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Lucille Bogan

Outspoken

Lucille Bogan

43 SONGS • 2 HOURS AND 6 MINUTES • MAR 17 2015

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
Baking Powder Blues
03:00
2
Coffee Grindin' Blues
03:28
3
The Pawn Shop Blues
02:57
4
Walkin' Blues
02:57
5
Sloppy Drunk Blues
03:18
6
Cravin' Whiskey Blues
02:43
7
Lonesome Daddy Blues
03:04
8
Groceries on the Shelf
02:59
9
Alley Boogie
03:07
10
Black Angel Blues
03:08
11
War Time Man Blues
02:41
12
My Georgia Grind
02:55
13
Woman Don't Need No Man
02:58
14
Jim Tampa Blues
02:50
15
Nice and Kind Blues
02:36
16
Doggone Wicked Blues
02:49
17
They Ain't Walkin' No More
03:08
18
Whiskey Selling Woman
03:11
19
Crawlin' Lizard Blues
03:06
20
Dirty Treatin' Blues
02:56
21
Don't Mean No Good Blues
03:22
22
Superstitious Blues
02:53
23
My Baby Come Back
02:46
24
Kind Stella Blues
02:43
25
Troubled Mind
02:49
26
Roll and Rattler
02:36
27
Pay Roll Blues
02:59
28
Trifflin' Daddy (Daddy Don't You Trifle on Me)
03:08
29
Sweet Patunia
02:44
30
Struttin' My Stuff
02:47
31
House Top Blues
02:55
32
Chirpin' the Blues
02:45
33
Mean Twister
02:57
34
T & N O Blues
02:58
35
New Muscle Shoals Blues
02:50
36
Seaboard Blues
02:53
37
Levee Blues
02:28
38
New Way Blues
02:50
39
Red Cross Man
03:12
40
Tricks Ain't Walkin' No More
03:17
41
Forty-Two Hundred Blues
02:44
42
Pot Hound Blues
03:11
43
Oklahoma Man Blues
02:29
(C) 2015 Suncoast Music

Artist bios

Bessie Jackson was a pseudonym of Lucille Bogan, a classic female blues artist from the '20s and '30s. Her outspoken lyrics deal with sexuality in a manner that manages to raise eyebrows even within a genre that is about as nasty as recorded music ever got prior to the emergence of artists such as 2 Live Crew or Ludacris. The name change seems to be quite different in her case than the usual pattern among blues artists who recorded under other names simply to make an end run around pre-existing recording contracts. Jackson/Bogan seemed to be looking for something more substantial, in that she not only changed her name but her performance style as well, and never recorded again under the name of Lucille Bogan once the Jackson persona had emerged. This was despite having enjoyed a hit record in the so-called "race market" in 1927 with the song "Sweet Petunia" as Bogan, but perhaps this was a scent she was trying to hide from.

This performer came out of the extremely active blues scene of Birmingham, AL, in the '20s. She was born Lucille Anderson in Mississippi, picking up Bogan as a married name. She was the aunt of pianist and trumpet player Thomas "Big Music" Anderson. Bogan made her first recordings of the tunes "Lonesome Daddy Blues" and "Pawnshop Blues," in 1923, in New York City for the OKeh label. Despite the blues references in the titles, these were more vaudeville numbers. She moved to Chicago a year or two later and developed a huge following in the Windy City, before relocating to New York City in the early '30s, where she began a long collaborative relationship with pianist Walter Roland. This was the type of musical combination that many songwriters and singers only dream about; he was a perfect foil, knew what to play on the piano to bring out the best in her voice, and was such a sympathetic partner that it is hard to know where her ideas start and his end, no matter what name she was using. The pair made more than 100 records together before Bogan stopped recording in 1935.

One of the most infamous of the Jackson sides is the song "B.D. Woman's Blues," which 75 years later packs more of a punch than the lesbian-themed material of artists such as Holly Near or the Indigo Girls. "B.D." was short for "bull dykes," after all, and the blues singer lays it right on the line with the opening verse: "Comin' a time/women ain't gonna need no men." Well, except for a good piano player such as Walter Roland or some of her other hotshot accompanists such as guitarists Tampa Red and Josh White, or banjo picker Papa Charlie Jackson. She herself gets an accordion credit on one early recording, quite unusual for this genre. Certainly one of Bogan's greatest talents was as a songwriter, and she copyrighted dozens of titles, many of them so original that other blues artists were forced to give credit where credit was due instead of whipping up "matcher" imitations as was more than norm. She still wrote songs during her later years living in California, and her final composition was "Gonna Leave Town," which turned out to be quite a prophetic title. By the time Smokey Hogg cut the tune in 1949, Jackson really had left town, having passed away the previous year from coronary sclerosis. While the material of some artists from this period has become largely forgotten, this is hardly the case for her; Saffire: The Uppity Blues Women have recorded several of her songs, as has bandmember Ann Rabson on her solo projects, as well as the naughty novelty band the Asylum Street Spankers. ~ Eugene Chadbourne

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Language of performance
English
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