Everything about The Memphis Jug Band totally explained
The
Memphis Jug Band was an
American musical group in the late
1920s and early to mid
1930s. The band featured
harmonicas,
violins,
mandolins,
banjos, and
guitars, backed by
washboards,
kazoo, and
jugs blown to supply the bass; they played in a variety of musical styles. The band recorded almost a hundred titles.
Between
1927 and
1934 various
African-American musicians in the
Memphis, Tennessee area grouped around singer, songwriter, guitarist, and
harmonica player
Will Shade (also known as Son Brimmer or Sun Brimmer). The personnel of this
jug band varied from day to day, with Shade booking gigs and arranging recording sessions.
Members
Among the recorded members were
Will Shade (vocals, guitar, harmonica),
Charlie Burse (pronounced Bursey) (guitar, mandolin, and vocals), Charlie Nickerson (piano and vocals), Charlie Pierce (violin), Charlie Polk (jug), Tewee Blackman (vocals, guitar), “Hambone” Lewis (jug), Jab Jones (jug), Johnny Hodges/Hardge (piano), Ben Ramey (vocals and kazoo),
Casey Bill Weldon (guitar and vocals),
Memphis Minnie (guitar and vocals), Vol Stevens (vocals, violin, and mandolin), Milton Robie (violin), Otto Gilmore/Gilmer (drums and woodblocks), and Robert Burse (drums). Vocals were also provided by
Hattie Hart,
Memphis Minnie, Jennie Mae Clayton (Shade’s wife), and Minnie Wallace, with
Charlie Burse often contributing beautiful harmony parts to Shade’s lead vocal lines.
The attributed names of the group led by Will Shade on various recording labels vary quite a bit, but recent scholarly consensus has led writers to compile all of these works under the over-arching rubric of the Memphis Jug Band. In addition to that name, alternative names found on record labels include the Picaninny Jug Band, Memphis Sanctified Singers, the Carolina Peanut Boys, the Dallas Jug Band, the Memphis Sheiks, the Jolly Jug Band and recordings credited to the individual performers Hattie Hart, Minnie Wallace,
Casey Bill Weldon, Charlie Nickerson, Vol Stevens,
Charlie Burse, “Poor Jab” Jones, and
Will Shade, but actually performed with accompaniment by other Memphis Jug Band members.
The Memphis Jug Band played wherever they could find engagements, and
busked in local parks. They were popular among white as well as black audiences. Musically they were flexible, playing a mixture of
ballads,
dance tunes, knock-about novelty numbers, and
blues. Some of their songs mention
hoodoo magical beliefs, and some members also contributed to
gospel recordings, either uncredited or as part of the Memphis Sanctified Singers. In total, they made more than eighty recordings, first for
Victor Records, then—as the Picaninny Jug Band—for the Champion-
Gennett label, and finally for
OKeh Records. The
Victor recordings were made in Memphis and Atlanta,
Georgia between
1927 and
1930, the Champion-Gennetts in
Richmond, Indiana in August
1932, while the final sessions on Okeh were held in
Chicago in November
1934. By that time, their style of music was no longer in demand, and
Will Shade was no longer able to keep the musicians assembled as a group, although many of the individuals carried on working around Memphis until the
1940s.
In
1963 Will Shade recorded one last time with another Memphian, 79-year-old
Gus Cannon, former leader of
Cannon’s Jug Stompers, another popular
jug band. They recorded the album
Walk Right In, on
Stax Records all a result of the "Rooftoop Singers" having made his "Walk Right In" into a number one single.
Will Shade on jug and Milton Roby on washboard perform a series of thirteen traditional songs, plus Cannon's great hit "Walk Right In," including "Narration," "Kill It," "Salty Dog," "Going Around," "The Mountain," "Ol' Hen", "Gonna Raise A Ruckus Tonight," "Ain't Gonna Rain No More," "Boll-Weevil," "Come On Down To My House," "Make Me A Pallet On Your Floor," "Get Up In The Morning Soon," and "Crawdad Hole." The album is almost an audio documentary tour through different corners of Cannon's life and career that, ideally, might've run to several volumes.
Selected discography
| Year |
Title |
Genre |
Label |
| 2007 |
Memphis Jug Band: Double Album (Import) |
Ballad, Blues |
Airmail Japan |
|
| 2001 |
The Best of the Memphis Jug Band |
Ballad, Blues |
Yazoo |
|
Footnotes
Further Information
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