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Willie Brown (musician)
   
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Willie Brown
Born August 6, 1900(1900-08-06)
Clarksdale, Mississippi, U.S.
Died December 30, 1952
Tunica, Mississippi, U.S.
Genre(s) Delta blues, country blues
Instrument(s) Guitar
Notable instrument(s)
Gibson L-1

Willie Brown (August 6, 1900 – December 30, 1952[1]) was an American delta blues guitarist and singer.

Contents

Life and career

Born in Clarksdale, Mississippi,[1] Brown played with such notables as Charley Patton, Son House, and Robert Johnson. He was not known to be a self-promoting frontman, preferring to "second" (accompany) other musicians. Little is known for certain of the man whom Robert Johnson called "my friend-boy, Willie Brown" (in his prophetic "Cross Road Blues") and whom Johnson indicated should be notified in event of his death. Brown is heard with Patton on the Paramount label sessions of 1930, playing "M & O Blues," and "Future Blues."[1] Apart from playing with Son House and Charlie Patton it has also been said that he played with artists such as Luke Thomson and Thomas "Clubfoot" Coles. At least four other songs he recorded for Paramount have never been found.

"Rowdy Blues", a 1929 song credited to Kid Bailey, is disputed to have Brown on backup, or Brown himself using the name of Kid Bailey. Willie Brown does his song "Future Blues" on the album Son House & The Great Delta Blues Singers (1994), recorded between 1928 and 1930, on the Document Records label.

David Evans has reconstructed the early biography of a Willie Brown living in Drew, Mississippi, until 1929. He was married by 1911 to a proficient guitarist named Josie Mills. He is recalled as singing and playing guitar with Charley Patton and others in the neighbourhood of Drew.[2] Informants with conflicting memories led Gayle Dean Wardlow and Steve Calt to conclude that this was a different Willie Brown.[3] Evans rejects this, believing that the singing and guitar style of the 1931 recordings is clearly in the tradition of other performers from Drew such as Charley Patton, Tommy Johnson, Kid Bailey, Howling Wolf and artists recorded non-commercially.

Alan Lomax added further confusion in 1993, suggesting that the William Brown he recorded in Arkansas in 1942 was the same man as the Paramount artist.[4] The recording was for a joint project between Fisk University and the Library of Congress documenting the music of Coahoma County, Mississippi in 1941 and 1942. Writing over fifty years later, Lomax forgot that he had actually recorded Willie the previous summer with Son House, Fiddlin' Joe Martin and Leroy Williams. Brown played second guitar on three performances by the whole band, and recorded one solo, "Make Me A Pallet On The Floor".

The later biography is clear. Willie Brown, the Paramount artist, lived in Robinsonville, Mississippi from 1929 and moved to Lake Cormorant, Mississippi by 1935. He performed occasionally with Charley Patton, and continually with Son House until his death. After this, House ceased performing until his "rediscovery" in 1964.

Brown died in Tunica, Mississippi in 1952 at the age of 52.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Allmusic biography
  2. ^ Evans, David. Big Road Blues. Tradition & Creativity in the Folk Blues. Da Capo (1982). ISBN 0-306-80300-3
  3. ^ Wardlow, Gayle Dean. Chasin' that Devil Music. Searching for the Blues. Miller Freeman Books (1998). ISBN 0-87930-552-5
  4. ^ Lomax, Alan. The Land Where the Blues Began. Methuen (1993). ISBN 0-413-67850-4

External links




Index Of Related Pages




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Willie Brown (musician)Willie Brown (politician)Willie Brown Jr.
Willie BrowneWillie BryantWillie Buchan
Willie BuchanonWillie Burden
Willie BurkeWillie Burton
Willie CagerWillie Campbell
Willie Campbell (hurler)Willie Carlin
Willie CarneWillie CarrWillie Carson
Willie Carson (photo-journalist)Willie Carson (soccer)Willie Cañate
Willie Clancy
Willie Clancy (hurler)Willie Clancy Summer SchoolWillie Clark
Willie Clark (ice hockey)Willie Clark (talk radio host)
Willie ClarkeWillie ClayWillie Clayton
Willie CliffordWillie CobbsWillie Coffey
Willie CollazoWillie ColonWillie Colon (American football)
Willie Colón
Willie Cook
Willie CorduffWillie CornishWillie Coulson
Willie CrawfordWillie Crilley
Willie CulbertWillie Cunningham
Willie Cunningham (Northern Irish footballer)Willie Cunningham (Scottish footballer)Willie D
Willie D. BurtonWillie Da Kid
Willie DanielWillie DavenportWillie Davie
Willie DaviesWillie Davies (footballer)Willie Davis
Willie Davis (baseball)
Willie Davis (defensive end)
Willie Davis (wide receiver)
Willie DeWitt
Willie Dee BowlesWillie Dennis
Willie DensonWillie Desjardins
Willie DixonWillie Doherty
Willie DonachieWillie Doyle
Willie Doyle (footballer)Willie DrewreyWillie Duff
Willie DugganWillie DunnWillie Dyer
Willie DynamiteWillie E. GaryWillie Earl Green
Willie EdwardsWillie Ellison
Willie EvansWillie Evans (defensive end)
Willie Evans (footballer)Willie Eyre
Willie FaganWillie FalconerWillie Farley
Willie FarrellWillie Ferguson
Willie Fernie (footballer)Willie Fernie (golfer)Willie Findlay
Willie FitzmauriceWillie Fleming
Willie ForbesWillie FotheringhamWillie Francis
Willie FraserWillie Fraser (footballer)Willie Frazer
Willie FrazierWillie Fung
Willie GalimoreWillie GallacherWillie Gant
Willie GarsonWillie Garvin
Willie Gary (American football)Willie Gaston
Willie Gault
Willie GeistWillie GermanyWillie Getaway
Willie GibsonWillie GilbertWillie Gildea
Willie GillisWillie GogginWillie Green
Willie Green (American football)Willie Greene
Willie HaleWillie Hall
Willie Hall (American football)Willie Hall (English footballer)
Willie Hall (drummer)
Willie Hall (pianist)Willie HamiltonWillie Hamilton (footballer)
Willie Harcourt-CoozeWillie Hardy
Willie HarmonWillie Harper
Willie HarrisWillie HaugheyWillie Haupt
Willie HayesWillie Henderson
Willie Henderson (musician)Willie Herd
Willie HernándezWillie Heston
Willie HoelWillie Holman
Willie HoppeWillie HorneWillie Horton
Willie Horton (baseball)
Willie Hough
Willie Huber
Willie HughesWillie HulonWillie Humphrey
Willie HunterWillie Hutch
Willie IrvinWillie Irvine
Willie J. Slater
Willie J. Williams (cornerback)
Willie JacksonWillie Jackson (American football)Willie Jackson (New Zealand)
Willie Jeffries
Willie John DalyWillie John Kiely
Willie John McBrideWillie Johnson
Willie Johnson (guitarist)
Willie JohnstonWillie Johnston (Medal of Honor recipient)Willie Jones
Willie Jones, IIIWillie Jones (baseball)
Willie Jones (statesman)Willie JorrinWillie Joyce
Willie KammWillie Keeler
Willie KempWillie Kent
Willie KirklandWillie KivlichanWillie Klutse
Willie L. Williams
Willie LairdWillie LambertWillie Lanier
Willie LewisWillie Lewis (rockabilly musician)
Willie Limond
Willie Littlechild
Willie LlewellynWillie LoganWillie Logan (Loganair)
Willie Lonsdale
Willie Loomis
Willie Lumpkin
Willie MabonWillie MacFadyen
Willie MacFarlane (footballer)Willie MacRae
Willie Mac AwardWillie MacfarlaneWillie Mack
Willie Maddren
Willie Mae Ford SmithWillie Mae Reid
Willie MaidenWillie Maley
Willie ManuWillie Marais
Willie MarshallWillie Marshall AwardWillie Martin
Willie MartinezWillie Martinez (football)Willie Martinez (jockey)
Willie MartínezWillie Mason
Willie MathiesonWillie MaxWillie May
Willie Mays
Willie McCarter
Willie McClendonWillie McCovey
Willie McCullochWillie McDonald
Willie McFaulWillie McGee
Willie McGee (boxer)Willie McGee (convict)Willie McGee (disambiguation)
Willie McGillWillie McGinest
Willie McKay
Willie McLarenWillie McLeanWillie McNaught
Willie McQueenWillie McSporran

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