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Bumble Bee Slim

Bumble Bee Slim 1934 -1937

Bumble Bee Slim

23 SONGS • 1 HOUR AND 8 MINUTES • SEP 03 2017

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
Burned Down Mill
03:14
2
You Can't Take It, Baby
02:54
3
Bleeding Heart Blues
02:43
4
Policy Dream Blues
02:56
5
Right from Wrong
03:04
6
Hay Lawdy Mama
02:58
7
Steady Roll Mama Blues
03:34
8
When the Sun Goes Down
02:48
9
Cold Blooded Murder No 2
02:58
10
How Long How Long Blues
02:46
11
When Somebody Loses
02:59
12
Ramblin' with That Woman
03:01
13
New Orleans Stop Time
03:03
14
When the Music Sounds Good
02:58
15
New Bricks in My Pillow
02:46
16
Ant Time at Night
03:05
17
Slave Man Blues
02:59
18
Green Country Gal
02:57
19
My Big Moments
03:15
20
Big Six
02:59
21
Rough Treatment
02:44
22
I'm Having so Much Trouble
02:59
23
Going Back to Florida
03:00
Wolf Records International GmbH

Artist bios

Popular and prolific, Bumble Bee Slim parlayed a familiar but rudimentary style into one of the earliest flowerings of the Chicago style. Much of what he performed he adapted from the groundbreaking duo Leroy Carr and Scrapper Blackwell -- Slim built on Carr's laconic, relaxed vocal style and Blackwell's guitar technique. During the mid-'30s, Bumble Bee Slim recorded a number of sides for a variety of labels, including Bluebird, Vocalion, and Decca, becoming one of the most-recorded bluesmen of the decade.

Born in Georgia, Bumble Bee Slim left his home when he was a teenager. He joined a circus and travelled thorughout the south and the Midwest for much of his adolescence and early adulthood. Eventually, he made a home in Indianapolis, where he played local parties and dance halls.

Bumble Bee Slim moved to Chicago in the early '30s. After a few years in the city, he began a recording career; his first singles appeared on Bluebird. Slim wrote and recorded frequently during the mid-'30s, selling more records than most of his contemporaries. In addition to cutting his own sides, he played on records by Big Bill Broonzy and Cripple Clarence Lofton, among others.

Bumble Bee Slim moved back to Georgia in the late '30s. After a few years, he left the state once again, relocating to Los Angeles in the early '40s. During the '50s, Slim cut some West Coast blues for Specialty and Pacific Jazz, which failed to gain much interest. For the rest of his career, he kept a low profile, playing various Californian clubs. Bumble Bee Slim died in 1968. ~ Cub Koda

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Language of performance
English
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