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Post by mesnier on Nov 22, 2006 15:57:32 GMT
Robert Lockwood Jr. March 27,1915 - November 21, 2006: Robert Lockwood, Jr. passed away today at 5pm Ohio time in his hospital bed at University hospital at Case Western. He had been hospitalized and in critical condition since November 3rd from a blood vessel that had burst in his head. He was 91. Robert Jr.'s history in the blues was of the highest stature and he was playing at his best till right before he fell ill.
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Post by Michael Messer on Nov 22, 2006 16:21:46 GMT
Pascal >Thank you for posting that very sad news about Robert Lockwood Jr. He was a fantastic musician - certainly one of THE greats of the blues. Just listen to 'Little Boy Blue' and 'I'm Gonna Train My Baby To Shoot a Pistol Like a Man' to hear how great he was.
Shine On Michael.
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Post by mesnier on Nov 23, 2006 14:42:33 GMT
Thanks a lot Michael,
Yes, it's a very sad new, one still is gone...
I still have the DAT you gave me years ago: 'Black spider blues' where he sounds like R.Johnson (that was a demo for J.Hammond senior I guess), 'Take a little walk with me' , 'Little boy blue' and 'I'm gonna train my baby...' It's a jewel for me, everyone into the blues should have a listen to him. Respects and peace Mr Lockwood.
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Post by Michael Messer on Nov 23, 2006 15:03:43 GMT
Bonjour Pascal, I forgot about Black Spider Blues, that is really good! Those recordings, along with some of his Chicago band recordings, are absolute jewels.
Shine On, Michael
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Post by robn on Nov 30, 2006 16:10:29 GMT
There is a quite detailed obituary in today's Independant (30 Nov 06)
Robn
PS I'll try and post it below direct from the Independant's web site
Robert Lockwood Jnr Disciple of the Delta blues Published: 30 November 2006
Robert Lockwood, guitarist and singer: born Turkey Scratch, Arkansas 27 March 1915; married first Annie Roberts (died 1997), second Mary Smith; died Cleveland, Ohio 21 November 2006. One of the last links with the golden age of the pre-war Delta blues, Robert Lockwood Jnr was an accomplished musician who built upon the legacy of his "stepfather", the guitarist and singer Robert Johnson, by adding jazz-influenced chords and Charlie Christian-like single-string solos to his playing. His musical journey, over the course of a career of more than 70 years, mirrored that of the genre itself as it moved up out of the Delta, through Memphis and St Louis, and on into Chicago and beyond. Lockwood was born in the farming hamlet of Turkey Scratch, Arkansas, in 1915. His first musical experiences came courtesy of the family's pump organ, but the regular presence of his mother Esther's boyfriend, Robert Johnson, inevitably led to Lockwood's taking up the guitar. He remembered his mentor as a secretive musician who was reluctant to pass on his skills, but he picked up enough from the older man to hold his own comfortably when they worked together. In deference to their close relationship, he at one point changed his name to Robert Jnr Lockwood. By the time he was 15 he was a regular fixture at local juke joints and fish fries alongside Johnson, Johnny Shines and the harmonica virtuoso Rice Miller, who would later go on to find fame as Sonny Boy Williamson II. Lockwood continued to hone his skills as he travelled to cities such as Memphis, St Louis and Chicago and, in 1941, in Aurora, Illinois, cut four solo sides for the Bluebird label, including "Take a Little Walk With Me" and "Little Boy Blue". In the same year he returned to Arkansas and played with Williamson on the seminal radio show King Biscuit Time on KFFA, Helena. Sponsored by King Biscuit Flour, the midday show gave the blues its first daily radio outlet and was a catalyst in the electrification of the music as it moved north to Chicago. The programmes also enabled Lockwood further to establish himself in Memphis, where he met and encouraged the young BB King. By the early 1950s Lockwood was based in Chicago, where he became a mainstay at Chess Records and contributed guitar work for the label's many stars, including Muddy Waters, Eddie Boyd, Little Walter Jacobs and his old friend Sonny Boy Williamson II. He also cut a handful of singles, including "I'm Gonna Dig Myself a Hole" (1951) and "Sweet Woman from Maine" (1955), though they enjoyed only limited success. By the end of the decade the impact of rock'n'roll was such that he felt it necessary to move and in 1961 he relocated to Cleveland. Lockwood played whenever and wherever he could and, at his wife's suggestion, switched from the six-string to the 12-string guitar. In 1970 he recorded his first solo album, Steady Rollin' Man, which featured the Myers brothers, Louis and Dave, and the former Chess drummer Fred Below, and was followed by a pair of albums cut in association with the musicologist Pete Lowry: Contrasts (1972) and Does 12 (1975). In 1980 Lockwood reunited with a fellow Johnson disciple, Johnny Shines, for an acclaimed album, Hangin' On. I Got to Find Me a Woman (1997) gained him a Grammy nomination and was followed, two years later, by another Grammy-nominated project, Delta Crossroads. Lockwood continued to tour well into his ninth decade and in 2004 released an in-concert album, The Legend Live.
Paul Wadey
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