sweartotellthetruth

February 23, 2016

Blues and Rhythm Show 218 on 93.3 CFMU (Hamilton, Ontario)

Swear to Tell the Truth for Tuesday, February 23rd (1:00 to 2:30pm)

Moving about between themes this week. We have some Soul, some Gospel, R&B from Maxwell Davis as performer, producer and band-leader, Delta blues, 1930s jug band music, and a couple of items from the Blues Revival.

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Next week, our one and only annual fundraising program. We hope that you’ll tune in and help CFMU and The Blues & Rhythm Show the one time in the year that we appeal to our listeners for support. If you’re not in the Hamilton area and you stream the program from the CFMU website, it’s very easy to make a contribution. Just go to Promotions and follow the simple instructions.

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On the Show

Chris Kenner – Maxwell Davis Swingtet – Patti Anne – Roosevelt Sykes live – Son House & friends – Jack Kelly’s South Memphis Jug Band – Walter “Wolfman” Washington – Willie Walker – Radio Four – Edna Gallmon Cooke – and others

Listen to the program at FM 93.3 in Hamilton or on CFMU online at cfmu.msumcmaster.ca. The program will be available to stream or as a podcast until March 21st.

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 (March 1st)

CFMU’s Fundraising Week is coming up! Our fundraising program will be nest Tuesday–March 1st.

cmc

 

February 16, 2016

Blues and Rhythm Show 217 on 93.3 CFMU (Hamilton, Ontario)

Swear to Tell the Truth for Tuesday, February 16th (1:00 to 2:30pm)

As of last Wednesday we had some ideas but nothing like a plan for this week’s program but we received an inquiry about a program we did two years ago and we found that we couldn’t furnish a copy of the show to the individual who contacted us.  So, we decided to rework and revise that original show and present the revised program on the air this week.

 Subject of that program was the Oakland record man, label owner, producer, songwriter, Bob Geddins. Bob Geddins was an African American from Marlin, Texas. He developed an early interest in blues and learned to play piano and some chords on guitar but didn’t pursue a career as a musician. Geddins hopped a freight with a friend, found his way went to L.A. in 1933 and later moved to Oakland where, alongside various other jobs  he operated a radio repair shop and a record store. He saw that there was a lot of African-American musical talent and activity in the Bay Area and the surrounding communities but no record companies or studios. Beginnng in 1945 and for twenty years or so, Bob Geddins produced, engineered recordings by local gozpel, blues and R&B acts. He even for a time pressed records himself on steam-driven equipment he designed.  Many of the records he produced appeared on a series of labels he owned and operated. Still more were leased or sold to larger independent labels, like Modern and Aladdin. In 1970, his enormous contribution to blues recording began to be recognized when Chris Strachwitz issued the album Oakland Blues on his Arhoolie label.  Earlier, when he was establishing the Arhoolie label, Strachwitz had sought out Bob Geddins for advice about the process of making records. 

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Cava-tone, Downtown, Big Town, Irma, Veltone, Bay-Tone, Art-Tone, Carter and Wax are the names of labels operated by Bob Geddins over the years. Hw would shut down one label and start another when relationships with suppliers, distributors and lother labels became problematic. Other records produced by Bob Geddins were leased or sold to bigger labels. He produced a great many records, a and range of music much larger than what we can present in a 90 minute program. There are some recordeings that were never issued, as well, but it appears that he lost track of them after he wound down the business for the most part in the mid 1960s. 

It’s hard to imagine what blues on record from Caifornia, and the Bay area, in particular, would look like without Bob Geddins. So many artists began their recording career or advanced it because of his efforts in the business. At the same time, operating a record company and staying in business was a constant struggle for Geddins who never managed to adequately capitalize his successive ventures in the record industry and was taken advantage of on more than one occasion. His successes in the record business were undermined by the deals he made and he was forced to make deals to get successful recordings he’d produced pressed and distributed. 

Detailed information isn’t easy to come by. The discographical information is fairly complete although details are missing for many sessions and recording dates and release dates appear to be jumbled because records are missing. Not too much has been written about Geddins. We went back to  Tom Mazzolini’s Living Blues interview with geddins from 1977 and the section about Oakland Blues in the book California Soul, but the best source of information is a fairly detailed article about Bob Geddins from 1997 by Opal Louis Nations. (Look for it in the website under his name holding his articles about secular music..)

As well as reworking our notes for the show, we’ve added some tracks, including a couple more of the hits Bob Geddins produced, and subtracted others 

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On the Show

King Solomon – Pilgrim Travelers – Lowell Fulson – Bob Geddins’ Cavaliers – Jimmy McCracklin – Roy Hawkins – Jimmy Wilson – Willie B. Huff – Big Mama Thornton – Sugar Pie De Santo – Tiny Powell

Listen to the program at FM 93.3 in Hamilton or on CFMU online at cfmu.msumcmaster.ca. The program will be available to stream or as a podcast until March 14th.

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 (February 23rd)

TBA.

CFMU’s Fundraising Week is coming up! Our fundraising program will be February 1st.

 

cmc

February 9, 2016

Blues and Rhythm Show 216 on 93.3 CFMU (Hamilton, Ontario)

Swear to Tell the Truth for Tuesday, February 9th  (1:00 to 2:30pm)

This show sits in the Tuesday schedule of CFMU so we can’t very well ignore Mardi Gras. Of course, as the beginning of Lent, the date that Mardi Gras falls upon depends upon the date of Easter Sunday. We did actually miss one Mardi Gras in the past four years because it fell in the same week that the station does fundraising.

 

Mardi Gras is inextricably tied to the Christian calendar of observance but Carnival has not always enjoyed the support of the church, or of secular authorities, for that matter. A day or days of excess before a period of abstinence has not always been seen as desirable by religious or civil authorities. As well, the rites of Mardi Gras include pre-Christian elements and Mardi Gras puts a spotlight on the distinctions between rich and poor. According to Samuel Kinser in his book Carnival American Style, African-Americans sense of Mardi Gras has been “opportunistic”. His choice of words is perhaps unfortunate but we guess that he means  that Mardi Gras was an opportunity for African Americans in New Orleans to break loose from the normal restrictions of prevailing social and racial norms and of the usual enforcement of law without having much concern over the religious significance of Carnival.

Mardi Gras in New Orleans was like two parallel but still inter-related events, white and black, each with their own symbols and traditions. Part of the black tradition is reflected in the songs of the Mardi Gras Indian bands which have to do with battles fought between the bands in the years before the authorities took measures to control and limit the combat. 

On our program, we’ll be playing some of the R&B and funk connected to the tradition of the Indian bands as part of a selection of New Orleans jazz, blues, R&B, gospel and parade music. 

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We’re playing music recorded between 1946 and 2012 for this Mardi Gras program.

On the Show

 

Roy Byrd (Professor Longhair) – Clarence Garlow & His Band – Sugar Boy Crawford – Lizzie Miles – Wild Tchoupitoulas – James Booker – Zion Harmonizers – Hot 8 Brass Band – Raymond Anthony Myles Singers – Allen Toussaint & the Stokes

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Listen to the program at FM 93.3 in Hamilton or on CFMU online at cfmu.msumcmaster.ca. The program will be available to stream or as a podcast until March 7th.

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 (February 16th)

TBA. 

CFMU’s Fundraising Week is coming up! Our fundraising program will be February 1st.

cmc

February 2, 2016

Blues and Rhythm Show 215 on 93.3 CFMU (Hamilton, Ontario)

Swear to Tell the Truth for Tuesday, February 2nd (1:00 to 2:30pm)

The history of classic Rhythm & Blues has been written around the narratives of the various record labels that featured the music, especially the great R&B independents.  Of course, the music existed and thrived apart from the recorded product and the studios that produced the records but few places received the kind of attention that the city of Newark did in the book Swing City, so we don’t have a broad picture of classic Rhythm & Blues apart from what took place in the recording studios. Specialist magazines have provided detailed bios of some of the performers but there are full-length biographies of only a few figures–Louis Jordan, Dinah Washington,  Wynonie Harris. 

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The stories of the record labels depend a great deal upon the company accounts kept by the label-owners, upon session details , correspondence and, where available the acetates and tapes that have survived.  They depend as well on the availability of the label operators and other principals, producers, arrangers, sales-people. Art Rupe provided information about his Specialty label and Ace Records gleaned information about Modern-RPM-Kent when they leased and later purchased the catalogue and assets of the label. In the case of Aladdin Records, we have the details in the blues and gospel discographies but we looked in different places for further information and came up empty.

Our survey covers the years 1945 to 1951, years in which the Aladdin flourished as an independent specializing in R&B.  We know that the label owners, Eddie, Leo and Ira Mesner, operated a record store, The Philharmonic Music store in Los Angeles. They had money to begin with and the label reported 1.5 million dollars in sales for 1945, according to John Broven. One artist described the Mesners as “gamblers” but we don’t know how to evaluate that observation. The label was originally called Philo but the Philco Company threatened legal action and the name was changed to Aladdin. The label did well into the through to 1950 but there was a slowdown at the beginning of the new decade. How well the label adapted toe changes in the record market after the early fifties is something we we can’t say at this point but Aladdin is supposed to have been the leading R&B label between the years 1948 and 1952. 

Something that was noticeable to us in putting this show together was the large role of Maxwell Davis. Davis was present as a player on many of the records we selected for the program, identified as bandleader on several, and likely the arranger and, effectively, if not in name,  the producer on much of what was produced in Aladdin’s studio.  According to Dave Penny, in 1948 he signed a contract with Aladdin that gave him the title of session musician/arranger/musical/director, roles he’d been filling informally up to then free-lancing at what looked to be every Coast  independent R&Blabel. His influence on R&B recording on the West Coast was huge because he played a similar role with just about every label, including large independents Specialty and Modern-RPM-Kent. A three-CD survey of his work, entitled Wailin’ Daddy is part of series called Architects of Rock ‘n’ Roll. Maxwell, Davis, Architect of Rhythm & Blues might be right.                     

 On the Show:

Jay McShann’s Kansas City Stompers – Johnny Moore’s Three Blazers – Helen Humes – Jo Jo Adams – Effie Smith – Jimmy “Baby Face” Lewis – The Rockets – Joe Turner – Little Miss Cornshucks – Robins – Amos Milburn – a.o.

Listen to the program at FM 93.3 in Hamilton or on CFMU online at cfmu.msumcmaster.ca. The program will be available to stream or as a podcast until February 28th.

Image result for driftin' blues philo label photos                                 

 The Aladdin Records Story

 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 (February 9th)

Mardi Gras

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