Frogtoon Music

Blues Hit Big Town (Album) by Junior Wells

Artist Biography For Junior Wells

Junior Wells December 9 1934 - January 15 1998 Born Amos Blakemore Was A Blues Vocalist And Harmonica Player Based In Chicago Who Was Famous For Playing With Muddy Waters Buddy Guy Magic Sam Lonnie Brooks The Rolling Stones And Van Morrison. He Was Born In Memphis Tennessee And Raised In Arkansas. Wells Moved To Chicago In 1948 And First Made His Mark At Age 18 Playing In Muddy Waters' Band. He Later Worked With Buddy Guy In The 1960s And Recorded For Delmark Records. His Most Memorable Songs Are "Messin' With The Kid" And "Little By Little " And His Best-Known Album 1965's Hoodoo Man Blues Which Evokes The Smoky Atmosphere Of The Era's Westside Chicago Blues Bars. Wells Made An Appearance In The 1998 Movie Blues Brothers 2000 The Sequel To The Blues Brothers. The Movie Was Released Less Than A Month After His Death. On His Passing In 1998 Junior Wells Was Interred In The Oak Woods Cemetery Chicago.

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Frogtoon Music Album Info: Blues Hit Big Town

He Was One Bad Dude Strutting Across The Stage Like A Harp-Toting Gangster Mesmerizing The Crowd With His Tough-Guy Antics And Rib-Sticking Chicago Blues Attack. Amazingly Junior Wells Kept At Precisely This Sort Of Thing For Over 40 Years — He Was An Active Performer From The Dawn Of The 1950s To His Death In The Late ’90s. Born In Memphis Wells Learned His Earliest Harp Licks From Another Future Legend Little Junior Parker Before He Came To Chicago At Age 12. In 1950 The Teenager Passed An Impromptu Audition For Guitarists Louis And David Myers At A House Party On The South Side And The Deuces Were Born. When Drummer Fred Below Came Aboard They Changed Their Name To The Aces. Little Walter Left Muddy Waters In 1952 In The Wake Of His Hit Instrumental “Juke” And Wells Jumped Ship To Take His Place With Waters. That Didn’t Stop The Aces Who Joined Forces With Little Walter From Backing Wells On His Initial Sessions For States Records Though — His Debut Date Produced Some Seminal Chicago Blues Efforts Including His First Reading Of “Hoodoo Man ” A Rollicking “Cut That Out ” And The Blazing Instrumentals “Eagle Rock” And “Junior’s Wail.” More Fireworks Ensued The Next Year When He Encored For States With A Mournful “So All Alone” And The Jumping “Lawdy! Lawdy!” Muddy Waters Moonlighted On Guitar For The Session . Already Wells Was Exhibiting His Tempestuous Side — He Was Allegedly AWOL From The Army At The Time. In 1957 Wells Hooked Up With Producer Mel London Who Owned The Chief And Profile Logos. The Association Resulted In Many Of Wells’s Most Enduring Sides Including “I Could Cry” And The Rock & Rolling “Lovey Dovey Lovely One” In 1957 The Grinding National R&B Hit “Little By Little” With Willie Dixon Providing Vocal Harmony In 1959 And The R&B-Laced Classic “Messin’ With The Kid” In 1960 Sporting Earl Hooker’s Immaculate Guitar Work . Wells’s Harp Was De-Emphasized During This Period On Record In Favor Of His Animated Vocals. With Bob Koester Producing The Harpist Cut An All-Time Classic LP For Delmark In 1965. Hoodoo Man Blues Vividly Captured The Feel Of A Typical Wells Set At Theresa’s Lounge Even Though It Was Cut In A Studio. With Buddy Guy Initially Billed As “Friendly Chap” Due To His Contract With Chess Providing Concise Lead Guitar Wells Laid Down Definitive Versions Of “Snatch It Back And Hold It ” “You Don’t Love Me ” And “Chittlin’ Con Carne.” The Harpist Made His Second Appearance On The National R&B Lists In 1968 With A Funky James Brown-Tinged Piece “You’re Tuff Enough ” For Mercury’s Feisty Blue Rock Logo. Wells Had Been Working In This Bag For Some Time Alarming The Purists But Delighting R&B Fans His Brass-Powered 1966 Single For Bright Star “Up In Heah ” Had Previously Made A Lot Of Local Noise. After A Fine Mid-’70s Set For Delmark On Tap Little Was Heard From Wells On Vinyl For An Extended Spell Though He Continued To Enjoy Massive Appeal At Home Theresa’s Was His Principal Haunt For Many A Moon And Abroad Whether On His Own Or In Partnership With Guy They Opened For The Rolling Stones On One Memorable Tour And Cut An Inconsistent But Interesting Album For Atco In The Early ’70s . Toward The End Of His Career Wells Just Didn’t Seem To Be Into Recording Anymore A Pair Of Sets For Telarc In The Early ’90s Were Major Disappointments But His Last Studio Session 1997’s Come On In This House Found Him On The Rebound And The Critics Noticed — The Album Won The W.C. Handy Blues Award For Traditional Blues Album In 1997. Even When He Came Up Short In The Studio Wells Remained A Potent Live Attraction Cutting A Familiar Swaggering Figure Commanding The Attention Of Everyone In The Room With One Menacing Yelp Or A Punctuating Blast From His Amplified Harmonica. He Continued Performing Until He Was Diagnosed With Lymphatic Cancer In The Summer Of 1997. That Fall He Suffered A Heart Attack While Undergoing Treatment Sending Him Into A Coma. Wells Stayed In The Coma Until He Passed Away On January 15 1998. A Handful Of Compilations Were Released Shortly After His Death As Was The Film Blues Brothers 2000 Which Featured A Cameo By Wells. About The Record Label
US Label Founded 1953 By Robert G. Koester. Delmark Started In 1953 As Delmar Records Before Turning To Delmark In 1959 Upon Koester’s Move To Chicago.