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Eddie Boyd

 
Artist: Eddie Boyd
  • Born: November 25, 1914, Stovall, MS
  • Died: July 13, 1994, Helsinki, Finland
  • Active: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s
  • Genres: Blues
  • Instrument: Piano, Vocals, Songwriter
  • Representative Albums: "Five Long Years - The Complete Recordings, Vol. 2: 1951-1953," "Third Degree," "Five Long Years"
  • Representative Songs: "Five Long Years," "Third Degree," "24 Hours"

Biography

Few postwar blues standards have retained the universal appeal of Eddie Boyd's "Five Long Years." Cut in 1951, Boyd's masterpiece has attracted faithful covers by B.B. King, Muddy Waters, Jimmy Reed, Buddy Guy, and too many other bluesmen to recount here. But Boyd's discography is filled with evocative compositions, often full of after-hours ambience.

Like so many Chicago blues stalwarts, Boyd hailed from the fertile Mississippi Delta. The segregationist policies that had a stranglehold on much of the South didn't appeal to the youngster, so he migrated up to Memphis (where he began to play the piano, influenced by Roosevelt Sykes and Leroy Carr). In 1941, Boyd settled in Chicago, falling in with the "Bluebird beat" crowd that recorded for producer Lester Melrose. He backed harp legend Sonny Boy Williamson on his 1945 classic "Elevator Woman," also accompanying Bluebird stars Jazz Gillum, Tampa Red, and Jazz Gillum on wax. Melrose produced Boyd's own 1947 recording debut for RCA as well; the pianist stayed with Victor through 1949.

Boyd reportedly paid for the date that produced "Five Long Years" himself, peddling the track to JOB Records (where the stolid blues topped the R&B charts during 1952). Powerful DJ Al Benson signed Boyd to a contract with his Parrot imprint and promptly sold the pact to Chess, inaugurating a stormy few years with Chicago's top blues outlet. There he waxed "24 Hours" and "Third Degree," both huge R&B hits in 1953, and a host of other Chicago blues gems. But Boyd and Leonard Chess were often at loggerheads, so it was on to Narvel "Cadillac Baby" Eatmon's Bea & Baby imprint in 1959 for eight solid sides with Robert Jr. Lockwood on guitar, and a slew of lesser labels after that. A serious auto wreck in 1957 had stalled his career for a spell.

Sick of the discrimination he perceived toward African Americans in this country, Boyd became enamored of Europe during his tour with the 1965 American Folk Blues Festival, so he moved to Belgium. The recording opportunities long denied him in his native land were plentiful overseas; Boyd cut prolifically during the late '60s, including two LPs for producer Mike Vernon. In the early '70s, he settled in Helsinki, Finland, where he played often and lived comfortably until his death. ~ Bill Dahl, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Eddie Boyd
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Edward Riley Boyd known as Eddie Boyd (November 25, 1914 – July 13, 1994[1]) was a blues piano player, born on Stovall's Plantation near Clarksdale, Mississippi.[2]

Contents

Life and career

Boyd moved to the Beale Street district of Memphis, Tennessee in 1936 where he played piano and guitar with his group, the Dixie Rhythm Boys. Boyd followed the great migration northward to the factories of Chicago, Illinois in 1941.[2]

He wrote and recorded the hit songs "Five Long Years" (1952), "24 Hours" (1953), and the "Third Degree" (co-written by Willie Dixon, also 1953).[2] Boyd toured Europe with Buddy Guy's band in 1965 as part of the American Folk Blues Festival.[2] He later toured and recorded with Fleetwood Mac and John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers.

Tired of the racial discrimination he experienced in the United States, he first moved to Belgium[1] where he recorded with the Dutch band, Cuby and the Blizzards. He settled in Helsinki, Finland in 1970,[2] where he recorded ten blues records, the first being Praise to Helsinki (1970). He married his wife, Leila, in 1977. His last blues concert took place in 1984. After that he performed only gospel music.

Boyd died in 1994 in Helsinki, Finland, just a few months before Eric Clapton released the chart-topping blues album, From the Cradle that included Boyd's "Five Long Years" and "Third Degree".

Discography

Albums

  • Eddie Boyd and His Blues Band featuring Peter GreenDecca (1967) with the Bluesbreakers; CD release on Gott Discs
  1. "Too Bad, Pt. 1"
  2. "Dust My Broom"
  3. "Unfair Lovers"
  4. "Key to the Highway"
  5. "Vacation from the Blues"
  6. "Steakhouse Rock"
  7. "Letter Missin' Blues"
  8. "Ain't Doin' Too Bad"
  9. "Blue Coat Man"
  10. "Train Is Coming"
  11. "Save Her Doctor"
  12. "Rack 'Em Back"
  13. "Too Bad, Pt. 2"
  14. "Big Bell"
  15. "Pinetop's Boogie Woogie"
  16. "Night Time Is the Right Time"

Eddie Boyd : piano, vocals
Peter Green : guitar, chorus (16)
John Mayall : harmonica, chorus (16)
John McVie : bass
Aynsley Dunbar : drums
Tony McPhee : guitar (02,11)
Albert Hall : trumpet (01)
Rex Morris : tenor saxophone (01)
Bob Efford : tenor sax (01)
Harry Klein : baritone saxophone (01)

recorded : March 14, 1967 (03, 06, 07, 12, 13, 14, 16); March 17, 1967 (01, 04, 05, 08, 09, 10, 15); March 21, 1967 (02 and 11)

  • 7936 South RhodesBlue Horizon, Epic BN26409 (1968) with Green, McVie, & Fleetwood
  1. "You Got to Reap"
  2. "Just the Blues"
  3. "She's Real"
  4. "Back Slack"
  5. "Be Careful"
  6. "Ten to One"
  7. "Blues Is Here to Stay"
  8. "You Are My Love"
  9. "Third Degree"
  10. "Thank You Baby"
  11. "She's Gone"
  12. "I Can't Stop Loving You"
  1. "Got To Know"
  2. "Let It Be Me"
  3. "Denmark
  4. "I Cried"
  5. "Nothing"
  6. "Praise to Helsinki"
  7. "When the Cuckoo"
  8. "The Guff"
  9. "Ding Dong"
  10. "Eddie's Instrumental"
  • Eddie Boyd: The Complete Blue Horizon SessionsColumbia, Sony/BMG (2006)
  1. "It’s So Miserable to Be Alone"
  2. "Empty Arms"
  3. "You Got to Reap"
  4. "Just the Blues"
  5. "She's Real"
  6. "Back Slack"
  7. "Be Careful"
  8. "Ten to One"
  9. "Blues Is Here to Stay"
  10. "You Are My Love"
  11. "Third Degree"
  12. "Thank You Baby"
  13. "She’s Gone"
  14. "(I Can't Stop) Loving You"
  15. "Big Boat"
  16. "Sent for You Yesterday"
  17. "Stroller" (Previously unreleased)
  18. "No Place Like Home" (Previously unreleased)
  • The Legacy of the Blues vol. 10 – Sonet

Singles

  • "Five Long Years" on Blues Masters Vol. 2: Postwar ChicagoRhino
  • "24 Hours" on The Best of Chess Blues vol. 1 – Chess/MCA
    • live version on American Folk Blues Festival '65 – L&R/Bellaphon
  • "Third Degree" on A Tribute to Willie Dixon: 1915–1992 – Chess

References

  1. ^ a b Allmusic biography
  2. ^ a b c d e Russell, Tony (1997). The Blues - From Robert Johnson to Robert Cray. Dubai: Carlton Books Limited. pp. 94-95. ISBN 1-85868-255-X. 

See also

External links

  • Biography at Answers.com retrieved June 24, 2006

 
 
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