Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Walter Lee Hood - "Big Daddy"


Big Daddy is a big, gold amoeba sitting motionless on a chair. He wears a 24-karat satin shirt. He has little feet. Up floats a microphone and Big Daddy wiggles, gets hooked in the mouth like a giant goldfish. Out pops a voice, a vibrant, poignant tenor, the sound at first fragile. Then he puts his weight behind it. “Gone buy me a .22,” he croons; a white sweat towel snakes over his shoulder, “don’t...make me shoot the...hell out of you.” The evolution is complete; Big Daddy is now the highest life form of all in a Saturday night bar - a Blues Singer.


That he is, says his manager, Jesse Robinson. The first time he saw Big Daddy, Robinson was struck by more than the size of this quarter-ton man, known only to local blues fans as Big Daddy. “The first thing he had,” said Robinson, “was his voice. The way he could sing the blues. The main thing is a 500-pound man singing the blues. You just don’t find that.” Eleven years ago, you wouldn’t have found it. It has only been a decade since Big Daddy found his blues voice. 

Now, in Jackson, Prentiss, Laurel, Hattiesburg, Greenville, Oxford, Utica, Cleveland, Clarksdale or Canton, you can find him, at colleges or in restaurants and lounges that bill him as Big Daddy, “ 500 pounds of blues.” Which is 30 pounds of over-billing. “I weigh only about 470 pounds,” Big Daddy said. He didn’t sound disappointed. “Yeah,” grinned Robinson, “470 pounds of blues’ just don’t get it.” 

Big Daddy’s real name, Walter Lee Hood, probably wouldn’t get it either. His fans got rid of it. “ Everybody started calling me Big Daddy,” he said before a show at the Subway Lounge. “ They said they liked the name. I did too.”He also likes greens and black-eyed peas, he said. “ As long as it’s boiled, I eat it.” He has tried to lose weight, but it has proved impossible. He also has diabetes.




“I do what the doctors tell me. They stopped me from working in 1979. They said my blood pressure was too high. I was doing construction but I had to quit. I picked up this weight sitting down doing nothing.” Before the weight gain, Big Daddy liked to hunt. “Oh, yeah, this is the time of year. 


"I miss it,” he said. “I would hunt or stay in camp and cook. “I can cook just about anything you can name. I can cook, sew and clean. I can do it all. That’s why I don’t worry about a wife. I can do it all myself. Except have a baby...Saves money too.” Big Daddy sat with his back to a sign touting sardines, barbecued chicken, gumbo, sausage and chitterlings. He sipped on a can of fruit juice. “I have always loved music,” he said, as people crept down the stairs to the cool, dark lounge. “A lot of my people sang in church.”



(Jackson, MS) Clarion 
Ledger, Feb 19, 1988.
He comes out of northwest Alabama, near Lee Bend, he said, where he was born in the early ’30s, “ so far back in the woods, it was pitiful.” Not long after his birth, his family moved to Columbus, where he grew up singing gospel in the Mount Olive Baptist Church.


For years, he made a living with his hands, not his voice, earning money in Columbus, Jackson, Yazoo City and other Mississippi towns at jobs ranging from drugstore delivery man to farmhand. Wherever he went, he sang in church and people liked his voice. They thought he could make money at it. “ They kept asking me, ‘why don’t you sing the blues?’” he said. One day Big Daddy woke up with the blues and started singing them.

(Jackson, MS) Clarion 
Ledger, Oct 31, 1989.
“Blues is here to stay,” he said. “My belief is the blues is a way of life. You might not have something to eat. You might not have anything in your pockets. People are just starting to realize it.”

He looked over at a woman at a nearby table. “What’s happening, Big Daddy?” she said. A waitress hurrying up from the bar put another can of juice on Big Daddy’s table and a smile on his wide, brown face. “You gone make a bad man out of me,” he told her. “You’re already bad,” she said. “I’m a good man.” He picked up his glass. “ When I’m asleep.” Big Daddy. 500 pounds of coy.

Fans searching for Big Daddy this weekend can find him performing Saturday with the Jesse Robinson Revue and Fingers Taylor at Wellsfest ’87 at Lakeland Park, just east of Smith-Wills Stadium on Lakeland Drive. They are scheduled to go on together at 2:45 p.m. at Center Stage.

(Jackson, MS) Clarion Ledger, Sep 23, 1987.

Jukin’ Through the Delta w/ Hodding Carter III

By Hodding Carter III – Chicago Tribune - September 8, 1991

Audrey imagined it is a sweet potato with a pointed top and a rounded bottom. That's the home of the blues—the Mississippi Delta—beginning 10 miles south of Memphis and circling to a close at the foot of Vicksburg's red clay cliffs: bordered on the west by Ol' Man River and on the east by Faulkner’s low-lying hills. 

As she drove down out of Memphis, the Delta spread out before her. First, it was less than a mile wide, but soon, only a short way down the road, she could no longer see where it began or ended. This rich, black earth, swaddled by the flooding Mississippi River for thousands of years, consumed every inch of space, and all around her the land was level. Not flat, though—like Kansas or some dead prairie—because flat would be lifeless, but so level that you could glimpse a man turning the soil five miles down the road.

Audrey was in search of the blues. She had begun her journey a few years back when she first heard Elmore James, Howlin Wolf, and Robert Johnson on tapes, records and CDs. She then haunted the odd blues festivals that found their way through the northeast during the '80s, watching from the balcony of monstrous auditoriums as the likes of B.B. King lit the stage.

But she sensed she was missing something—something of the mournful soul. Then she read Birney Imes’s Juke Joints, a photographic essay of the Delta's musical roots. In those stark, unpeopled pictures of the hard-wrought music clubs, she could actually see the blues—in the peeling paint, along the uneven floorboards—and it struck her that the only way to find the, blues would be to go there.

Fear of the Unknown

Her journey to the Delta, though, began with unqualified fear. This steadfast Brooklyn girl was headed into the Deep South, and she could only imagine fat, red-faced white men sitting in pickup trucks spitting out globs of tobacco between their teeth.  [This was] a descent into the unknown; her brush with hell and, maybe, Deliverance.

She stayed calm far past the Mason-Dixon line, not breaking a sweat until she reached the border of North Carolina and Tennessee. The gentle rolling hills, fresh with budding spring, and the approaching Smoky Mountains had lulled her into some form of acceptance, but then came the dreaded Midway truck stop.  While her husband, a born-and-bred Delta boy, hovered over an entire table of Goo-Goo clusters, recalling how many of these chocolate-covered gobs of marshmallow, caramel and peanuts it took to make him sick.  Audrey faced a much more threatening vision in the women's room. A large, black swastika seared into the stall finally reminded her where she was. Audrey and her husband didn't waste much time getting to Tennessee.

The next stop was at a Stuckey's, a clean roadside stop that like kudzu has spread all over the South. At its worst, Stuckey's might have had one too many log rolls (similar to Goo-Goo's in sweetness but made of pecans and marshmallows); but there was certainly no racist graffiti.

B.B. King had just announced the opening in Memphis of a 300-seat nightclub bearing his name, and Audrey was expecting what the city was now calling itself: "Blues Capital of the World." What she found was another theme-park stop on the endless string of plastic attractions that is modern American tourism—some-thing akin to New York's South Street Seaport or Boston's Faneuil Hall.

Soulless Tourist Strip

A few years back a local developer renovated Beale Street long known for its seedy bars of hearty jazz, into a sterile, soulless tourist strip that pushes Memphis and the blues. While some, of the music playing on the street is authentic blues, in the bars it rang rampant commercialism--about as natural as a blues band from. Delta Junction, Alaska!

She did like the brass notes embedded in the sidewalk to commemorate past jazz, blues, and soul musicians: There was Otis Redding, W.C. Handy, and scribbled into the wet concrete below Maurice Hulbert’s note was etched "Calvin Williams," a local Kilroy.  But what best reflected Memphis and the blues was a huge legend on a billboard on the corner of Beale and Third Street: "Target Your Black Market in Memphis."

"Beale Street is great if you like Disney World. It’s all clean, simple, and commercial," Patty Johnson of Rooster Blues recording company explained later that night. "But if you want  to sink your teeth into the blues, you know, hear the real thing, you’d better come, on down into the Delta."

I woke up this morning
All my shrimps was dead and gone
I was thinking about you, baby
While you hadn't even been born
I got dead shrimps,
Someone's fishing in my pond

Robert Johnson; "Dead Shrimp Blues"

"Driving along Highway 61—the road that either God or the devil made to take the bluesman to Chicago and bring him home again when the playing was done—Audrey's fears slowly slid back north. Ragged balls of cotton, unclaimed during last fall's harvest, waved in the wind as the road stretched past row after row of rich black earth.  She could smell the heavy soil through the closed, car windows.

Blues and Barbeque

The first stop came an hour and a half south of Memphis, at the crossroads of 61 and Clarksdale, Miss. The legendary Robert Johnson made a pact with the devil here, trading his soul to become the best bluesman of his time. Audrey and her husband weren't meeting the devil, but eating the best barbecue in the world at Abe's BBQ, where a room-length mural of a pig lets a traveler know that this is a pig's shop. The double-decked sandwich of crispy coleslaw and. Large-helping of slow, pit-cooked, pork--topped off with a homemade barbecue sauce--completely displaced the nasty culture shock that had nagged Audrey since North Carolina. If she could fit the whole thing in her mouth in one bite she would have.

To burn off their midafternoon meal, they walked a few blocks through Clarksdale's downtown. The little country seat, built on an ancient Indian trading site, is arguably one of Mississippi's oldest communities, and its downtown, just for its sheer existence, is a modern-day anomaly. The nearest shopping mall is in Greenville, a good 90 minutes away. People actually greeted them as they walked along the unfettered streets. Once on Delta Street, Audrey and her husband entered the town library and followed a blue stripe painted on the floor to the dowdy, one-room Delta Blues Museum, which sits on the second story. 

In one corner of the room stood a life-size wax figure of Muddy Waters, whose heavy face smiled at them as they climbed the stairs. The other corners and walls were covered with pictures of blues artists: Little Son Jefferson, Furry and B.B. King. Son Thomas' portrait commanded attention, the singer scowling from beneath a straw cowboy hat.

It felt as if Clarksdale was the emerging blues capital of the world. "This little town's never seen anything like this!" Sid Graves, the founder and curator of the blues museum, exclaimed. "Ever since ZZ Top put out its latest album dedicated to Muddy Waters, we've had overnight success. We had 568 visitors to the museum in February and expect to have 2,000 a month during the summer. Before ZZ Top it was only a couple dozen a month. 

ZZ Top is one of the few bands out there today that financially acknowledges the debt that American music owes to the blues, donating $100,000 to the museum. As Sid explained it, the debt goes something like this:

W.C. Handy, a successful jazzman by the turn of the century, heard local musicians playing the blues while performing at a country club in Yazoo City.  He played some standard minstrel tunes for a while but noticed that the people weren't dancing.  He asked them what they wanted to hear, and they pointed to the waiters. Those fellows got up on stage, played their blues, and the floor spilled over with dancers. Pretty soon Handy was backing some of these Delta musicians and publishing the blues as well.  

Within two decades George Gershwin, after hoboing onto the blues train with "Rhapsody in Blue," wrote on a copy of the piece, “Mr. Handy, whose early blues are the forefathers of this work. With admiration and best wishes, George Gershwin, August 30, 1926." That autographed copy now sits in the Delta Blues Museum, and the rest became history.  


You know, the blues is the mother
Don't forget it, brother
Been havin' sex with the world a longtime
It's just been underestimated
'Cause we're segregated
Now, the story's really bein' told
You know the blues da baby
The whole world’s callin' it rock and roll

Muddy Waters, “The Blues Had a Baby"

Goin' to Muddy's Place

A little later a mysterious man—her husband—whisked Audrey off in their convertible, the top down even though the sky was threatening to let loose any moment. All he said was, "We’re goin’ to Muddy's. place."  Six and a half miles later they were. There, on the edge of the old Stovall Plantation. A very small blue and black sign announced and pointed to Muddy Waters' Home.” 

All that was left of the square shack were the walls and floorboards. Ever since Muddy: died in 1983, people have been stealing bits and pieces for souvenirs and building material.  As Audrey started walking toward the faded red walls pieced together with five-inch-thick slabs of wood, an old hound dog howled from beneath the house. She decided to just look from beside the car, thinking that maybe this old dog was either Howlin' Wolf or Muddy himself come back to protect the Delta from scavenging tourists.

Around six o’clock, they made it to the Stackhouse/Rooster Blues recording studio and store back in Clarksdale. When they walked into the store, which is decorated on the outside like an old riverboat, they met Jim O'Neal. With his long, scraggly hair, and full beard, O'Neal, a Mississippi native, looked like a young Grizzly. Adams, but they also knew him to be just about the most knowledgeable white man in the world on the subject of the blues.  He had been the [co-]founding editor of Living Blues magazine in Chicago, and after selling the magazine to the University of Mississippi he'd come to Clarksdale about three years back to make sure the real blues singers—the Mississippi Deltans—were recorded. 

Heart-Tugging Strains

Jim was listening to Early Wright on the radio. Wright, 76, has hosted "The Soul Man Show" on WROX since 1947. His deep, brassy voice made Audrey feel high and mighty. A song by Big Jack Johnson, a local bluesman, who still sings the plaintive cries that make Delta blues the most heart-tugging strains of all, was spinning to an end. "That was a beautiful record I dropped on you for your listening pleasure," Wright said and then asked for his listeners to call in. "If we drive by and honk our horn in front of the station, he'll thank us on the air for greeting him,” Jim said.

Jim and his wife, Patty Johnson, would serve as guides for the night.  Many of the bluesmen don't have phones, and so they'd have to go from joint to joint, searching for that evening's talent.  The first stop was Boss Hogs. It's not a juke joint, but, like Abe's, it also has the best barbecue in the world.  Large Jack Brinson, who easily tops '300 pounds, is the boss.  He has been barbecuing for thirteen years near the corner of fourth and Florida, standing out on the street until 4:00 in the morning, alongside an old propane tank that he into a grill. He can cook 60 pounds of meat at a time. 

Jim asked where they could hear the blues that night. Jack was not sure who’d be playing in Clarksdale, but he said Little Milton was due to be in Indianola.  In support of their quest, he donated a platter of his night's special—hog. maws smothered with mustard and hot sauce.  Due to renovations, the food stand's sign--"You don't need no teeth to eat this meat” had been' taken down, but the words still rang true. The hog maws were finished (all eaten) in just a few minutes.

"This is the meanest corner in Clarksdale," Jack claimed, looking across the street. Audrey followed the big man's stare to where' a group of young toughs were, busy riling up each other. "But they don't mess with me because 'I've got something waiting for them if they ever do."

They stood out on the corner with Brinson for a while, feeling quite protected, talking about the dangers of New York City.  All Audrey said was "Hmph," as she watched the commotion across the street escalate until it seemed like it’d all be choreographed for her benefit. Young men were laughing and heckling, jumping all over each other.  A while later the two couples took their nightly ration of BBQ sandwiches to a juke joint off Fourth Street called Margaret’s Blue Diamond.

A juke joint, according to Webster’s dictionary, is a “small, inexpensive establishment, for eating drinking dancing to the music of a jukebox." Put more simply, it’s a place where a whole lot of jukin’ is going on.  There is usually no windows, but if there are, two-by-fours block the outside from looking inside.  From the street they look like abandoned buildings. Inside there's always a juke box, but often there'll be a local band as well playing smooth-talking blues to lure you onto the dance floor.

Margaret did not have anyone playing, and so the juke box was in command. Margaret sat at round table in front of the bar, a clapboard stand painted light blue, just like the walls. Dressed in a pretty print dress, Margaret hugged Jim and Patty hello while Audrey and her husband found a table. None of the tables (or, for that matter, the chairs, some of' which were plush red sofas and vinyl bus seats) were the same, and so it was difficult to choose.  Audrey finally decided on what looked like a table with a pink top because of the red light overhead.

Jim and Patty came over with a couple of quart bottles (you only drink quarts or shots in juke joints) of Miller beer; and while a few of Margaret’s regulars danced to Little Jeno singing ‘Don't Look Now,’ Audrey's table finished off Boss Hog's sandwiches.  At first, Audrey felt like the girl in the bright yellow party dress who just said the wrong thing in a loud voice. But everybody was dancing and smiling at them and the feeling soon passed.  Margaret’s place was warm and hospitable, even to northerners.

A Living Bluesman

But they still hadn’t seen a living bluesman in his natural habitat.  So they crossed town to the Rivermount Lounge.  The Rivermount ,if it had any windows, would look over the Sunflower River, and while it used to be thought of as a hangout for disreputable members of the community, it recently had become fairly upscale.  In fact it was almost too slick, with its matching tables and chairs and clean, U-shape bar. That night’s performers, the Clarksdale All-Stars, were eating deep-fried fish fillets of catfish.  They were a mixed lot; a black drummer named Bobby Little, who also works at Rooster Blues, two white guys from Jackson, another one from Clarksdale, and Charles, a black guitarist who just came from nowhere.

Their first song was just about what you might expect when white boys play the blues: a mesh of electricity and music.  And the audience talked right through the song.  Before the second number, Charles announced that they were going to sing a Muddy Waters song in honor of Muddy’s birthday.  Then somewhere in the middle of “Mean Mistreater” it happened.  The harmonica player stepped out, and the band found its soul. He appealed to the god of music, the devil and Muddy all in the same note.

“He’s the most tasteful harmonica I've ever heard," Patty said.  "Succinct, not overplaying.'' Audrey didn't know about all that, but one thing for sure, she couldn't stop moving her body.  Everyone loosened up. The All-Stars moseyed through "I Want to Know," ripped around "Got My Mojo Working,” and Charles, swinging his pink and green guitar to a standard blues riff, bellowed out an impromptu, "You know what you get in a cracker jacks box?” Candy-coated popcorn, peanuts and a surprise.  And we got a whole lot of surprise for you tonight!”

When the band took a break, the quartet drove 80 miles across the Delta through a thin spring fog, reaching Club Ebony in Indianola shortly after midnight. Little Milton Campbell, down from Chicago for a southern tour, had packed the place. “Little Milton,” Jim said as they made theoir way through the crowd, “is what a Delta bluesman aspires to.”  He grew up in Greenville and, after playing all the joints in Mississippi, made it big in Chicago. 

Club Ebony is a juke joint made big as well.  Everyone was dressed like Sunday morning, and the doorman extolled a cover charge at the entrance. People didn’t even buy beer in quart bottles. But in the back room, where the music was playing, the club’s distinction as a juke joint held fast.

Romantic Ballad Start

Up on the stage, strutting to two trombones, a drummer, keyboardist, bass and guitar players and two backup singers shaking like slinkies down a staircase, Little Milton soother the crowd.  For the first half of the show, his silky voice cried out romantic ballads that filled the dance floor, immersing the crowd in his trademark soul blues.

“I’d like to do this one," he said, wiping away sweat with his sky-blue handkerchief, “for my favorite species: the ladies.” At that, all the' women stretched their hands out to him, swaying to the music, with their heads slightly bent forward. They called out to Little Milton.

“Unh-hunh! And “Yeah, Milt!” they screamed. “Tell ‘em something Milt.”

A few guys asked Audrey to dance to a song while her husband wasn't looking. When she said no, they just smiled and moved on to the next victim. She laughed to herself, thinking how this would have gone over in New York.

As a waiter wearing a black arm band on his left sleeve delivered a plastic cup of Jack Daniels with a bowl of ice to the table, Milton called out from the stage, "There’s a great man out in the crowd everybody…Mister Jim O'Neal. He wants to hear the blues, so I guess I'd better do it now.”  The backup singers left the stage then, and Milton, pulling out his guitar, took to the front. It was a shame, what he and his guitar did, making that crowd forget there ever was a guitar named Lucille.

"You must be lovin’ somebody else baby," Little Milton lamented, “Cause you sure ain't lovin’ me. I’m gonna get that ole possum while he's nibblin' in the dark.”

The music did not stop for an hour and a half.  A little before two in the morning, the police came to make sure the show was going to end. Milton easily convinced everybody to stand up, and the he finished with a heavy-handed, Chicago sounding, show-stopping, "The blues is back. The blues is all right.” There wasn’t a stiff body in the building

In his dressing room the show, Milton let on to what it was all about, “Whatever you do, whether it's singing, writing, living, do it from the heart,” he said. “Tell the truth. It must be what you believe, what you see. Don’t make it objective. It’s got to come from you.

And for Audrey, the quest was over.  This cool Brooklyn girl had found out where the blues had always been.

Friday, December 1, 2017

Obituary: Joe Willie Wilkins

By Celia Huggins - Blues Unlimited 1979

A tiny rural area known as Davenport, Mississippi marked only by a railroad crossing just southwest of Clarksdale was the birthplace of Joe Willie Wilkins.

Born on 7 January 1923 (some sources say as early as 1921), his father Frank Wilkins was an accomplished and respected guitar player. Joe Willie's earliest memories were of a place a little further south called Bobo where he was raised in a typical farming community. Oddly, his first musical experiments were with the harmonica, but after two years of that he changed to guitar at the age of twelve. His father's musical activities brought him into contact with other country musicians like Sam Harris, a fiddle player, accordionist Walter 'Pat' Rhodes and Bob Williams, another guitarist. Not being allowed to tamper with his father's guitar he soon acquired a box of his own and at about the age of sixteen left Bobo to work as a field hand at the Sherrard Plantation near the Mississippi River.

By this time he had accumulated a fine repertoire of tunes—he remembered hearing Blind Lemon, Charley Patton, and Robert Johnson—and as a solo performer became the local music man. It was his ability to perform almost any request on the spot that earned him the nickname 'Joe Willie—The Walking Seeburg' (jukebox). Helpful encounters with other musicians in the area ensured his increasing musical dexterity, and he met Muddy Waters, Robert Jr. Lockwood and Sonny Boy Williamson (Rice Miller) in the Clarksdale area.

According to the 1930 Census, a nine-year-old Joe Willie Wilkins lived with his parents, Frank and Pearle, in Beat 5 of Bolivar County, the plantation town of Duncan, near Bobo.

According to the 1940 Census, a 21-year-old Joe Willie Wilkins lived in the household of his father Frank and Pearlee Wilkins, Frank’s daughter in law Mary Wilkins and his step-grandson Moses Bolden.

After Pearl Harbor early in 1942 he was drafted into the Navy but was discharged after only three months. It was then he discovered that his friend Sonny Boy had got his own radio show, and he promptly went to Helena, Ark. where he started working regularly on King Biscuit Time, alongside Peck Curtis, Dudlow and Willie Love. The 1940s saw him constantly in the company of the Delta luminaries like Sonny Boy and Robert Nighthawk — his first wife was Nighthawk's sister.

Still learning guitar, he particularly remembered playing with Robert Jr. Lockwood and being made to work very hard by the more experienced man who used to travel back and forth from Chicago to Helena to be an occasional King Biscuit Boy. Some time was spent travelling around Arkansas and Mississippi making guest King Biscuit broadcasts with his colleagues on different radio stations and Joe Willie is also supposed to have played with the 'All Stars', a big band which worked country clubs and schools in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas, Missouri and four other states in 1945- 46.

More than likely working with Sonny Boy though — when he was around — Joe Willie had become a proficient guitarist but he'd stick to the straight playing style. Although he could play bottleneck, having been influenced by his father and another King Biscuit Boy Houston Stackhouse, he did not dare play this way in public at this time because of his reverence for Nighthawk, Elmore James and Earl Hooker. But life with Sonny Boy was not always smooth. Stackhouse related the story that Joe Willie once went to Detroit with Sonny Boy only to find himself stranded there when Sonny Boy ran off with the gig money, leaving him no choice but to play for pennies to make his fare back to Helena.

The King Biscuit Boys remained popular with or without Sonny Boy, and after a few years with Peck, Pinetop Perkins and Stack-house, in 1948 Joe Willie left Helena and moved to West Memphis. Here he played with the local musicians and met B.B. King with whom he occasionally broadcast.

Sonny Boy was also briefly resident in West Memphis at the time and their ties continued. Throughout his career so far, Joe Willie had refused to sing, not having a great opinion of his own voice. Ile was to continue his role of instrumentalist-only on subsequent recording sessions in the '50s. The longest sessions were cut with Sonny Boy and Willie Love for Trumpet in 1951 and 1952, but he recorded with Arthur Crudup, Willie His and Roosevelt Sykes as well. He said he also attempted a session of his own in the Sun studios, but lacking confidence in himself, nothing materialized.

In 1959 after the death of his father, he moved from West Memphis to Memphis, which was to be his home until his own death. He continued to play with old friends but after Sonny Boy and Nighthawk died, he did not work so much, although the will was still there. Eventually, a partnership with Houston Stackhouse led to the formation of the New King Biscuit Boys and the somewhat bleak 1960s led to a more promising outlook for the 1970s, although Joe Willis's own health was now suffering.

Spurred on by his second wife Carrie, an enthusiastic blues fan herself, and sharing their house with Stackhouse and bass-playing friend Willie Kenebrew, Joe Willie Wilkins & His King Biscuit Boys made appearances at the Ann Arbor Festivals in 1971 and 1973, and Memphis' River City Festivals in 1972 and 1973. 1973 also saw Joe Willie's overdue debut under his own name and as a singer on disc in the shape of 'It's Too Bad' and 'Mr. Downchild', a single made for Steve LaVere's Mimosa label.

The early to mid-1970s also provided work for him on the Memphis Blues Caravan, a traveling show made up mainly of old-time artists like Furry Lewis, Bukka White, and Sleepy John Estes but also featuring Joe Willie and his Boys. The personnel of the Boys changed periodically and included harp players Sonny Blake and Boy Blue and guitarist Clarence Nelson, but Houston Stackhouse was ever-present and the contrasting styles of his and Joe Willie's guitar playing must have made for exciting shows.


At the beginning of 1976, Joe Willie, Stackhouse and a lot of other Memphis regulars were filmed by a BBC-TV mew for a program in `The Devil's Music' series. They were seen performing `Mr. Downchild' and this seems to have been their favorite number as Joe Willie was reluctant to allow his vocal talents to be documented further. Occasional gigs were played at such unlikely venues as the Regency Hyatt Hotel in Memphis for the up-market, curious whites, but Joe Willie was much more at home playing downhome joints like Robinson's Cafe in Hughes, Ark.

Meanwhile a quiet revolution was taking place on the blues scene in Memphis. New clubs were opening in an attempt to revitalize the city's heritage after the demolition of Beale Street. Paul and Marti Savarin were running the Shanty Inn in early 1977 after several years of successful blues features on the Memphis Queen Riverboat line, and were soon to open their present club Blues Alley, and in early 1978 Joe Willie was performing regularly at Larry James' Birth Of The Blues club with pianist Mose Vinson. Then playing at his very best, this newfound outlet was short-lived, closing in late summer 1978, leaving Joe Willie and Vinson without a job.

The last musical group that included Joe Willie Wilkins would have been the Blues Alley Ensemble, but he did not live to make it so.  On March 28, 1979, Wilkens experienced a massive heart attack around 7:30 and died at the Univerity of Tennessee Hospital, Memphis.  His remains were buried on April 3 in Galilee Memorial Gardens.

With this tragedy, we have lost one of the great Delta guitarists and most powerful and well-loved characters of the post-war years. He was remarkable perhaps for never having left the Delta-like so many of his contemporaries, but still managing to find regular worthwhile work. So all we have now to remember him are his recordings: his excellent work with Sonny Boy can be heard on Blues Classics which has been reissued and remastered on Arhoolie 2020. Although only one Willie Love track is readily available on LP — `Seventy Four Blues' on Blues Classics 15, I would pick these recordings to show his style at its best.

His outing with Willie Nix produced the classic `Baker Shop Boogie' and `Seems Like A Million Years', which are available on Charly CR 30125 and only recently did Joe Willie `confess' to being responsible for the guitar on Walter Horton's `Cotton Patch Hotfoot' and `Blues In The Morning' which are only available on the rare Polydor Juke Blues album. He was not too proud of those performances. There is, of course, his own single on Mimosa 174, which is a really fine performance considering his obsessive but unwarranted shyness about singing.

Last summer it was reported that he had made an LP in a more country style setting on the Adamo label, but I have no details of this record. And of course, we have `The Devil's Music'. Not only will we get a chance to see again that brief film of the performance of `Mr. Downchild' when the series is finally repeated, strikes permitting, but Red Lightnin' Records have just completed a contract with the BBC to issue the complete uncut soundtrack from the series, which also contains songs not included in the program.

Joe Willie's widow, Carrie Wilkins, last lived at 1656 Carpenter Street, Memphis, TN.

Acknowledgments
Thanks to Giles Oakley, Arne Brogger, Bengt Ollssen, Mash Taters Johnson, Billfold Cunningham, Kate "The Sharp End" Epsom,  and Bob Flowers, the last of whom pledged his time to find the unmarked grave of Wilkins - wherever it is.

Hank Williams Grave

By Kate Brumback 

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — More than half a century after his death, fans are still paying homage to country music icon Hank Williams. His boyhood home, a museum in Montgomery and the cemetery where he and his wife are buried attract a steady stream of fans, including visitors from England, Japan and other places around the world. A new brochure is due out Nov. 1 listing these and other sites on what the Alabama Bureau of Tourism & Travel calls the "Hank Williams Trail?'

"I enjoy all country western music and Hank is one of the best," said Guyla Hornsby, who visited Williams' grave last summer with her husband, Preston. "I didn't know what to expect, but it's pretty neat." Williams' driver found him dead at age 29 on Jan. 1, 1953, in the backseat of his Cadillac en route to a gig in Ohio. While the cause of death is still a subject of controversy, his short career had been marred by heavy drinking and use of painkillers for a back condition. Williams' hits included a dozen singles at No. 1 and many more in the country top 10. Among them were "Your Cheatin' Heart," "I'm So Lone-some I Could Cry," "Cold, Cold Heart," "Hey Good Lookin,"' "Jambalaya (On the Bayou)," "Move It On Over" and "Lovesick Blues." Many of the songs remain well-known both as country songs and as popular standards, with artists from Linda Ronstadt to Norah Jones recording covers. Williams' son, Hank Williams Jr., is a successful country-rock musician as well. Williams is buried in the Oakwood Cemetery Annex, about a mile from the Hank Williams Museum in downtown Montgomery.

The gravesite features two white and gray marble monuments, one to Hank and one to his wife, Audrey. Marble slabs with their names and the years they were born and died mark the burial sites. There's also a marble replica of Williams' cowboy hat. A low marble curb pens in the artificial-grass-carpeted area around the monument, and two marble benches provide a resting spot for weary visitors. While folks come year-round to pay their respects, ceremonies are held at the cemetery twice a year, on the Jan. 1 anniversary of Williams' death, and on his Sept. 17 birthday. The New Year's Day event "is the best time of year to come," said Lee Sentell, director of Alabama Tourism. Fans gather at the museum in downtown Montgomery, and singers, both professional and amateurs, per-form impromptu covers of his songs. Guests at the events have included elderly members of Williams' old band, the Drifting Cowboys, along with Charles Carr, the driver who found Williams dead.



More than 25,000 people came to Montgomery for Williams' funeral, a record crowd for the city that has never been surpassed. The funeral was held in City Hall, which is also on the Hank Williams Trail, and broadcast to the crowds outside. The statue of Williams stands across the street. The Hank Williams Museum gets about 35,000 visitors a year. The museum was founded in 1999 by Cecil Jackson, who fell in love with Williams' music at age 8, before Williams had started recording. He was popular locally and Jackson heard him on the radio. Jackson's daughter, Beth Birtley, manages the museum today and describes herself as a life-long fan. "I was raised knowing who Hank Williams was," she said. "I'm very proud to have had my father teach me who Hank Williams was and how to appreciate him and his music. And I'm proud to be a part of the family that helps keep his memory alive." Museum exhibits include the convertible Williams was riding in when he died.

Williams' fans may also want to pay a visit to Lincoln Cemetery, where a 9-foot-tall white marble stone notes that Williams' mentor, Rufus "Tee-Tot" Payne, is buried there. The exact location of his unmarked grave is not known. Payne, a black street musician, taught Williams to play guitar in the 1930s. Sentell, the tourism director, says fans often make nocturnal visits to Williams' grave in Oak-wood, and they sometimes leave an unusual offering. "Because of Alan Jackson's song, 'Midnight in Montgomery,' fans of Hank's, as well as country music in general, will frequently go up there to have a beer," Sentell said. He said he went up to the grave one Sunday to take photos in the early morning light and found several empty beer cans, as well as a full one — seemingly left for Hank. Cemetery custodians have told Sentell it is not uncommon to find beer cans both empty and full — by the site in the morning. "Somebody during the night," said Sentell, "shared a brew with Hank."