Roadhouse Blues                                                           May 1, 2018  
Dear John,
The one and only Sonny Boy Williamson would have celebrated his 104th birthday yesterday. The iconic Bluesman wrote a slew of songs we've all heard throughout our Blues journey and I'm sure many would be surprised he wrote them. "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl" comes to mind. It's a long list.
Look at the Yucca Tap Room poster for this weekend! Helluva show on tap for your Saturday afternoon.
Don't forget to make your plans for the next PBS fundraiser on May 27. If we ever needed your support we need it now.
And after that it's the Flagstaff Blues & Brews gig. Debbi and Jennifer Grogan have built  this show into a major event on the Blues festival calendar. Keep Debbi in your thoughts as she struggles with major medical problems.
Not an overpowering calendar for this week but there's still plenty of folks to see and hear.Get out and getcha some!
And hug someone you haven't hugged in a while. You'll feel good.
Sincerely,
Jim Crawford, PBS

by Dan Morris - 2012

On a hilltop, under an oak in southwest Madison County, a tombstone is adorned with harmonicas and coins left by visitors.  Aside from songbirds and gusts of wind that rustle the leaves, it is a quiet place, far removed from the boisterous nightclubs of south Chicago in the 1940s.  John Lee Curtis "Sonny Boy" Williamson is buried beneath that stone, but his legend lives on in the world of blues music. He made his name in Chicago as a musician, singer and songwriter and is regarded as the first great blues harmonica player.  Sonny Boy was born 100 years ago today near his grave. Artists still record his songs and at-tempt to duplicate his magic with a harmonica.
He was 34 and enjoying another nationwide hit with his recording of "Shake the Boogie" when he was murdered in Chicago in 1948.His wife, Lacey Belle Davidson, brought him home, granting the request he made known in a verse of one of his songs: "I want my body buried in Jackson, Tennessee."
William "Billy Boy" Arnold was 12 when Sonny Boy died. Hearing the news was the most shocking moment of his young life.
"I rang the doorbell of his apartment house on Giles Street here in Chicago," Arnold said. "He lived on the second floor. A lady stuck her head out of a window and asked who I was looking for. I said, 'Sonny Boy.' She said, `Oh, baby, ain't you heard? He got killed.'"
"I was so sad," Arnold said. "Sonny Boy was my buddy. He was going to show me how to play the harmonica like he did."
Arnold had heard Sonny Boy's records and was in love with the music. He got a harmonica and tried to play like his idol. When he discovered that Sonny Boy lived nearby, he recruited a cousin and friend to go with him to try to meet Sonny Boy. They rang the doorbell, and Sonny Boy answered.
"We had never seen him, and we said, `We want to see Sonny Boy.' He said, 'I'm him. Come on up.'"
He led the boys to his apartment, introduced them to some house guests and asked how he could help them. Arnold asked Sonny Boy, "How do you make the harmonica go, 'Wow, wow, wow?'"
Sonny Boy laughed and said, "You have to choke it." Then he showed Arnold how to "bend the notes," and Arnold went home and practiced. A few days later he returned.  Sonny Boy hooked up his amp and mike and let me play along with the record 'Sugar Gal.' That was one of his hits," Arnold said. "He laughed and seemed to get a kick out of me wanting to play like him. He told his guests, 'He's going to be better than me.' 
"He was real nice to me, and I couldn't believe it when I went back to his house the third time and they told me he was killed. He was the first to make the harp a lead instrument in blues mu-sic. He could sing and play that harp without missing a beat. All the guys who came after him didn't have the talent he had."  Arnold cherished the brief time he spent with his mentor and kept working on his skills. He became "Billy Boy" Arnold and a famous Chicago blues harmonica performer in his own right. He is 78 and still plays today, most recently in Spain.
Sonny Boy probably saw himself in Arnold because Sonny Boy began his love affair with the harmonica when he was 11.  His mother, Nancy Utley, gave him his first harmonica for Christmas. He taught himself how to play, and friends said he quickly learned how to make the instrument squall and sound like a pack of hounds.
His father, Rafe Williamson, died when he was a baby. His stepfather, Willie Utley, died during World War II.  The family attended Blairs Chapel CME Church, which was founded in 1881 about a mile off Steam Mill Ferry Road. It relocated to its present location on Steam Mill Ferry in 1971. Sonny Boy began his musical career singing at church in a quartet named The Four Lamb Jubilee. But his harmonica was not allowed at church.
Word spread about his talent, and he began performing as a teenager at regional shows with bluesmen such as Sleepy John Estes and Yank Rachell. That led to Memphis, St. Louis and Chicago. He married Lacey Belle in Madison County on Nov. 13, 1937, and they soon moved to Chicago where Sonny Boy recorded for RCA's Bluebird label.
His first recording session produced classics such as "Good Morning Little School Girl," "Sugar Mama Blues" and "Bluebird Blues." From 1937 to 1947, he recorded more than 120 songs for RCA. "Good Morning Little School Girl" is among the most recorded blues songs in history. One of the verses says:
"Now, you be my baby, mm, come on an' be my baby, mm. I'll buy you a diamond, I'll buy you a diamond ring. Well, if you don't be my little woman, then I won't buy you a doggone thing."
Sonny Boy's material has been recorded by dozens of musicians, including Rod Stewart, Van Morrison, The Yardbirds, The Grateful Dead, John Lee Hooker and Muddy Waters. He often wrote and sang about home, such as in "Shannon Street Blues," in which he refers to the street in downtown Jackson and to his wife, Lacey.
"I went down on Shannon Street, now to buy some alcohol," he moaned. "Lacey tells me, papa, papa, well you ain't no good at all...You don't make me happy, so long as you fool with this alcohol.'"
In typical blues tradition, Sonny Boy wrote about women, booze and empty pockets, bill collectors, welfare and even his old refrigerator in "Frigidaire Blues." He was the first to cup both the microphone and harmonica in his hands to achieve a unique amplification and sound. It was said that he put pillows under his feet during recording sessions to muffle the sound of his shoes as they tapped to the beat
Blues historians unanimously say that Sonny Boy was the most influential harmonica player of his generation. He was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in 1980.
"He influenced almost every blues harmonica player who came after him," said David Evans, a University of Memphis professor who is a noted specialist in American folk and popular music. "He pioneered in treating the harmonica as a second voice, answering and interacting with the vocal. Previously, most harmonica players simply played interlude choruses or harmonica solo numbers...He was highly respected and had many imitators of both his harmonica and vocal style."
Sonny Boy was at the top of his profession and would have built upon his reputation if he had lived. David Evans thinks "he would have been a major figure in the Chicago blues scene of the 1950s and 1960s," who probably would have toured internationally and collaborated with blues-rock stars of the 1960s. The amazing talent, no doubt, would have also composed more tunes that would come to be regarded as standards of the genre.
But the brutal end came suddenly for Sonny Boy.
On June 1, 1948, Sonny Boy Williamson died from a vicious beating after a performance at the Plantation Club near his home. The official police report indicates he was robbed and beaten as he walked home. 
"Billy Boy" Arnold, however, claims to know the real story.  He claimed that the assault "rumor...got started to cover up what really happened," and a booking agent told him a tale that he got from a "musician who saw what happened."  After his engagement at the Plantation Club, Sonny Boy went over to a private residence for its after-hours whiskey and games of chance. He won a great deal of money from several unfortunate, dangerous gamblers. "The musician said that the guy running the joint went and got three or four guys and jumped on Sonny Boy to get the money back," according to Arnold.  The owner of the home and I guess nobody wanted to get involved. They took him to his house and left him at the door." 
"Sonny Boy's wife told me that when she found him leaning against the door, he told her he had won more money that night than he ever had in his life," Arnold said. "But there was no money on him. She helped him up the stairs to their apartment, but he passed out."
An ambulance was called, and he was taken to a hospital, where he died at 6 a.m.
His death notice appeared in The Jackson Sun on Sunday, June 6, 1948. It was buried on page 15 among the classified ads under the heading "Colored Dead." Three short paragraphs said nothing about his musical career.
For 42 years, Sonny Boy's remains rested unnoticed on top of the hill at the old Blairs Chapel Cemetery. The site was unmarked except for a small, metal rectangle that funeral homes place at graves for a temporary indicator. Kudzu blanketed the hill, and few challenged the fallen trees and thick brush to visit the area's graves.
That changed in 1990 when Michael Baker, Judy Pennel and Jack Wood of the Jackson-Madison County Library got involved. Realizing the significance of Sonny Boy's contributions to the nation's blues music, they researched his life, wrote articles and gained local and national support.
That led to the placement of a red granite headstone at Sonny Boy's grave and a Tennessee State Historical Marker at the intersection of Tenn. 18 and Caldwell Road near Malesus Park in Jackson.
On June 1, 1990, the 42nd anniversary of his death, the city held a Sonny Boy Williamson Day to celebrate his life and dedicate the new markers. A blues festival evolved on Shannon Street that saluted Sonny Boy and lasted about 20 years.
The downtown library location has a display of Sonny Boy memorabilia in recognition of his 100th birthday. And Sonny Boy's music is plentiful on the Internet. You can Google his name and find him singing many of his songs on YouTube.
But be certain to use the name Sonny Boy Williamson I to distinguish between him and Sonny Boy Williamson II. Alex Miller from Mississippi, another blues harmonica player, took the name Sonny Boy Williamson and used it professionally after the first Sonny Boy's death.
Baker, who often visits Sonny Boy's grave, said he is glad the library pushed to recognize the blues musician.
"It was a great project to do and one of the things I'm most proud of in my career," Baker said. "It's gratifying even today when school kids come in to do research on Sonny Boy for term papers
"He was a phenomenal musician, singer and writer, so he had it all and was at the top of his game when he died. The man did a lot in 34 years."
In This Issue



Out & About
Tuesday, May 1
Rocket 88s JAM, 6 p.m., Last Stop, Phoenix
 
Carvin Jones, 8 p.m., Yucca Tap Room, Tempe
 
Wednesday, May 2
Paris James, 6 p.m., D'Vine Wine p.m., Mesa
 
Carvin Jones, 7 p.m., Lucky Break, Tempe
 
Bad News Blues Band, Every Wed., 9:30 p.m., Chicago Bar, Tucson
 
Thursday, May 3
Mikel Lander, 8 p.m., Culinary Dropout, Tempe
 
Hans Olson (EVERY THURSDAY), 6 p.m., Handlebar, Apache Junction
 
Arizona Blues Project, 8 p.m., Harold's, Cave Creek
 
Friday, May 4
Mike Eldred Trio, 9 p.m., Rhythm Room, Phoenix
 
JC & the Juke Rockers, 7 p.m., Handlebar, Apache Junction
 
Blues Review Band, 8 p.m., All American, Fountain Hills
 
Paris James, 6 p.m., D'Vine Wine p.m., Mesa
 
Front Page Blues Band, 7 p.m., Windsock, Lounge, Prescott
 
Saturday, May 5
Adriana Marie & Her Groovecutters, 9 p.m., Rhythm Room, Phoenix
 
Smokestack Lightning/Mike Morrow & the Blue Souleros/Pop Top, 1 p.m., Yucca Tap Room, Tempe
 
JC & the Juke Rockers, 8 p.m., Rogue Tomato, Glendale
 
Hoodoo Casters, 7 p.m., Westwood Tap, Glendale
 
Blues Review Band, 7 p.m., JD's Lounge, Scottsdale
 
Leon J, 1 p.m., Javelina Leap, Sedona
 
Carvin Jones, 2 p.m., Roadhouse, Cave Creek
 
Paris James, 6 p.m., D'Vine Wine p.m., Chandler
 
Front Page Blues Band, 7 p.m., Eagle's Nest, Prescott
 
Sunday, May 6
Rocket 88s JAM, 6 p.m., Chopper John's, Phoenix
 
True Flavor Blues, NOON , Copper Star, Phoenix
 
Monday, May 7
 
Weekly Jams
Sunday
Bourbon Jack's JAM w/Kody Herring, 6 p.m., Chandler

NEW JAM! Sir Harrison, every other Sunday, The Windsock, Prescott

MONDAY 
Bam Bam & Badness Open JAM, 9 p.m., Char's, Phoenix

Weatherford Hotel JAM, 6:30 p.m., Flagstaff 

TUESDAY
JAM Sir Harrison, 9 p.m., Char's, Phoenix

Rocket 88s, 6 p.m., The Last Stop (Old Hideaway West), Phoenix

Gypsy's Bluesday Night JAM, 7 p.m. Pho Cao, Tempe

Tailgaters JAM, 7 p.m., Glendale

WEDNESDAY
Rocket 88s, 7 p.m., Chopper John's, Phoenix
 
Tool Shed JAM Party, 7 p.m., Draw 10, Phoenix
 
THURSDAY
Tool Shed JAM Party, 7 p.m., Steel Horse Saloon, Phoenix
 
Jolie's Place JAM w/Adrenaline, 9 p.m., Chandler
 
Brad's Place JAM, 7 p.m., Ahwatukee (Every other Week)

Friday

Saturday 
Bumpin' Bud's 2nd & 4th Saturdays JAM, 7 p.m., Marc's,  Glendale 
Moved? Changed email addresses?
 
Please let us know of any changes in your address, email, or phone number so we can keep you informed about the Blues community in Arizona.
 
Email us at: info@phoenixblues.org  
or write to:
Phoenix Blues Society
P.O. Box 36874
Phoenix, Arizona 85067
GOT BLUES?
If you are a Blues musician, a group, or a club that features Blues music, and would like to be listed, please send your info to info@phoenixblues.org and we'll be happy to list your event in our weekly Out & About section of the newsletter




 

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