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| I first heard of Elmore James from reading liner notes and record
labels. Paul had covered "Look Over Yonder's Wall" and "Shake
Your Money Maker" on his first album. I went out and bought "The
Sky Is Cryin" on Sphere(I still have the album) and I was hooked.
I had heard about Robert Johnson and even had the Columbia"King
of The Delta Blues Singers" LP, but that was kind of weird and
hard to get comfortable with. Elmore, while not as intricate as
Robert, had it all . That stinging ELECTRIC guitar and a powerful
voice. For a fifteen year old kid from Larchmont, NY it was a
revelation. Elmore was born in Richland, Miss. and first learned to play a "diddley bow" by the mid '30s his family had moved to the Belzoni area. It was there that Elmore met Robert Johnson and Rice (Sonny Boy Williamson II) Miller. Robert's "Dust my Broom" lick (Johnson got the lyrics from Kokmo Arnold's 1934 "Sagefield Woman Blues") became Elmore's signature. After a stint in the Navy, Elmore started gigging with Rice Miller and Willie Love around Memphis in the late '40s and did his first sessions backing Sonny Boy on "Eyesight to the Blind" in 1951. Later that year Elmore recorded "Dust My Broom" for the first time. The song was an immediate success. He next recorded for the Bihari bros Modern/ Flair label. His band , the "Broomdusters" , featuring the piano of Johnny Jones and the sax of J. T. Brown, created a fusion of country blues and urban swing that tore it up. B.B. King said his note bending and vibrato were attempts to cop Elmore's style. Elmore was prolific in this period , also working for Meteor and Chess In 1960 Elmore releases "The Sky Is Crying"(covered by Albert King , among others) on Fire. There's something about this session and the later Fire/Enjoy sessions that clicked . These are among his best recordings(actually there is NO bad Elmore James record!). Songs from this period include "Done Somebody Wrong"(no Greg Allman didn't write it!) and "Bleeding Heart" (covered by Jimi Hendrix). The Capricorn reisssue of the complete Fire-Enjoy sessions is a great place to start your Elmore collection.Put that box in open D, crank it up and go for the twelfth fret! As Elmore said,"Yessss...!!!". This is the s***t! Don't take my word, ask B.B.King, Eric Clapton, Homesick James, J.B. Hutto, John Mayall or Geroge Thorogood. Or listen to the Allmans, Butterfield, Fleetwood Mac and a list too long to mention. . . |
To find the music of Elmore James . . .