Mostrando postagens com marcador Cow Cow Davenport. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Cow Cow Davenport. Mostrar todas as postagens

11.2.25

COW COW DAVENPORT — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 1 • 1925 to 1929 | DOCD- 5141 (1992) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The complete output of pianist/singer Cow Cow Davenport as a leader has been made available on two CDs by Europe's Document CD; his sideman dates are also available on two other CDs. Because Cow Cow (named after his famous "Cow Cow Blues") is often categorized as a member of the blues world, it is sometimes overlooked how strong a jazz/blues pianist he was. On this first volume, Davenport is heard collaborating with singer Dora Carr, playing duets with cornetist B.T. Wingfield, interacting with singer Sam Theard, and performing heated solos which are sometimes commented upon by his partner Ivy Smith; in addition, there are a few solo instrumentals that really show what Davenport could do. The highlights include "Chimes Blues," "Atlanta Rag," "Back In the Alley" and four versions of "Cow Cow Blues." Scott Yanow

Abridged from this album’s original booklet notes. Through the efforts of early jazz enthusiasts we know more about Charles “Cow Cow” Davenport than any of the pioneer blues and boogie pianists. Born in 1894 in Anniston, Alabama into a religious and musical family, he taught himself on the church organ. A brief sojourn at the Theological Seminary, Selma was terminated in 1910 when he played piano too freely for a function where the students marched (dancing was not allowed) and “the girls got so frisky they couldn’t march in time”. This incident was to inspire his most popular and enduring song, Mama Don’t Allow No Music Playing Here while the general disapproval of church people for the music he wanted to play led to his coining the term “boogie woogie”. As badly behaved children would be threatened with the “boogie man” (“bogey man”) Davenport said, “I called my music ‘Boogie’ music”. Note that in Davenport’s dictionary the phrase covered all the music “in the honky tonks, joints where nice people did not go”.

A short-lived (one year) marriage to a blues singer pianist Helen Rivers led to Cow Cow Blues (Railroad Blues) his most famous song: “I was so blue I commenced to get drunk. I went from honky tonk to honky tonk drinking everything I could get my hands on. When I walked out on stage that night I could hardly stand up straight. But I had sense enough to pretend like it was part of the act. I made up some words right there on the spot and began to sing my sadness:
Lord I woke up this morning, my gal was gone Fell out my bedside, hung my head and moaned Went down to state and I couldn’t be satisfied Had those Railroad Blues I just too mean to cry

His despair was short-lived too for he met singer Dora Carr who “pestered” him until they teamed up and worked the T.O.B.A. circuit as Davenport And Carr. Laid off in New Orleans they met Ralph Peer who sent them to New York and the first recordings as a vocal duo for Okeh followed in 1924 with Clarence Williams on piano and it was to be a year before Cow Cow Davenport was to play piano on record. Even then the session for Gennett went unissued (possibly because of the Okeh contract?) and it was later that year that Williams allowed him to accompany Dora on Cow Cow Blues. One more Davenport And Carr duo the next year (see BDCD-6040) and the relationship with Dora and, it seems, Okeh broke up. A Paramount session in 1927 with new partner Ivy Smith had violin accompaniment from Leroy Pickett and cornet by B. T. Wingfield who was in Pickett’s band at the Apollo Theatre, Chicago but 1928 and ’29 were the boom years with over twenty sessions for Vocalion and Gennett with Ivy Smith, novelty numbers with his new discovery Sam Theard, accompaniments to Hound Head Henry, probably Jim Towel and Memphis Joe (BDCD-6041) and brilliant solo sessions in a rich variety of styles. Along the definitive Cow Cow Blues and State Street Jive, great classics of Blues piano, Alabama Strut and Atlanta Rag were consummate ragtime while Mootch Piddle hinted at his vaudeville comedy routines. Cow Cow Blues was his most influential number but Dirty Ground Hog was even recalled by John Lee Hooker at his 1952 Chess session. Constantly in demand Cow Cow Davenport must have thought the good times were going to last for ever. DOCD-5141
Tracklist :
1        Cow Cow Blues    2:53
2        Alabama Mistreater    3:01
3        Jim Crow Blues    3:07
4        Goin' Home Blues    3:18
5        New Cow Cow Blues    2:53
6        Stealin' Blues    2:38
7        Cow Cow Blues [Take 1]    3:05
8        Cow Cow Blues [Take 2]    3:10
9        State Street Jive [Take 1]    3:01
10        State Street Jive [Take 2]    3:04
11        Chimin' The Blues    3:11
12        Alabama Strut    2:52
13        Alabama Mistreater    2:53
14        Dirty Ground Hog (Blues)    2:51
15        Chimes Blues    3:19
16        Struttin' The Blues    3:07
17        Givin' It Away    2:28
18        Slow Drag    3:15
19        Atlanta Drag    3:11
20        That'll Get It    3:22
21        I'm Gonna Tell You In Front So You Won't Be Hurt Behind    3:24
22        State Street Blues    2:49
23        Back In The Alley    2:56
24        Mootch Piddle    2:53

COW COW DAVENPORT — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 2 • 1929 to 1945 | DOCD- 5142 (1994) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The second half of the Cow Cow Davenport story (the two Document CDs in this series have all of his recordings as a leader) features Davenport in a variety of settings: solo in 1929; sharing vocal duets with Sam Tarpley and Ivy Smith during 1929-30; sticking to vocalizing on a lone date from 1938; and performing eight selections (six of which are piano solos) in 1945 for what would be his final recordings. Although Cow Cow Davenport ended up quite destitute and forgotten, his music was generally quite joyous, and he was certainly a fine, underrated pianist. Among the more memorable selections on this recommended disc are "Mama Don't Allow No Easy Riders," "Everybody Likes That Thing," "The Mess Is Here," "Jeep Boogie" and "Hobson City Stomp." Scott Yanow

Abridged from this album’s original booklet notes. 1928 and ’29 were the good years for Cow Cow Davenport. He was on the staff of Vocalion Records, paid $ 85 a week as a composer, owned a large apartment at 35th & Wabash and had money in the bank. Further he claimed he was even owed $ 3000 royalties on his Paramount sessions. The road beckoned again and with Iva (possibly her correct name?) Smith he put together “Cow Cow’s Chicago Steppers” review. Sinking all his money into it but charging the bus to Paramount, against the owed royalties. He hired musicians, acrobats, comedians and showgirls and, on the eve of the Depression, took to the road. Kansas City was a successful first stop but when they moved down South to Dallas, “things began to break bad”. With no money left the show broke up in Mobile and Cow Cow, who’d pawned the bus several times, ended up in jail and with pneumonia. On release, six months later, arthritis set in and he lost the use of his right arm. Still trying, he joined up with Haeg’s Circus in Florida as a minstrel and eventually made his way to his sister’s in Cleveland. Gradually, he started to play again and when he met Peggy Taylor, a performer who did a dance with snakes and had a show in the city, Cow Cow couldn’t resist. “When you see shows, you always want to join them” he said. He introduced himself as a comedian and he was off on the road again. There was still trouble – this time with the snakes, police and, not surprisingly, landladies. Back in Cleveland, Peggy went to work for the city and Cow Cow kept writing Mayo Williams, now at Decca, who set up the 1938 session. With Sam Price and a bunch of New York musicians he recorded two earlier songs he’d written for Sam Theard; I Ain’t No Ice Man and That’ll Get It and, of course, the vocal version of Cow Cow Blues. (Incidentally the original “Iceman” was the precursor of Bo Carter‘s All Around Man.) Despite the good songs it was not a happy session. Cow Cow only sang (Teddy Bunn remembered Don’t You Loudmouth Me, and Davenport as a loudmouth too) and one can imagine Cow Cow Davenport the old-fashioned, once famous entertainer down on his luck, and desperate for a comeback but his brilliant piano-playing just a memory, trying to impress a slick New York house-band. Cow Cow Davenport was to play piano again, from time to time, in small clubs and jobs engineered by collectors, while working as a washroom attendant and on record for J. H. Alderton Jr‘s Comet label in 1945. A vocal session with Peggy for Rudi Blesh‘s Circle label remains unissued. His last years of poverty on Scoville Avenue in the heart of the Cleveland ghetto have a depressing familiar ring to them. Local jazz enthusiasts had persuaded A.S.C.A.R to admit Cow Cow as a member and there was a small royalty cheque each month – but not from “Cow Cow Boogie”, a pop song he’d signed away to Leeds Music for $500 in 1942. DOCD-5134
Tracklist :
1    Cow Cow Davenport–    We Gonna Rub It 3:12
Piano [Solo], Speech – Cow Cow Davenport
2    Cow Cow Davenport–    Texas Shout 3:10
Piano [Solo] – Cow Cow Davenport
3    Cow Cow Davenport–    Mama Don't Allow No Easy Riders 3:03
Piano [Solo] – Cow Cow Davenport
4    Cow Cow Davenport–    Slum Gullion Stomp 3:09
Piano [Solo] – Cow Cow Davenport
5    Memphis Sam And John–    It's Just All Right 3:00
Piano – Cow Cow Davenport
Vocals [Duet] – Cow Cow Davenport, Sam Tarpley

6    Memphis Sam And John–    Everybody Likes That Thing 3:04
Piano – Cow Cow Davenport
Vocals [Duet] – Ivy Smith, Sam Tarpley

7    Charlie Davenport And Ivy Smith–    He Don't Mean Me No Harm 3:02
Piano – Cow Cow Davenport
Vocals [Duet] – Cow Cow Davenport, Ivy Smith

8    Charlie Davenport And Ivy Smith–    You Got Another Thought Coming To You 2:45
Piano – Cow Cow Davenport
Vocals [Duet] – Cow Cow Davenport, Ivy Smith

9    Charlie Davenport And Ivy Smith–    Now She Gives It Away 2:52
Piano – Cow Cow Davenport
Vocals [Duet] – Cow Cow Davenport, Ivy Smith

10    Cow Cow Davenport–    Don't You Loud Mouth Me 2:33
Double Bass [Stand Up Bass] – Richard Fullbright
Flugelhorn – Joe Bishop
Piano – Sammy Price
Vocals – Cow Cow Davenport

11    Cow Cow Davenport–    I Ain't No Ice Man 2:43
Double Bass [Stand Up Bass] – Richard Fullbright
Flugelhorn – Joe Bishop
Piano – Sammy Price
Vocals – Cow Cow Davenport

12    Cow Cow Davenport–    The Mess Is Here 2:43
Double Bass [Stand Up Bass] – Richard Fullbright
Flugelhorn – Joe Bishop
Piano – Sammy Price
Vocals – Cow Cow Davenport

13    Cow Cow Davenport–    Railroad Blues 2:40
Double Bass [Stand Up Bass] – Richard Fullbright
Flugelhorn – Joe Bishop
Piano – Sammy Price
Vocals – Cow Cow Davenport

14    Cow Cow Davenport–    That'll Get It 2:35
Double Bass [Stand Up Bass] – Richard Fullbright
Flugelhorn – Joe Bishop
Piano – Sammy Price
Vocals – Cow Cow Davenport

15    Cow Cow Davenport–    Jump Little Jitterbug 2:54
Piano, Vocals – Cow Cow Davenport
16    Cow Cow Davenport–    Gotta Girl For Every Day Of The Week 3:06
Piano, Vocals – Cow Cow Davenport
17    Cow Cow Davenport–    Jeep Boogie 2:55
Piano – Cow Cow Davenport
18    Cow Cow Davenport–    Chimin' Away 2:52
Piano – Cow Cow Davenport
19    Cow Cow Davenport–    Hobson City Stomp 2:54
Piano – Cow Cow Davenport
20    Cow Cow Davenport–    Run Into Me 2:58
Piano – Cow Cow Davenport
21    Cow Cow Davenport–    "Cow Cow's" Stomp 3:03
Piano – Cow Cow Davenport
22    Cow Cow Davenport–    Gin Mill Stomp 2:52
Piano – Cow Cow Davenport

12.1.25

TAMPA RED — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 3 • 1929-1930 | DOCD-5075 (1991) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Document's Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 3 (1929-1930) wraps up a year in the life of Tampa Red, finding the Chicago bluesman recording a parade of blues, including "Chicago Moan Blues" and "Whiskey Drinkin' Blues." He also takes on several tracks of lighthearted hokum ("I Wonder Where My Easy Rider's Gone?," "Mama Don't Allow No Easy Riders Here"), along with the traditional standard "Corrine, Corrina."  Thom Owens

Abridged from this album’s original booklet notes. You might call it a period of transition, for after a fulminate start with their success of “It’s Tight Like That” and a period of follow-ups, the duo of Tampa Red and Georgia Tom gradually left the “hokum” genre and concentrated more and more on two easy things: the swinging, jazz-influenced up-tempo pieces like Easy Rider, and they got deeper and deeper into the real slow blues numbers, exploring several aspects of blues playing, and it is plain to hear that especially Tampa Red was getting more and more self confident in his playing refining his guitar style to a degree that he really became a champion, or in other words, a “guitar wizard”. The very first title included here, I Wonder Where My Easy Rider’s Gone (also known as “Easy Rider Blues), shows him as a leader of a small band that foreshadows his later “Chicago Five“. The flip side of this song was Come On Mama, Do That Dance it becomes evident that the swinging impetus of the two records comes not from the bass and washboard accompaniment, but from Tampa’s guitar. The same can be said for another track called Mama Don’t Allow to a degree that the listener doesn’t miss any rhythm instruments. Another side to Tampa Red‘s playing is revealed in the slow blues numbers such as Moanin’ Heart Blues, Chicago Moan Blues or I.C. Moan Blues. The moaning is not accomplished by his vocals, as is done by so many other blues singers, but by his guitar. Tampa is able to hold long notes with his slide, and then bend them in long melody bows. The two tracks Dying Mercy Blues and Black Hearted Blues have fine piano accompaniment, the later by Bill O’Bryant, a boogie specialist, plays the accompaniment. DOCD-5075
Tracklist :
1    Tampa Red And His Hokum Jug Band–    I Wonder Where My Easy Rider's Gone? 2:45
Bass – Bill Johnson
Guitar – Tampa Red
Piano – Georgia Tom Dorsey
Vocals – Frankie Jaxon
Washboard [Prob.] – Jasper Taylor

2    Tampa Red And His Hokum Jug Band–    Come On, Mama, Do That Dance 2:48
Bass – Bill Johnson
Guitar – Tampa Red
Piano – Georgia Tom Dorsey
Vocals – Frankie Jaxon
Washboard [Prob.] – Jasper Taylor

3    Tampa Red And Georgia Tom–    Friendless Blues 3:05
Bass [Poss.] – Bill Johnson
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red
Vocals, Piano – Georgia Tom

4    Tampa Red And His Hokum Jug Band–    Mama Don't Allow No Easy Riders Here 3:11
Kazoo, Jug – Unknown Artist
Piano [Prob.] – Cow Cow Davenport
Vocals – Frankie Jaxon
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red
Washboard [Prob.] – Jasper Taylor

5    Tampa Red And His Hokum Jug Band–    Saturday Night Scrontch 3:12
Guitar – Tampa Red
Kazoo, Jug – Unknown Artist
Piano [Prob.] – Cow Cow Davenport
Vocals – Frankie Jaxon
Washboard [Prob.] – Jasper Taylor

6    Tampa Red And Georgia Tom–    Mama Don't Allow No Easy Riders Here 2:53              
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red
Vocals, Piano – Georgia Tom
7    Tampa Red And Georgia Tom–    Strewin' Your Mess 2:48
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red
Vocals, Piano – Georgia Tom

8    Tampa Red "The Guitar Wizard"–    Dying Mercy Blues 3:07
Piano [Prob.] – Romeo Nelson
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red

9    Jenny Pope–    Whiskey Drinkin' Blues 3:12
Guitar – Tampa Red
Piano – Georgia Tom Dorsey
Vocals – Jenny Pope

10    Jenny Pope–    Doggin' Me Around Blues 3:04
Guitar – Tampa Red
Piano – Georgia Tom

11    Tampa Red–    Worried Man Blues 3:17
Piano – Georgia Tom
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red

12    Tampa Red–    Mrs. Baker's Blues 3:10
Piano – Georgia Tom
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red

13    Tampa Red And Georgia Tom–    Corrine Corrina 2:57
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red
Vocals, Piano – Georgia Tom

14    Georgia Tom, Tampa Red And Frankie Jaxon (The Black Hill Billies)–    Kunjine Baby 3:05
Vocals – Frankie Jaxon
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red
Vocals, Piano – Georgia Tom

15    Tampa Red–    That Stuff You Sell 2:17
Piano – Georgia Tom
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red

16    Tampa Red–    Station Time Blues 3:02
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red
17    Tampa Red "The Guitar Wizard"–    Moanin' Heart Blues 2:48
Guitar – Tampa Red
18    Tampa Red "The Guitar Wizard"–    Chicago Moan Blues 3:15
Guitar – Tampa Red
19    Tampa Red–    Black Hearted Blues 2:57
Piano – Bill O'Bryant
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red

20    Tampa Red And Georgia Tom–    But They Got It Fixed Right On 2:54
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red
Vocals, Piano – Georgia Tom

21    Tampa Red And Georgia Tom–    Corinne Corinna No. 2 2:43
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red
Vocals, Piano – Georgia Tom

22    Tampa Red And Georgia Tom–    The Dirty Dozen No. 2 3:14
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red
Vocals, Piano – Georgia Tom

23    Tampa Red And Georgia Tom–    I. C. Moan Blues 2:58
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red
Vocals, Piano – Georgia Tom

24    Tampa Red And Georgia Tom–    Cryin' Shame Blues 3:04
Vocals – Georgia Tom
Vocals, Guitar – Tampa Red

JAYBIRD COLEMAN & THE BIRMINGHAM JUG BAND — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order 1927-1930 | DOCD-5140 (1992) RM | FLAC (tracks), lossless

Jaybird Coleman wasn't one of the most distinctive early country-blues harmonica players, but he nevertheless made engaging, entertainin...