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Archive for April, 2011

Eddie “Guitar” Burns

Eddie "Guitar" Burns

Eddie “Guitar” Burns (born February 8, 1928, Belzoni, Mississippi) is an American Detroit blues guitarist, harmonica player, singer and songwriter. His career has spanned seven decades, and in terms of Detroit bluesmen, Burns is deemed second only in stature to John Lee Hooker.

Burn’s father was a sharecropper who performed as a singer in medicine shows, although Burns was mainly raised by his grandparents. He was self taught in the harmonica and made his first guitar.

Initially influenced by exposure to the music of Sonny Boy Williamson I and Big Bill Broonzy, Burns relocated from the Mississippi delta via Waterloo, Iowa to Detroit in 1948.   Originally Burns excelled playing the harmonica, and his debut single, “Notoriety Woman” (1948), featured this ability accompanied by the guitar playing of John T. Smith. Burns tells how he met John Lee Hooker here: “Well see, John T. and me was playing at a house party this particular Saturday night. We was in Detroit Black Bottom…so Hooker was on his way home from somewhere – I guess he was at some other party, house parties used to be real plentiful here. Hooker heard it, knocked at the door, and they let him in. He introduced himself and he sat down and played some with us. And then, he liked the way I was blowing harmonica…he had a session coming up on Tuesday, this was on a Saturday. And so then, he wanted to know if I wanted to do this session with him on Tuesday. And I told him, yes, naturally. So that’s how John T. and me went down to cut for Hooker. When we got through the man wanted to know what I had. I had one song, “Notoriety Woman.” And so he said I’d need two, and I sat there and made up “Papa’s Boogie.”"   However, by the following year Burns was playing guitar accompaniment on recordings by John Lee Hooker.

Eddie "Guitar" Burns

Billed at times as Big Daddy, Little Eddie, or Big Ed, Burns performed regularly in Detroit nightclubs, but had to supplement his earnings by working as a mechanic.  In those early years Burns’s own recording was not prolific with just a handful of tracks released on several labels. His output veered from Detroit blues to R&B as the 1960s progressed, when he issued a number of singles in that decade on Harvey Fuqua’s Harvey Records label.  Now permanently billed as Eddie “Guitar” Burns, he appeared on Hooker’s album The Real Folk Blues (1966).

Jimmy Burns and Eddie “Guitar” Burns

In 1972 Burns undertook a European tour and recorded his debut album, Bottle Up & Go in London, England.  This was followed by an appearance at the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival in 1973. Two years later Burns toured Europe again, this time as part of the billing of ‘American Blues Legends’.   Burns self penned track, “Orange Driver”, was recorded by The J. Geils Band (Hotline, 1975).  In August 1976, Burns performed his song “Bottle Up & Go” live on the British television program, So It Goes.

In 1989 Burns released an album titled Detroit on Blue Suit Records, where his ability on both guitar and harmonica were displayed.  In February 1992, Burns appeared alongside Jack Owens, Bud Spires, and Lonnie Pitchford at the seventh annual New York Winter Blues Festival.  By 1994, Burns had been granted the Michigan Heritage Award.

His brother, Jimmy Burns, is a soul blues musician, who lives in Chicago, and played guitar on Burns 2002 album Snake Eyes.  Burns most recent offering was Second Degree Burns, released when he was 77 years of age.

SHE KEEPS ME GUESSING

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ORANGE DRIVER

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TREAT ME LIKE I TREAT YOU

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HARD HEARTED WOMAN

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THE THING TO DO

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JINGLIN’ BABY




New From: $8.99 In Stock
Release date January 26, 2006.
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Today in Rock Roots History – April 30

  • On this date in 1923, American Jazz Bassist, Percy Heath of The Modern Jazz Quartet was born
  • On this date in 1933, American Musician, Singer and Songwriter, Willie Nelson was born
  • On this date in 1934, British Singer/Songwriter, Jerry Lordan was born
  • On this date in 1941, American Musician and Composer, Johnny Farina of Santo and Johnny was born
  • On this date in 1943, American Singer, Bobby Vee was born
  • On this date in 1953, American Singer and Bassist, Merrill Osmond of The Osmonds was born
  • On this date in 1966, American Folk Singer, Richard Fariña died
  • On this date in 1982, American Music Journalist, Lester Bangs died
  • On this date in 1983, American Blues Musician, Muddy Waters died
  • On this date in 2007, American Singer Zola Taylor of The Platters died
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April Stevens

April Stevens

April Stevens (born Carol LoTempio, April 29, 1936, Niagara Falls, New York) is an American singer.

She has recorded since she was 16 years old. Her most popular solo recording was her RCA Victor recording of “I’m in Love Again” (music and lyrics by Cole Porter). Accompanied by an orchestra arranged and conducted by Henri René, Stevens’ recording peaked at No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in 1951.

Stevens returned to the U.S. chart in 1959 with the song “Teach Me Tiger”, which caused a minor uproar for its sexual suggestiveness and consequently did not receive airplay on many radio stations. The song peaked at No. 86 on the Billboard Hot 100. Stevens’ recording of this song is often erroneously accredited to Marilyn Monroe.

April Stevens and Nino Tempo

She is perhaps best known for her 1963 Atco Records recording of “Deep Purple” (music by Peter DeRose and lyrics by Mitchell Parish) with her brother Antonino LoTempio (singing under the stage name Nino Tempo). A standard song that Larry Clinton and His Orchestra and band vocalist Bea Wain had popularized in 1939, the Stevens and Tempo version reached No.1 on the Billboard chart in November 1963. The song won the 1964 Grammy Award for Best Rock and Roll Recording. It sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold disc.

They also enjoyed a 1964 follow-up hit in the U.S. with the standard song “Whispering” (music by Vincent Rose and lyrics by Richard Coburn and John Schonberger). The recording, which had an arrangement similar to their recording of “Deep Purple”, reached No. 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. They also had chart success with “All Strung Out”, which reached No. 26 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1966.

TRICKS OF THE TRADE

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DON’T DO IT

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WANTING YOU

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DO IT AGAIN

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TEACH ME TIGER

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DEEP PURPLE

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AW C’MON




Release date May 2, 2010.
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Today in Rock Roots History – April 29

  • On this date in 1899, American Jazz Pianist and Bandleader, Duke Ellington was born
  • On this date in 1915, American Singer, Donald Mills of The Mills Brothers was born
  • On this date in 1922, Belgian Jazz Guitarist and Harmonica Player, Toots Thielemans was born
  • On this date in 1928, American Singer, Carl Gardner of The Coasters was born
  • On this date in 1929, American Percussionist, Ray Barretto was born
  • On this date in 1931, the British King of Skiffle, Lonnie Donnegan was born
  • On this date in 1933, American Poet and Composer, Rod McKuen was born
  • On this date in 1934, American Blues Guitarist and Singer, Otis Rush was born
  • On this date in 1935, American Blues Singer, Songwriter and Pianist, Leroy Carr died
  • On this date in 1936, American Singer, April Stevens was born
  • On this date in 1938, German Musician, Artist and Record Producer, Klaus Voorman of Manfred Mann was born
  • On this date in 1945, American Singer and Songwriter, Tammi Terrell was born
  • On this date in 1947, American Guitarist, Singer, Songwriter and Record Producer, Tommy James was born
  • On this date in 1957, American Guitarist and Songwriter, Mark Kendall of Great White was born
  • On this date in 1961, American Folk Singer, Cisco Houston died
  • On this date in 1967, American Bkues Guitarist, Singer and Songwriter, J.B. Lenoir died
  • On this date in 1968, the musical “Hair” opened on Broadway
  • On this date in 1993, British Multi-instrumentalist, Session Guitarist, Songwriter, Arranger and Producer, Mick Ronson died
  • On this date in 2008, Swiss Chemist and the man responsible for psychedelic rock thanks to being the first to synthesize LSD, Albert Hofmann died
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Arbee Stidham

Arbee Stidham

Arbee Stidham (February 9, 1917 – 1988) was an American blues singer and multi-instrumentalist, most successful in the late 1940s and 1950s.

He was born in De Valls Bluff, Arkansas to a musical family – his father played with Jimmie Lunceford and his uncle with the Memphis Jug Band – and learned to play harmonica, clarinet and saxophone as a child. Before his teens he had formed his own band, the Southern Syncopators, which backed Bessie Smith on tour in 1930-31, and played on radio and in clubs in Arkansas and Memphis, Tennessee.

In the mid-1940s he moved to Chicago and met Lester Melrose, who signed him to RCA Victor in 1947. His biggest hit, “My Heart Belongs to You”, was recorded at his first session, and reached # 1 on the Billboard R&B chart in June 1948. He spent the rest of his career trying to emulate its success, recording for Checker, States, and other independent labels as a jazz-influenced blues vocalist. After a car accident made it impossible to play saxophone, he took up the guitar in the 1950s under the tutelage of Big Bill Broonzy, and played it on his early 1960s recordings for Folkways. He continued to record occasionally up to the early 1970s, and also made many festival and club appearances nationwide and internationally. He lectured on the blues at Cleveland State University in the 1970s, and appeared in the film The Bluesman in 1973.

SIXTY MINUTES TO WAIT

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FIND MY BABY

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WANT TO ROCK (ROCK BABY)

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PLEASE LET IT BE ME




New From: $8.99 In Stock
Release date January 1, 1961.
posted by admin in Blues and have No Comments

Today in Rock Roots History – April 28

  • On this date in 1924, American Jazz and Beebop Singer and Pianist, Blossom Dearie was born
  • On this date in 1941, Swedish-born American Singer, Dancer and Actress, Ann-Margaret was born
  • On this date in 1948, Canadian Jazz Singer and Actress, Dorothée Berryman was born
  • On this date in 1953, American, Guitarist, Bassist, Vocalist, Artist, Record Producer, and Actress, Kim Gordon of Sonic Youth was born
  • On this date in 1956, Scottish-born Australian Singer and Songwriter, Jimmy Barnes was born
  • On this date in 1975, American Disc Jockey, Tom Donahue was born
  • On this date in 2005, American Jazz Bassist, Percy Heath of The Modern Jazz Quartet
  • On this date in 2007, American Saxophonist and Arranger, Tommy Newsom was born
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