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Jody Williams

 
Artist: Jody Williams
Jody Williams

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Influenced By:

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Worked With:

Otis Spann, Earl Phillips, S.P. Leary, Lafayette Leake, Hosea Lee Kennard, Fred Below, Sam Lay, Johnny Jones, Hubert Sumlin, Henry Gray, Willie Dixon
  • Born: February 03, 1935, Mobile, AL
  • Active: '50s, '60s, '70s, 2000s
  • Genres: Blues
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "Leading Brand," "You Left Me in the Dark," "Return of a Legend"
  • Representative Songs: "Lucky Lou" "You May"

Biography

Retired from the Chicago blues business for decades and now back again and sounding as good as ever, Jody Williams's stinging lead guitar work is still stirringly felt every time someone punches up Billy Boy Arnold's "I Was Fooled," Bo Diddley's "Who Do You Love," Otis Spann's "Five Spot," or Williams's eerie minor-key instrumental masterpiece, "Lucky Lou."

Born in Alabama, Joseph Leon Williams moved to Chicago at age six. He grew up alongside Bo Diddley, the two trading licks as kids and playing for real by 1951. By the mid-'50s, Williams was ensconced as a Chicago session guitarist of high stature, but he began to grow disenchanted when the signature lick he created for newcomer Billy Stewart's Argo waxing of "Billy's Blues" was appropriated by Mickey Baker for the Mickey & Sylvia smash "Love Is Strange." Baker apparently caught Williams playing the riff in Washington, D.C., at the Howard Theatre. When the legal smoke had cleared, Bo Diddley's wife owned the writing credit for "Love Is Strange" and Jody Williams had zipola for monetary compensation.

Williams made his recording debut (singing as well as playing) as a leader for powerhouse deejay Al Benson's Blue Lake imprint in 1955: "Looking for My Baby" was credited to Little Papa Joe. That alias pattern held in 1957, when Argo unleashed "Lucky Lou" and its sumptuous slow blues vocal flip "You May" as by Little Joe Lee (quite a band here -- saxists Harold Ashby and Red Holloway, keyboardist Lafayette Leake, and bassist Willie Dixon). In 1960, Herald Records labeled him Sugar Boy Williams on "Little Girl." 1960s outings for Nike, Jive, Smash, and Yulando rounded out Williams's slim discography.

Jody Williams dropped out of the blues game and went to work at Xerox as a technical engineer. He retired in 1994 and began to think about getting back into music. In 1999 at the urging of producer Dick Shurman, he went to a blues club for the first time in many, many years to see his old friend Robert Lockwood, Jr.. Soon after Williams broke out some old tapes he made in 1964, liked what he heard so much that it brought tears to his eyes and decided to recapture the sound he created back when he was a top session man. After playing some gigs in 2000 and 2001, Williams and Dick Shurman went into the studio to cut his first solo album. Return of a Legend was issued in 2002, garnering rave reviews and sparking newfound interest in one of the unsung heroes of the blues guitar. ~ Bill Dahl, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Jody Williams (blues musician)
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Jody Williams
Birth name Joseph Leon Williams
Also known as Little Papa Joe, Little Joe Lee
Born February 3, 1935 (1935-02-03) (age 74)
Mobile, Alabama, U.S.
Origin Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Genres Blues
Instruments Electric guitar, vocals
Years active 1954–1960s, 2000–present
Labels Blue Lake, Argo, Nike, Jive, Smash, Yulando, Evidence

Joseph Leon Williams (born February 3, 1935), better known as Jody Williams, is an American blues guitarist and singer. His singular guitar playing, marked by flamboyant string-bending, imaginative chord changes and a distinctive tone, was highly influential in the Chicago blues scene of the 1950s.

Contents

Career

In the mid 1950s, Williams was one of the most sought-after session guitarists in Chicago, yet he was little known outside the music industry since his name rarely appeared on discs. His acclaimed comeback in 2002 led to a resurgence of interest in Williams’ early work, and his reappraisal as one of the great blues guitarists.[1]

Chicago heyday

Born in Mobile, Alabama, Williams moved to Chicago at the age of five. His first instrument was the harmonica, which he swapped for the guitar after hearing Bo Diddley play at a talent show they were both performing in. Diddley, seven years his senior, took Williams under his wing and taught him the rudiments of guitar. By 1951 Williams and Diddley were playing on the street together, with Williams providing backing to Diddley's vocals, accompanied by Roosevelt Jackson on washtub bass.[1][2] Williams cut his teeth gigging with a string of blues musicians, notably Memphis Minnie, Elmore James and Otis Spann. After touring with West Coast piano player Charles Brown, Williams established himself as a session player with Chess Records.[1]

At Chess, Williams met Howlin’ Wolf, recently arrived in Chicago from Memphis, Tennessee, and became a member of his band. Williams played guitar alongside Hubert Sumlin on Howlin’ Wolf’s 1954 singles, "Evil Is Going On", and "Forty Four", and on the 1955 releases, "Who Will Be Next" and "Come To Me Baby." Williams also provided backing on Otis Spann’s 1954 release, "It Must Have Been The Devil", that features lead guitar work from B. B. King, one of Williams’ early heroes and a big influence on his playing.[1]

Williams’ solo career began in December 1955 with the upbeat saxophone-driven "Lookin’ For My Baby", released under the name Little Papa Joe on Al Benson's Blue Lake label. Unfortunately, the company closed a few months later, leaving his brilliant slide guitar performance on "Groaning My Blues Away" unreleased. By this time, Williams was highly sought after as a session guitarist, and his virtuosity in this capacity is well illustrated by his blistering lead guitar work on Bo Diddley's "Who Do You Love?",[1] a hit for Checker Records in 1956. Other notable session work from the 1950s include lead guitar parts on Jimmy Rogers’ "One Kiss", Jimmy Witherspoon’s "Ain't Nobody's Business" and Otis Rush’s "Three Times A Fool".[3]

In 1957, Williams released "You May" on Argo Records under the name Little Joe Lee, with the inventive b-side instrumental "Lucky Lou", the extraordinary opening riff of which Otis Rush adapted for his 1958 Cobra Records side "All Your Love (I Miss Loving)".[1] Further evidence of Williams’ influence on Rush (they played in a number of sessions together) is Rush’s solo on Buddy Guy’s 1958 debut, "Sit And Cry (The Blues)", copied almost exactly from Williams’ "You May".[1]

Disullusionment with music business

The frequency with which Williams found his distinctive guitar phrases being copied without credit led to increasing disenchantment with the music business. When the riff he created for Billy Stewart's 1956 Argo release, "Billy's Blues", was appropriated by Mickey Baker for the Mickey & Sylvia hit, "Love Is Strange", Chess Records took legal action. At the conclusion of the case in 1961, Williams gained neither credit nor compensation.[1] "I was ripped off," Williams later told John Sinkevics in the Grand Rapids Press.[4] In the early 1960s, Williams was making a living gigging with his Big 3 Trio (distinct from Willie Dixon’s group of the same name), but by the end of the decade, he had retired from the music industry altogether. He studied electronics and eventually became a technical engineer for Xerox, his job for over 25 years.

Comeback

Only after his retirement did he consider picking up his guitar again, which had laid untouched under his bed all the while. "One day my wife said if I started playing again I might feel better about life in general," he told Hoekstra of the Chicago Sun-Times.[5] In 2000, he went to see his old friend Robert Jr. Lockwood play, and grew nostalgic for his music days. Back at home, an old tape of himself playing moved him to tears and inspired him to pick up his guitar again.[1] He returned to playing gigs only two months later. He gained much encouragement in this period from Dick Shurman, who eventually produced his comeback album, Return of a Legend (2002), on which his bold playing belies his thirty-year break from music.[1] "He plays with a verve and vigor that sound as good today as it did on the classic records," wrote Vintage Guitar magazine.[6]


Technique

Williams is known for his imaginative chord selection, characterized by raised fives, and minor sixths and minor sevenths with flattened fives. He usually plays with an unusual open E tuning, originally taught to him by Bo Diddley.[1]

Discography

Singles

  • 1956 – "Looking For My Baby" / "Easy Lovin’" (Blue Lake 116) (as Little Papa Joe)
  • 1957 – "You May" / "Lucky Lou" (Argo 5274) (as Little Joe Lee)
  • 1963 – "Lonely Without You" / "Moanin’ For Molasses" (Nike 1013)
  • 1963 – "Lonely Without You" / "Time For A Change" (Jive J-1004)
  • 1963 – "Hideout" / "Moanin’ For Molasses" (Smash 1801)
  • 1966 – "Lonely Without You" / "Time For A Change" (Yulando R-133-8665)

Albums

  • 2002 – Return Of A Legend (Evidence ECD 26120)
  • 2004 – You Left Me In The Dark (Evidence ECD 26130)

Appearances as guitarist

  • 1954 – Howlin’ Wolf, "Evil Is Going On" / "Baby How Long" (Chess 1575)
  • 1954 – Howlin’ Wolf, "Forty Four" / "I’ll Be Around" (Chess 1584)
  • 1954 – Otis Spann, "It Must Have Been The Devil" / "Five Spot" (Checker 807)
  • 1955 – Howlin’ Wolf, "Who Will Be Next" / "I Have A Little Girl" (Chess 1593)
  • 1955 – Howlin’ Wolf, "Come To Me Baby" / "Don’t Mess With Me Baby" (Chess 1607)
  • 1955 – Sonny Boy Williamson II, "Don’t Start Me Talkin’" / "All My Love In Vain" (Checker 824)
  • 1955 – Billy Boy Arnold, "I Was Fooled" / "I Wish You Would" (Vee-Jay VJ 146)
  • 1955 – Earl Phillips, "Oop De Oop" / "Nothing But Love" (Vee-Jay VJ 158)
  • 1955 – Bo Diddley, "Diddy Wah Diddy" / "I’m Looking For A Woman" (Checker 832)
  • 1956 – Billy Boy Arnold, "Don’t Stay Out All Night" / "I Ain’t Got You" (Vee-Jay VJ171)
  • 1956 – Lu Mac, "Albert Is His Name" / "I’ll Never Let Him Know" (Blue Lake 117)
  • 1956 – Bo Diddley, "Who Do You Love?" / "I’m Bad" (Checker 842)
  • 1956 – Floyd Dixon, "Alarm Clock Blue"s / "I’m Ashamed Of Myself" (Checker 857)
  • 1956 – Bobby Charles, "Why Did You Leave" / "Don’t You Know I Love You" (Chess 1617)
  • 1956 – Billy Stewart, "Billy’s Blues (Part 1)" / "Billy’s Blues (Part 2)" (Chess 1625 and Argo 5256)
  • 1956 – Billy Boy Arnold, "Here’s My Picture" / "You Got Me Wrong" (Vee-Jay VJ 192)
  • 1957 – Jimmy Rogers, "One Kiss" / "I Can’t Believe" (Chess 1659)
  • 1957 – Otis Rush, "Groaning The Blues" / "If You Were Mine" (Cobra 5010)
  • 1957 – Harold Burrage, "Messed Up" / "I Don’t Care Who Knows" (Cobra 5012)
  • 1958 – Howlin’ Wolf, "I Didn’t Know" / "Moanin’ For My Baby" (Chess 1695)
  • 1958 – Otis Rush, "Three Times A Fool" / "She’s A Good ‘Un" (Cobra 5023)
  • 1959 – Bobby Davis, "I Was Wrong" / "Hype You Into Sellin’ (Your Head)" (Bandera 2505)
  • 1959 – Bo Diddley, "Dancing Girl" (on Have Guitar Will Travel: Checker LP 2974)
  • 1960 – Bobby Davis and the Big “3” Trio, "One Love Have I" / "She’s A Problem" (Bandera 2508)
  • 1964 – Billy Boy Arnold, "I Wish You Would" / "Prisoner’s Plea" (Vivid 109)
  • 2007 – The Mannish Boys, "Groan My Blues Away" / "Young & Tender" (on Big Plans: Delta Groove DGPCD 116)

Tracks issued much later than their original recording date

  • 1976 – J. T. Brown, "Lonely (As A Man Can Be)" / "Going Home To My Baby" / "It's A Shame To Tell The People" / "When I Was A Lad" / "Use That Spot" (Windy City Boogie: Pearl PL-9; recorded 1956)
  • 1979 – Harold Burrage, "I Love My Baby" (on Rockin’ Wild: P-Vine PLP-9021; recorded 1957)
  • 1982 – Willie Dixon, "Firey Love" (on Blues Roots Series Vol. 12: Chess LP 6.24802AG; recorded 1957)
  • 1989 – Jody Williams, "Moaning Blues (Groan My Blues Away)" / "What A Fool I’ve Been (I Feel So All Alone)" (on Cool Playing Blues: Relic LP 8025/CD 7016; recorded 1955)
  • 1990 – Jimmy Witherspoon, "Congratulations" / "Ain’t Nobody’s Business" (on Spoon So Easy: Chess CH-93003; recorded 1956)
  • 1991 – Jody Williams, "What Kind Of Gal Is That?" (on The Blues Vol. 6: Chess/MCA CH/CHD 9330; recorded 1957)
  • 1995 – Willie Dixon, All The Time (on The Original Wang Dang Doodle: Chess/MCA CHD-9353; recorded 1957)
  • 1996 – Bobby Charles, "Watch It, Sprocket" / "Hey Good Lookin’" (on Chess Masters: MCA Victor MVCM-22078; recorded 1956)

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
Leading Brand (1978 Album by Earl Hooker)
Blues Masters, Vol. 2: Postwar Chicago Blues (1992 Album by Various Artists)
Wrinkles (1989 Album by Various Artists)

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