Showing posts with label horn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horn. Show all posts

Friday, October 12, 2018

Big Walter Horton-Horn Lake Miss Us 51 South Haven, MS

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Miss U. S. 51 
Big Walter Horton  - HORN LAKE (1918-1981)
Blues harmonica virtuoso Big Walter Hortonwas renowned for hi sinnovative contributions to the music of Memphis and Chicago. Horton was born in Horn Lark on april 6, 1918, and began his career as a child working for tips  on the streets of Memphis. He performed and recorded with Muddy Waters, Jimmy rogers, Willie Dixon, Fleetwood Mac, Johnny Winter and many others. His technique and tone continued to be sutdied and emulated by harmonica players around the world. 
Big Walter Horton
Big Walter Horton
Walter Horton was heralded as one of the most brilliant and creative musicians ever to play the harmonica. Born on a plantation near this site, as a child he blew into tin cans to create sounds. His birth date is usually cited as April 6, 1918, although some sources give the year as 1917 or 1921. Nicknamed “Shakey” due to nystagmus, an affliction related to eye movement that can result in involuntary head shaking and learning disabilities, Horton quit school in the first grade. He made his way doing odd jobs and playing harmonica with local veterans such as Jack Kelly, Garfield Akers, and Little Buddy Doyle as well as young friends Johnny Shines, Floyd Jones, and Honeyboy Edwards. They performed in Church Park, Handy Park, hotel lobbies, and anywhere else they could earn tips, including nearby areas of Arkansas, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee.

Horton began recording for legendary Memphis producer Sam Phillips in 1951. The first record on Phillips’s Sun label in 1952 was assigned to “Jackie Boy and Little Walter” (Jack Kelly and Horton). While Sun never officially released the Kelly-Horton disc, other Horton tracks from Phillips’s studio appeared on the Modern and RPM labels under the name of “Mumbles.” On later recordings, Walter was usually billed as “Shakey Horton” or “Big Walter.”

Horton joined the Muddy Waters band in Chicago in 1953. Chicago’s foremost blues producer/ songwriter, Willie Dixon, who called Horton “the greatest harmonica player in the world,” began recording him for labels including States, Cobra, and Argo, and hired him to play harmonica on sessions by Otis Rush, Koko Taylor, Jimmy Rogers, Sunnyland Slim, and others. Horton also toured and recorded with Willie Dixon’s Chicago Blues All Stars, and played on the Fleetwood Mac album Blues Jam in Chicago. Full albums of his work appeared on several labels, including Alligator, Chess, and Blind Pig. Horton toured internationally, but in Chicago most of his work was in small clubs. He also resumed playing the streets for tips at Chicago’s Maxwell Street market.

Horton’s playing–sometimes powerful and dramatic, other times delicate and sensitive–left an influence on harmonica masters Little Walter (Jacobs) and Sonny Boy Williamson No. 2 (Rice Miller) and on the generations to follow. His shy, gentle nature, often hidden beneath a gruff or glum exterior, endeared him to many. The uplifting beauty of Horton’s music contrasted with the sorrows and tragedies of his personal life. He died of heart failure on December 8, 1981. His death certificate also cited acute alcoholism. Horton was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 1982.
Captions
“Easy,” one of Walter Horton’s classic instrumentals, was recorded in 1953 with Jimmy DeBerry on guitar. Horton and DeBerry reunited in 1972 and 1973 to record for producer Steve LaVere in Memphis.

Horton performance at ChicagoFest on August 7, 1981, just a few months prior to his death 
From left: Walter Horton, Willie Nix and wife Patry, J.T. Brown and wife Katie, Muddy Waters, and Jimmy Rogers, Chicago, 1953

From left: Walter Horton, Willie Nix and wife Patty, JT Brown, and wife Katie, Muddy Waters, and Jimmy Rodgers Chicago 1953
Sun Records
 “EASY”
Jimmy & Walter 
Delta Music 

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Visit us online at www.MSBluesTrail.org 

Friday, January 20, 2017

πŸŽ‚πŸŽ‚πŸŽ‚Father of the Blues "W.C. Handy" Museum πŸ›

William Christoper Handy was born November 16, 1873, in Florence, Alabama.  
Come celebrate the birthday of W.C. Handy on November 16 at the Handy Home, Museum, and Library on 620 West College Street in Florence. 
From 11:00AM to 1:00PM you can tour the museum and listen to music on the front lawn of the museum. 
It is free to the public with a birthday cake and other refreshments.

In 2009, my daughter, granddaughter, and I joined in the celebration and toured the Museum, Home, and Library. 
Happy Birthday Father of the Blues "The chocolate cake was  delicious"
Bust of Handy
Picture of Handy 
Library 
Handy and the St Louis Blues
Inside the Cabin
Handy's Piano
Kitchen of Cabin 
The W. C. Handy Birthplace, Museum, and Library, in FlorenceLauderdale County, was established to celebrate the life of musician and composer William "W. C." Handy (1873-1958), known as the "Father of the Blues." Handy himself donated the seed money to set up the museum, which now includes several buildings and houses a large collection of memorabilia, personal items, and objects relating to Handy's musical career. 
Handy gave to the city the $29,000 he was paid for the land on which the cabin stood to be used for the future restoration of his childhood home as a museum. The cabin was carefully dismantled and the logs were numbered and stored for later reassembly. Handy also bequeathed a large number of his personal possessions to the city to be used in the cabin after a suitable new location was found.
A site was selected at 620 West College Street, in the southwest corner of town. Work began early in 1970 on reassembling the log cabin and on constructing a museum next to the cabin to properly house and display the artifacts and tell the story of Handy's life and career. The completed structure was filled with the artifacts that the Handy family sent to Florence from their home in New York, including the upright piano on which Handy composed the "St. Louis Blues," his brass trumpet, furniture, and numerous boxes of his letters, pictures, musical compositions, personal mementos, and datebooks.







Local citizens donated furnishings and other items that represented the period during which Handy lived there as a child. The W. C. Handy Museum opened to the public on June 7, 1970. 
A separate building was added in 1980 to house the Black Heritage Library, which was filled with books donated to or purchased for the museum under the direction of the Cabin Committee. 
In 2002, an addition was constructed that included a new area for the Black Heritage Library, office space, a kitchen, and a restroom as well as a community meeting room.
Article from the Encyclopedia of Alabama 



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