kenny Watts (tracks: 1 - 4), Memphis Slim (tracks: 17, 18)
Tenor Saxophone – Bill Casimir (tracks: 13 - 16, 19 - 21), Don Byas (tracks: 1 - 4)
Trumpet – Johnny Morton (tracks: 13 - 16, 22 - 25)
+ last month
BIG BILL BROONZY — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 4 • 1935-1936 | DOCD-5126 (1992) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Swing might have been king by 1935-36, but Big Bill Broonzy was a different type of royalty, one of the major bluesmen in Chicago. Always a ...