Friday, October 12, 2018

Joe Callicott-Nesbit Miss US 51 Blues Trail Tanger Outlet South Haven, MS

Bottom
Miss US.51
Joe Callicott -Nesbit (1900-1969)
Although his early recording career resulted in only two songs issued in 1930, Nesbit native Joe Callicott (1899-1969) is often regarded as one of Mississippi’s finest early bluesmen. His guitar work was also featured with local bluesman Garfield Akers on Cottonfield Blues, a classic 1929 single that illustrated how blues developed from field hollers. In the late 1960s, Callicott recorded more extensively for folklorists and served as a mentor to Nesbit guitarist Kenny Brown.
Joe Callicot 
Top
Joe Callicott, whose music was notable for his delicate guitar style and rich vocals, spent most of his life here in Nesbit. He began playing blues as a young boy and performed for many years together with fellow guitarist Garfield Akers (c. 1900-1959). They played mostly around the area at informal gatherings and performed in a distinctive local style similar to that of Memphis blues pioneer Frank Stokes and Hernando’s Jim Jackson. In 1929 Jackson arranged for the pair to record for the Brunswick-Balke-Collender corporation of Chicago, which had set up a temporary recording unit at the Peabody Hotel in Memphis. Callicott’s recording of “Mississippi Boll Weevil Blues” from that session was unissued, but he played on Akers’ two-part single “Cottonfield Blues,” which was issued on the Vocalion label. The following year they again recorded in Memphis. Vocalion issued “Dough Roller Blues” and “Jumpin’ and Shoutin’ Blues” by Akers, while Brunswick released Callicott’s "Fare Thee Well Blues" and "Traveling Mama Blues" (using the spelling Calicott on the label and Callicutt in company files). Although Callicott gave up performing in the 1940s, Akers was active on the down-home Memphis blues scene of the early ‘50s. Akers, however, never recorded again.

In 1967 folklorist George Mitchell met and recorded Callicott, and Callicott’s subsequent return to performing included a booking at the 1968 Memphis Country Blues Festival in Memphis and travels as far as New York City. Recordings made by Mitchell and British producer Mike Vernon of the Blue Horizon label revealed the impressive range of Callicott’s early repertoire, which included songs about World War I and the boisterous nightlife of Beale Street. During this period Callicott also taught guitar to Kenny Brown (b. 1953), who lived with his family next door. Brown later became well known in the blues world via his twenty-year relationship with Holly Springs guitarist R. L. Burnside as well as his own recordings. On his 2003 Fat Possum CD Stingray Brown recorded three of Callicott’s songs.

Another young student of older blues artists in the area was Bobby Ray Watson (b. 1943) of the nearby Pleasant Hill community. Watson often performed together with local harmonica player Johnny Woods (1917-1990), a dynamic performer and native of nearby Looxahoma. This area’s most famous resident, the legendary pianist, and vocalist Jerry Lee Lewis included many blues songs in his repertoire. The Nesbit ranch purchased by Lewis 1973 became a tourist attraction and featured a piano-shaped pool.
Joe Callicott Miss US 51
Joe Callicott Miss US 51
Captions
Left and above right, Joe Callicott, late 1960a. Above left with his wife Doll, circa the 1950s. The top label is from a 1970 LP of George Mitchell field recordings. Callicott is buried in the cemetery adjacent to this marker. 

Cover sleeve of a 1972 single on the Oblivion label by Johny Woods. In addition to making his own recordings, Woods also performed on record with his frequent musical partners R. L. Burnside and Mississippi Fred McDowell. 

Watson and his wife Libby Rae founded the Mississippi Country Blues Society and conducted field recordings sessions with many traditional blues artists around the state

Kenny Brown left with David Kimbrough, Dwayne Burnside, and Cedric Burnside at the dedication of the “Hill Country Blues” Blues Trail marker in Holly Springs, July 3, 2008. In 2006 Brown started the annual North Mississippi Hill country Picnic that celebrates blues from the region. 

Revival Label song 33 1/3 rpm Mono Side 1
“Deal Gone Down"
Rolling & Tumbling
Riverside Blues
Down Home Blues
Old Boll Weevil
Frankie and Albert
Joe Callicott 

Welcome to one of the many sites on the Mississippi Blues Trail 

Visit us online at www.MSBluesTrail.org 
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/9708063/joe-callicott

Magic Sam-Grenada Miss US 51 Blues Trail Tanger Outlet South Haven, MS

Miss US 51

Samuel “Magic Sam” Maghett

Magic Sam (Samuel Maghett) was one of the most dynamic and gifted blues musicians during his short lifetime (1937-1969). Born a few miles northeast of this site, Maghett began his performing career in Grenada and lived in this house until he moved to Chicago in the early 1950s. The youthful energy and spirit of Magic Sam, Buddy Guy, Otis Rush, and Freddie King modernized Chicago blues into an explosive, electrifying new style in the late 1950s and early '60s.
MISS US 51 Magic Sam 
Top 
Magic Sam, unlike most of his blues contemporaries, was born and raised in a community where fiddle music, hoedowns, and square dances held sway over the blues among the African American population. Roy Moses, a renowned black fiddler in Grenada County, was not only the leading caller of steps at such dances but also a mentor and inspiration to younger local musicians. Samuel Maghett carried these musical influences with him to Chicago in 1950. Blues guitarist Syl Johnson, who later became a nationally known soul singer, recalled that Sam was playing “a hillbilly style” at the time, and Johnson began teaching him blues and boogies. Sam developed a house-rocking blues style unparalleled in its rhythmic drive; it may well have had roots in the dance tempos of the reels and breakdowns he learned in Grenada.

Magic Sam was better known, however, for the heartfelt vocals and stinging guitar work of his 1957-58 blues recordings produced by Willie Dixon for the Cobra label in Chicago such as “All Your Love” and “Easy Baby,” some of which featured another Grenada native, Billy Stepney, on drums. Sam’s singing reflected another early influence, that of the church. During the ‘50s he often returned to visit and perform in Grenada, where he was credited with helping to popularize the blues. Sam and his combo won a local talent contest at the Union Theater which enabled them to compete on a show in Memphis promoted by WDIA radio. After performing under several stage names, he settled on “Magic” Sam–to rhyme with his surname.

In Chicago, Sam was at the vanguard of a new West Side blues movement. He remained a popular nightclub act during the 1960s and was poised to take his career to a new level, after recording two acclaimed albums for Delmark Records and turning in legendary festival performances in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and in Europe, but he died of a heart attack on December 1, 1969. His music has continued to influence generations of blues, R&B, and rock musicians.

Magic Sam’s birthplace now lies submerged beneath Grenada Lake. The Redgrass and Hendersonville communities where he spent his earliest years, along with the former town of Graysport, were flooded in the late 1940s to create the lake as a flood control reservoir. The Maghett family relocated here to the Knoxville community, where Sam resided until he was thirteen. Maggitt Street, just south of this site, represents one of many local variations of the family surname.



Caption


You don’t have to work all day.

Just make love to me and say,

“Easy, baby, mmm, easy, baby.”
“Easy, baby, won’t you love me night and day?

You don’t have to weep and moan.
Just hold me, baby, in your arms.
Easy Baby, mmm, easy baby,
Easy, baby, let me love you night and day. 
“Easy Baby”-Magic Sam (Cobra)

Magic Singing Sam” with Letha Jones, pianist Little Johnnie Jones, and Georgia Lee Jones; in the back is drummer S. Pl. Leary, at the Tay May Club, Chicago, early 1960s

The country music influence that Sam grew up within Grenada showed up in some of his recordings, such as “Square Dance Rock” from 1960. 

What discs would you choose if you are stranded on a  desert island and had nothing else to listen to? Critics here often given “desert island side” statue to Magic Sam’s first two LPs for Delmark, West Side Soul, and Black Magic. 

(Right) Magic Sam and friend Luberta, Texas at a Chicago Nightclub c 1963

Morris Holt, a childhood friend of Magic Sam’s in Granda assumed the stage name Magic Slim and continued Sam’s Tradition of rocking the blues in Chicago. He is pictured here at the first annual Chicago Blues Festival in 1984.

Welcome to one of the many sites on the Mississippi Blues Trail 
Visit us online at www.MSBluesTrail.org 
Magic Sam
Magic Sam
Mississippi Blues Trail
5205 Airways Blvd
Desoto County South Haven, MS
Tanger Outlets Shopping

Cobra Record Corp
Easy Baby 
Dixon 
Magic Sam 
5029
BMI Vocal 
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/4161/samuel-maghett

Tanger Outlet Blues Trail South Haven, MS

Tanger Outlets 
Documenting the Blues Miss US 71
Hubert Sumlin
Howlin'Wolf
Robert Johnson
Birth Place of America's Music
MISSISSIPPI 
Peavine Railroad
Albert King 
"One of The Best"
"our knowledgeable friend and Blues tour guide described the B.B. King Museum as one of the best museums she had ever been to, and I have to agree. Allow several hours for this visit and make a special trip to Indianola to go there. You won't be sorry. My three teenage sons learned a great deal. Fantastic displays, many of which were interactive."
-A visitor from Houston, Texas
400 Second Street Indianola, S www.bbkingmuseum.org
BB King Museum
"Brought Me to Tears"
"This was our last stop on our Delta Blues Pilgrimage. And we saved the best for last. A beautiful building and museum. A part of the museum is a cotton gin where BB King used to work. The exhibit progresses through his childhood up to the present day. The video of him speaking about his life brought me to tears. Worth the drive to Indianola."
-A Visitor from Mobile, Alabama
400 Second Street Indianola, S www.bbkingmuseum.org
BB King Museum
"So Much Fun for Every Age"
"This facility is nothing short of amazing. It's a haven for anyone who loves and appreciates the music of all genres. We didn't
t want to leave!"
-A Visitor from Tennessee
800 West Sunflower Road Cleveland, MS
GRAMMYMuseumMS.org
662-441-0100
Recording Academy
GRAMMY MUSEUM
MISSISSIPPI
"This Place is Amazing "
"It has a lot of interactive features where you would spend hours listening to music and learning about the awesome past and present GRAMMY winners."
-A Visitor from Colorado
800 West Sunflower Road Cleveland, MS
GRAMMYMuseumMS.org
662-441-0100
Recording Academy
GRAMMY MUSEUM
MISSISSIPPI
"A Wealth of History! "
"Plan on spending at least two hours looking at this museum. You will find pictures articles, instruments, clothing, and more about these talented musicians. It helps clear up all that was going on in that area and how it affected the music. Don't miss this place."
A Visitor from Daytona Beach, Florida
1 Blues Alley Clarksdale, MS
www.deltableebluesmuseum.org
DELTA BLUES
MUSEUM
Large Guitar 
Muddy Waters
Gateway to the Blues "Great exhibit"
"This place has guitars from all the blues greats, they even have Son House's resonator guitar on display. Eric Clapton's and BB King's guitars are on showcase as well Great exhibit, owned by Ceasar's of Las Vegas fame."
-A Victor Calexico, California
13625 HighwaY 61 North Tunica Resorts, MS
www.tunicatravel.com
Gateway to the
BLUES
Tunica, MS

Elvis Presley & WC Handy 
The Blues Trail
Birthplace of America's Music Mississippi 
Large Guitar 
Large Guitar 



Elvis in Tupelo, MS 
"A Must-see if you are in Memphis!"
"By far our best experience in Memphis. The house itself is just full of history and memories. A very emotional experience. You can almost feel the joy and happy memories that Elvis and his family had there."
-A Visitor from the Newcastle United Kingdom
3717 Elvis Presley Boulevard Memphis,  TN
www.graceland.com
Graceland
The home of Elvis Presley 
"Awesome to sit on his front porch."
"As a lifelong Elvis fan, this was a must-see on my visit I was not disappointed, the tiny house was amazing to see and it was great to get a photo taken on the swing outside with lots of interesting information and great insight into the early years of his life."
306 Elvis Presley Drive Tupelo, MS
www.elvispresleybirthplace.com
Elvis
BIRTHPLACE
Jessie Mae Hemphill
Graceland 

Thursday, August 23, 2018

2018 Aug 6-8, Metro Streetcar Ride in Little Rock, Arkansas (3 days)

Hubby and I had an enjoyable visit to Little Rock, Arkansas
The people were friendly, and the food was good.
We stayed two nights at the Wyndham Hotel in North Little Rock, which included breakfast.
Our room was ground level, with a good view of the downtown area and the Arkansas River bridges. 

The first day after we checked in, we rode to the downtown area to find somewhere to eat lunch. David's Burger was closing for the day, so we walked down the block to Big Whiskey's.
Big Whiskey's, where I enjoyed a plate of Hot wings
We walked around the downtown area, stopping at Arkansas Studies Institute, where we stopped to talk to the curator.
The building had a vault, which in its heyday was used to store spices.
Our next stop was the Arkansas Historical Museum, where we saw a collection of Bowie knives, a children's gallery, and contemporary art.
The Pioneer Village had closed up shop for the day.

Bowie Knives
We stopped at General McArthur's Park, where we saw several war markers.
The museum was closed.
We rode behind the museum, where we saw several families of ducklings.

Duckings
We rode to Arkansas Capitol Grounds, where we saw the Vietnam Memorials, the Purpleheart recipients plaques, a Civil War memorial, and the Firefighters Memorial.
It was getting late as the sun slowly drifted out of sight.
I don't think I could walk another step after all the sightseeing.
We stopped at Wendy's for a quick bite and retired for the day.

Little Rock's Capitol Building 
On the first day, we drove everywhere, and it cost $1.50 for one-hour parking, so we bought a Metro Streetcar pass for $2.00 each to ride the Metro Streetcar all day. (we bought the tickets at the Historic Arkansas Museum)

To catch the Streetcar, we had to walk a couple blocks.  
The drivers were knowledgeable about the area, the Metro Streetcar was air-conditioned, and the Metro Streetcar ran every twenty minutes.

Metro Streetcar
Our first stop was the William J. Clinton Presidential Library, where we saw his 1993 Cadillac Fleetwood limousine, the life-size replica of the Oval Office and Cabinet Room as they looked during Clinton's tenure. 
Oval Office
We stopped outside of the Clinton School of Public Service to take a few pictures, and then we walked to the nearby Heifer International Building. 

We were greeted at the door by a curator at the Heifner building.
The curator gave us a brief description of the Heifer company and how it got started with just a cup of milk.
At the Heifer International village and farm, we saw their vegetable garden and farm animals. 
At Cafe Heifer, we ordered oatmeal raisins,  macadamia cookies, and water.
We saw several turtles in the wetlands, and the gardeners were pulling up plants that no longer were bearing vegetables. 
Heifer Garden 
We took the Metro Streetcar to the 1836 Old State House Museum, at no charge, which has three levels of artifacts, hand-stitched African quilts, and American Indian relics. 
Old State House
We took the Metro Streetcar to the River Market District, got off, and walked to David's Burgers, where we enjoyed a dressed hamburger and all the fries you can eat for lunch. (They are only open for lunch).

River Market 
Just a few blocks away was the Museum of Discovery, where we experienced the physics and chemistry of the natural phenomenon of Little Rock's 1999 twister in Tornado Alley.

Little Rock 1999 Twister in Tornado Alley.
On the Streetcar, we met an older man treating four of his eleven grandchildren to a Metro Streetcar ride.
It was super hot, so it was nice to just hop on a nice cool Metro Streetcar instead of a hot car.
Storms were a brew all through Arkansas in the late evening, and we even got some rain. 


Storm Clouds over Arkansas River 
Woke to thunder and rain this morning.
I hope we miss the bad weather traveling home.

2018 Aug 22, Kermits Outlaw Kitchen & Sites Tupelo, MS.

Hubby and I rode south on Natchez Trace, stopping at Pharr Mounds, where we saw three markers overlooking the Indian Mounds. Trade from Afar, Objects and Ideas, and Coming Home. 

Pharr Mounds 
Pharr Mounds Rest Area
We stopped at Natchez Trace Visitor Center Saltillo near Tupelo, a part of the National Park Service. 
The ranger gave me a map of the Trail of Tears. I also picked up Explore the Natchez Trace Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee: A Unique Journey from Natchez to Nashville and a book about Natchez, Mississippi (I hope to visit Natchez shortly).

There were signs throughout the center: Natchez Trace Parkway Center, The Heyday of the Old Trace, Transition, Who Traveled the Old Trace, The Old Southwest, The Mission to Remember, Traces of Tribes, and a bust of Meriwether Lewis. 

Visitor Center Natchez Trace, Mississippi

Visitor Center Natchez Trace, Mississippi
We stopped at the Tupelo Automobile Museum, where we saw over 100 various restored cars from the turn of the century to the present day car.  
The tour begins with a brief history of the museum and its founder, Frank Spain.
We saw a 1976 Lincoln Mark IV owned by Elvis Presley, Liberace's Barrister, one used in the movie The Great Race, New York to Paris, Richard Petty #23 NASCAR, BB King's Rolls Royce, & Chevy El Camino. We saw the 1948 Tucker, 1920 Cord L-29, 1937 Lagonda, and 1929 Duesjnberg, just to name a few.
Liberace's 1982 black "Barrister" Corvette was one of only seven made by California customizer George Barris. The extended body, multiple side pipes, and golden radiator grill were common to all seven, but the full-size candelabra bolted to the trunk is exclusively Liberace.
Richard Petty #43 NASCAR HE won his 200th and final race in Daytona
Elvis Presley 1976 Royal Blue Lincoln Mark IV
This car was given to a policeman who oversaw Elvis's security.
BB King 1978 Rolls Royce 
We stopped at the newly remodeled Tupelo Welcome Center on display is Tuple’s Elvis Story. Welcome to Tupelo and Elvis's Musical influence in Gospel, Country, Blues, and Modern Music. 

Elvis influenced Music in the gospel, Blues, Country, and Modern 
In Tuple’s Fair Park stands a statue of Elvis Presley holding a microphone and holding his hand out to welcome his fans. 
On October 3, 1945, a ten-year-old Elvis played to his first crowd on these grounds and took 5th place in a talent show.

We also saw a plaque with a picture of Elvis holding a guitar and guitars throughout the town of Tupelo.
The Elvis Presley statue stands on the site of the old fairgrounds where the concert took place, created by Mississippi sculptor Bill Beckwith.
We were told that Kermit's Outlaw Kitchen has the best food in town. 
So, we each ordered a fully loaded hamburger and fries.
Kermit's Outlaw Kitchen purchases its food from local farmers. The food was delicious. (One of the best hamburgers that I have eaten in a long time.)
Outside Kermits’s was a pile of wood and a raccoon holding a shotgun. 

Inside, hanging on the wall, was the outlaw Willie Nelson. 
Outlaw Burger 
Kermit's Outlaw Kitchen
KOK is a wood-fired grill that uses the freshest meats produced from local farms.

2024 Christmas Journal Activies

 Merry Christmas and Happy New Year  To all my friends and family Hope this year brought you lots of health and happiness.  Just a recap ...