Baby Remember Me. 03:04. He’s a Jelly-Roll Baker.
This CD completes Lonnie Johnson's prewar recordings with 23 titles (including four previously unreleased numbers from a club date) from the 1940-1942 period. Johnson is mostly heard in trios with such sidemen as pianists Lil Armstrong and Blind John Davis, and bassist Andrew Harris. There is only one instrumental ("Secret Emotions") but Johnson's guitar gets its spots along the way. Highlights include "Somebody's Got to Go," "Rambler's Blues," "The Devil's Woman," and "He's a Jelly-Roll. 14. From 20 to 44. Lonnie Johnson.
Lonnie Johnson was off records for five years during 1932-1937, working in Cleveland with Putney Dandridge, appearing on the radio, and working outside of music. In 1937, he moved to Chicago, where he returned to full-time music and began recording regularly for the Decca label. Three Document CDs cover his work of 1937-1947. Laplegged Drunk Again.
Lonnie Johnson, Album. Complete 1937 to June 1947 Recordings, Vol. 2: 22 May 1940 to 13 February 1942. This CD completes Lonnie Johnson's prewar recordings with 23 titles (including four previously unreleased numbers from a club date) from the 1940-1942 period. Highlights include "Somebody's Got to Go," "Rambler's Blues," "The Devil's Woman," and "He's a Jelly-Roll Baker 21 Heart of Iron Lonnie Johnson 3:14. 22 He's a Jelly Roll Baker Lonnie Johnson 3:20. 23 When You Feel Low Down Lonnie Johnson 2:55.
Compilation de Lonnie Johnson. Compilation de Lonnie Johnson. Sortie : 31 mars 2009.
Lizzie Douglas (June 3, 1897 – August 6, 1973), known as Memphis Minnie, was a blues guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter whose recording career lasted from the 1920s to the 1950s. She recorded around 200 songs, some of the best known being "Bumble Bee", "Nothing in Rambling", and "Me and My Chauffeur Blues". Her performances and songwriting made her well known in a genre dominated by men. Early life. Lizzie Douglas was born on June 3, 1897, in Algiers, Louisiana. She was the eldest of 13 siblings.
Blues Stay Away From Me: Selected Singles As & Bs 1947-1953 (CD) Lonnie Johnson. Blues By Lonnie Johnson, Losing Game (CD) Lonnie Johnson. Volume 1: 1925-1929 (CD) Lonnie Johnson. Portraits In Blues: Vol. 6 (LP) Lonnie Johnson. A Life in Music: Selected Sides 1925-1953 (CD) Lonnie Johnson. The Very Best Of Lonnie Johnson (CD) Lonnie Johnson. Playing With the Strings Lonnie Johnson. 3. Flood Water Blues. 4. It Ain't What You USTA Be. 15. Blue Ghost Blues.
In December 1927, Johnson recorded in Chicago as a guest artist with Louis Armstrong and His Hot Five, paired with the banjoist Johnny St. Cy. Johnson died on June 16, 1970. A funeral was held at Mount Hope Cemetery in Toronto by his friends and fellow musicians, but his family members insisted on transferring the body to Philadelphia where he was buried. He was "virtually broke . He had been featured on several compilation blues albums from Folkways, beginning in the 1960s, but never released a solo album on the label in his lifetime. Retrieved August 30, 2015. Sallis, James (1982).