sweartotellthetruth

October 27, 2013

Blues and Rhythm Show 103 on 93.3 CFMU (Hamilton, Ontario)

Swear to Tell the Truth for Tuesday, October 29th, 2013 (1:00-2:30 pm)

We have not programmed a lot of white country blues week to week. Recently, we took a look at our composite playlist and recognized how little of this music we’d managed to fit into the show. We suggested last week we might do a feature on Western Swing but the feature we have put together would be better characterized as Old Timey, covering the period 1924-1935. White Country Blues serve some of the same functions as blues in the African-American tradition. They serve at times  as ironic commentary, humour, and even social protest. Some singers, like Jimmy Davis, Gene Autry and Cliff Carlisle, specialized, at least part of the time, in “blue” blues. White Country Blues also at times betrayed a fascination with African American music, speech and behaviour. Some white blues amounted to parody of black style, like the minstrel tradition, and, as with the minstrel tradition, some parody appeared to be sympathetic, even, at times, admiring, and some contemptuous and hateful. 

In the set we’ve prepared we haven’t sought out the songs that were topical or salacious. It’s a selection of blues that we hope will illustrate simply that blues was a significant part of Old Time or Hillbilly music, beside the ballads and breakdowns. 

On the Show

Lonnie Johnson – Bukka White – Big Chief Ellis  – Morgan Davis – Uncle Dave Macon – Frank Hutchinson – Dock Boggs – Charlie Poole & the North Carolina Ramblers – Riley Puckett – Holmes Brothers – and many others

Listen to the program at FM 93.3 in Hamilton or on CFMU online at cfmu.mcmaster.ca. The program will be available to stream or as a podcast until November 26th.

Contact Us

To reach us with comments or queries, write us at sweartotellthetruth@gmail.com.

You can also follow the program at sweartotellthetruth@nosignifying on Twitter.

Next week (November 5th)

Undetermined as of today. We’ll update.

Errors and Omissions

Last week (BRS 102), we played Curtis Jones, but we failed to mention that, like Memphis Slim and Eddie Boyd, Curtis Jones moved to Europe in the 1960s and made records there. He also made a well-received album for Delmark, in Chicago.

We experienced several skips on the CD track we played by Curtis Jones, “Bad Avenue Blues”. The CD players at the station are quite sensitive. We examined the surface of the disc to see a flaw or anything on the surface to cause the problem but couldn’t find the source of the malfunction.

cmc

 
 

October 21, 2013

Blues and Rhythm Show 102 on 93.3 CFMU (Hamilton, Ontario)

Swear to Tell the Truth for Tuesday, October 22nd, 2013 (1:00-2:30 pm)

This week, we have a feature devoted to piano blues of the 1930s, 1929-1941, to be precise. The end of the 1920s saw a recording trend towards piano-guitar duos but, by the end of the thirties, larger combos prevailed and, though several of the leading figures on records were piano players, the piano may seem to have been less important as a lead or solo instrument in blues than at the beginning of the decade.  At the same time, the piano was prominent as part of an ensemble of  accompanying instruments on records by Big Bill, Memphis Minnie, Bumble Bee Slim, Tampa Red and many others in the second half of the 1930s.

Most blues recording in this era was controlled by a handful of individuals employed by or contracted to record companies, who among themselves determined who made blues records and what combination of instruments would be used on recordings. Lester Melrose controlled blues recording at both at Victor-Bluebird and at Columbia’s various subsidiaries. We don’t know to what extent the combos who made records reflected the way music was heard live. We do know that the Harlem Hamfats are said to have been a studio group who performed together rarely, if ever, live. In twenty years, the phenomenon of live music recreating recordings would be well under way. That development was in its infancy in the 1930s but the men controlling the studios for the three big companies were already utilizing certain performers, including piano players,  over and over, as studio musicians. This practice produced a certain sameness and predictability to recording sessions but the system was overturned after the war by the rise of the many independent labels recording blues and R&B–even though some of these companies would adopt a similar approach to the majors.

Our feature will look at some of the piano players who appeared most often as solo artists or leaders as well as at some players who were usually employed as accompanists to other artists.

We’ll also play a couple of numbers by preachers who made records, some West Coast bluesmen who are not household names, and a few minutes of soul out of Memphis.

On the Show:

Elder Solomon Lightfoot Michaux – King Solomon –  Al King – Lee Green – Lucille Bogan – Lil Johnson – Curtis Jones – Barbara and the Browns – Rita Chiarelli

Listen to the program at FM 93.3 in Hamilton or on CFMU online at cfmu.mcmaster.ca. The program will be available to stream or as a podcast until November 19th.

Contact Us

To reach us with comments or queries, write us at sweartotellthetruth@gmail.com.

You can also follow the program at sweartotellthetruth@nosignifying on Twitter.

Next week (October 29th)

Undetermined as of today. We’ll update.

 cmc

October 14, 2013

Blues and Rhythm Show 101 on 93.3 CFMU (Hamilton, Ontario)

Swear to Tell the Truth for Tuesday, October 15th, 2013 (1:00-2:30 pm)

This week’s program begins with some blues, including several instrumentals. The second part of the show is devoted to gospel soloists, mostly between 1937 and around 1959.

The 1950s saw the proliferation of outstanding solo gospel singers on recordings and in live performances, singers like Mahalia Jackson, Brother Joe May, Bessie Griffin, Robert Anderson and others. Some of these performers usually recorded without vocal accompaniment; some often recorded with backing singers or choirs; and still others were members of vocal groups like the Caravans or the Roberta Martin Singers that featured the different members of the group as soloists. In fact, we are using the term simply for its convenience to identify gospel figures who have been recognized as solo performers rather more than they have as members of a particular group.

It’s probably because so many gospel acts have been quartets, groups or choirs that the distinction has been made but singers in all styles of gospel have begun their public careers singing solo in church or fronting a choir.

Records by solo gospel singers began not long after the first African-American quartets and groups were recorded, to the mid-1920s, but the emergence of Rosetta Tharpe and Mahalia Jackson in the years after World War II has the appearance of something new.

On the Show:

Downchild Blues Band – Earl Hooker –  Steve Strongman – Jimmy McCracklin – Gospel Soloists – Mahalia jackson – Georgia Peach – Brother joe May – Edna Gallmon Cooke – Alex Bradford

Listen to the program at FM 93.3 in Hamilton or on CFMU online at cfmu.mcmaster.ca. The program will be available to stream or as a podcast until November 12th.

Contact Us

To reach us with comments or queries, write us at sweartotellthetruth@gmail.com.

You can also follow the program at sweartotellthetruth@nosignifying on Twitter.

Next week (October 22nd)

Undetermined as of today. We’ll update.

Errors and Omissions

On last week’s program (BRS 100) we played “New Orleans Hop” by Monte Easter and His Orchestra. We failed to make mention of the fantastic tenor solos by Maxwell Davis, who may appear on more records played on Swear to Tell the Truth than any other artist and was the producer on as many records as he played on.

cmc

October 7, 2013

Blues and Rhythm Show 100 on 93.3 CFMU (Hamilton, Ontario)

Swear to Tell the Truth for Tuesday, October 8th, 2013 (1:00-2:30 pm)

This week will be our 100th original show. (We were absent a couple of times and the station played repeats.) Instead of any single theme, we’re going to survey the areas we cover on the program and, as always, we try to bring you music you aren’t likely to hear on any other program.

The emphasis on Swear to Tell the Truth falls upon the history of the music. There are other programs, including programs on CFMU, that place greater emphasis on contemporary blues and related music. We try to bring you an entire tradition, including the stuff on the margins. We like to play the classic recordings but we also like to bring you the less obvious tracks and things other programmers aren’t likely to bring to air.

The internet is changing the way music is distributed and disseminated but it remains the case that only some of the recorded history of the music is available to the public at any one time. Ace Records of Britain and Bear Family of Germany continue to reissue a great deal of music in definitive editions, and all of it properly licensed, but as large as their catalogues have become, there’s a limit to what they can make available and keep in print. Researchers and collectors continue to uncover music of the past and make it available but mainly to a specialist audience through “grey-market” labels. New material keeps on appearing but it is harder to find on albums with liner notes and session details, even as a lot of older albums have found a home on iTunes and other downloading sites. We have long passed the high point of major label reissue projects and a lot of what was available a decade ago is gone or consigned to digital downloads.

The internet has also made music available on YouTube and you can find both classic tracks and completely out-of the-way music on YouTube but it’s quite unpredictable and a very long way from being a comprehensive source.

We remember listening to Dave Booth (“Daddy Cool”) on CFNY and John Norris’ That Midnight Jazz on CBC, and other shows,  not just to hear music we knew about but to hear the music we didn’t know about and we think there should be places on radio today that serve that part of the audience that wants to dig a little deeper and find the hidden capillaries of blues, gospel and soul–as there should be for other forms of music. There are many more radio stations today than in the past and hundreds of blues shows but we think there is certainly room for more shows that delve into the history of blues, gospel, R&B and soul.

There’s a great irony in the fact that we know more today generally about blues than we do about the mainstream popular music of the day. How many people know about popular music giants of the nineteen tens to the thirties like Sophie Tucker, the early Bing Crosby, or Russ Columbo today, compared to those who know a bit about about Robert Johnson and Memphis Minnie? On the other hand, we think we the story of blues and gospel have been too much distorted by the perspective of today, with too little regard for the complexities and ambiguities of history.

To the extent that we are able to provide a narrative around the music we play, we want to make sure that it is the right narrative and not the clichėd, incurious,  and misleading story we often encounter. And we want to try to address questions about why and how blues, mostly an African-American creation, widely despised and denounced in their time, are important to us today. What is our relationship to the older music and people who created it and what do they mean to us today?

We try to address these questions on Swear to Tell the Truth and, more immediately, we try to understand the people who made and consumed this music as more than names on record labels and “good-time” or “hard-luck” caricatures.

On today’s program, some R&B, some blues, some gospel and some soul…

On the Show:

Monte Easter – Velma Nelson –  Calvin Boze – Pearl Woods – Fenton Robinson – Morgan Davis – Reverend Louis Overstreet – Sweet Inspirations – Sam Cooke – Majestics

Listen to the program at FM 93.3 in Hamilton or on CFMU online at cfmu.mcmaster.ca. The program will be available to stream or as a podcast until November 5th.

Contact Us

To reach us with comments or queries, write us at sweartotellthetruth@gmail.com.

You can also follow the program at sweartotellthetruth@nosignifying on Twitter.

Next week (October 15th)

We’ll include a feature on great gospel soloists in the program.

Upcoming programs

We will definitely be presenting special features on the King and Modern record labels. We also have plans to look at the Library of Congress recordings of the thirties and forties in some detail. We’ll continue to look at different eras in blues as reflected in the recordings of the time and also some artist profiles, including Memphis Minnie and Big Bill. We’re looking at a couple of Gospel label profiles–Peacock and VeeJay, for now. We’d also like to do something with Duke and Peacock‘s Houston-based R&B and soul recordings. At some point, we plan to begin a series of year-by-year surveys of R&B hits and significant recordings. And we’ll make sure we fit in some programs featuring post-war electric blues.

Errata

We sometimes make mistakes on the air and we’ve decided to correct any mistakes we catch in this space.

Last week, we indicated both that Gene Phillips recorded for Modern in September, 1945, and that he first recorded for the label within a week of a September, 1946 session recorded by Johnny Moore’s Three Blazers, in September, 1946. Obviously, the two assertions contradict each other and one assertion was incorrect. The session took place in September, 1946, and, as we mentioned, appeared not to be issued immediately.

Twoo weeks ago, we mentioned Frederick Knight‘s recording of “I’ve Been Lonely For Too Long”, in reference to the song “Hard Times by Johnny B. Moore. Knight recorded the song for Stax, not for Chimneyville, as we suggested.

cmc

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