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Little Willie Littlefield

I'm in the Mood

Little Willie Littlefield

21 SONGS • 1 HOUR AND 6 MINUTES • JAN 01 1983

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
Farmsound Boogie
02:50
2
Houseparty
02:20
3
Holland Boogie Wiggle
02:27
4
Beggin'
03:03
5
Chief Boogie Woogie
01:32
6
Raining
04:51
7
Walking Through the Streets
02:43
8
Just Relax
04:11
9
Willie Rolls the Boogie Woogie
02:35
10
Then I Wonder
03:50
11
Jump the Boogie Woogie
03:14
12
Rollin' the Basses
03:22
13
Boogie Woogie Playgirl
03:35
14
The Breeze
03:26
15
Little Willie's Boogie
01:57
16
Ain't a Better Story to Be Told
02:30
17
Riffin' Along
03:22
18
One More Drink
03:06
19
Found My Baby
04:40
20
A Little Cure
02:09
21
Jive at Five
04:31
℗© 1993 Oldie Blues-Munich Records

Artist bios

Before he was 21 years old, Texas-born pianist Little Willie Littlefield had etched an all-time classic into the blues lexicon. Only trouble was, his original 1952 waxing of "Kansas City" (here titled "K.C. Loving") didn't sell sufficiently to show up on the charts (thus leaving the door open for Wilbert Harrison to invade the airwaves with the ubiquitous Jerry Leiber/Mike Stoller composition seven years later).

Influenced by Albert Ammons, Charles Brown, and Amos Milburn, Little Willie was already a veteran of the R&B recording wars by the time he waxed "K.C. Loving," having made his debut 78 in 1948 for Houston-based Eddie's Records while still in his teens. After a few sides for Eddie's and Freedom, he moved over to the Bihari Brothers' Los Angeles-headquartered Modern logo in 1949. There he immediately hit paydirt with two major R&B hits, "It's Midnight" and "Farewell" (he added another chart entry, "I've Been Lost," in 1951).

Littlefield proved a sensation upon moving to L.A. during his Modern tenure, playing at area clubs and touring with a band that included saxist Maxwell Davis. At Littlefield's first L.A. session for King's Federal subsidiary in 1952, he cut "K.C. Loving" (with Davis on sax), but neither it nor several fine Federal follow-ups returned the boogie piano specialist to the charts.

Other than a few 1957-1958 singles for Oakland's Rhythm logo, little was heard from Little Willie Littlefield until the late '70s, when he began to mount a comeback at various festivals and on the European circuit. While overseas, he met a Dutch woman, married her, and settled in the Netherlands, where he remained active musically into the 2000s. He died of cancer in 2013. ~ Bill Dahl

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Language of performance
English
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