Scheherezade entertained the Prince with tales over 1001 nights. You and me have 1001 blues ...
Tuesday, 12 July 2011
Tale #27.Drive Em Down from the Crescent City to Halifax
Blues artist Willie Hall was better known as "Drive 'Em Down" and though he never recorded, he left a legacy in the melody called "Junkers Blues". It was a story of drugs and a harsh existence in the notorious Angola Prison. The distinctive riff became part of the New Orleans musical tradition picked up by Champion Jack Dupree in 1940 for a session released by the Okeh label. It was certainly recognised as the first recorded version of this famous piece and it inspired Fats Domino's debut "The Fat Man" in 1949.
Since then you can hear the same motif in "Lawdy Miss Clawdy" by Lloyd Price and Professor Longhair's "Tipitina" and countless other variations. Though Jack was the quintessential New Orleans barrelhouse player, he moved to Halifax, married a Yorkshire lass and got a major feature in the Sunday Times Colour supplement.
Our STAR BLUES playlist on 10th July took the track from the set of Champion Jack's Okeh recordings and raritiess issued by Columbia/Legacy in the early 1990s.
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