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Charlie Patton




Charley Patton ( May 1 , 1891April 28 , 1934 ) is best known as an American Delta Blues Musician . He is considered by many to be the "Father of Delta Blues" and therefore one of the oldest known figures of American popular music.

Charley Patton is one of the first mainstream stars of the Delta blues genre. Patton, who was born in Hinds County, Mississippi near Edwards or Bolton , lived most of his life in Sunflower County , in the Mississippi Delta . He was extremely popular across the U.S. South , and (in contrast to the itinerant wandering of most blues musicians of his time) was invited to perform at plantations and taverns.

He is credited with creating an enduring body of American music and personally inspiring just about every Delta blues man (Robert Palmer, 1995). Palmer considers him among the most important musicians that America produced in the twentieth century. Long before Jimi Hendrix he was the entertainer's entertainer with dazzling showmanship, often playing guitar on his knees and behind his head, as well as behind his back.

Patton was born in Southern Mississippi, near Edwards in 1891 but there is still some debate about this. In 1900, however, his family moved 100 miles north to the legendary 10,000 Acre Dockery Plantation sawmill and cotton farm near Ruleville, Mississippi . It was here that both John Lee Hooker and Howlin' Wolf fell under the Patton spell. It was also here that Robert Johnson played his first guitar.

At Dockery, Charlie fell under the spell of Henry Sloan who had an unusual new style of playing music which we would recognize today as very early blues.

Charlie followed Henry Sloan around like a puppy and by the time he was about 19 in 1910 he was an accomplished performer and composer, having already composed his theme song "Pony Blues".

Although Patton was a small man at about 5 foot 5 and 135 pounds, the sound of his whiskey- and cigarette-scarred voice was rumored to have carried for over 500 yards without amplification. This gritty voice was a major influence in the singing style of one of his students, Howlin' Wolf.

It is of minor debate which race Charley Patton was. Though he was most likely African-American like most of his contemporaries in the blues field, because of his light complexion there have been rumors that he was Mexican , full-blood Cherokee (Howlin' Wolf himself endorsed this theory) and many others.

Patton settled in Holly Ridge, Mississippi with his common-law wife and recording partner Bertha Lee in 1933.

Patton died on the Heathman-Dedham plantation near Indianola from Heart Disease on April 28, 1934 and is buried in Holly Ridge (both towns are located in Sunflower County).


CHARLEY PATTON TIME LINE


  • (1891) - Charley Patton was born in Hinds County, Mississippi near Edwards or Bolton.

  • (1895) (4) - The Patton family moves near Edwards Depot.

  • (1900) (9) - Moves to Dockery's plantation in Sunflower County, Mississippi

  • (1905/1907) (14-16)- He gets guitar lessons from Earl Harris of Cleveland, and learns You Take My Woman and Maggie

  • (1908) (17) - Lives with Millie Barnes, and has a baby girl named Willie Mae

  • (1910) (19) - Some of his songs include: Pony Blues, Banty Rooster Blues, Mississippi BoWeavil, and Down The Dirt Road

  • (1916) (25) - Offered a position in W.C. Handy's band

  • (1922) (31) - Marries Mandy France on Oss Pepper's plantation

  • (1926) (35) - Willie Brown becomes his duet partner

  • (1929) (38) - Records fourteen titles for Paramount Records at Richmond, Indiana

  • (1932) (41) - Final Paramount recording is released

  • (1932) (41) - Marries an overseer's daughter in Morgan City, Mississippi

  • (1933) (42) - Almost killed when his throat is slit near Holly Ridge

  • (1934) (43) - (January 30 - February 1) - Records twenty-six titles for ARC in New York

  • (1934) (43) - Dies of heart failure on the Heathman-Dedham plantation



DISCOGRAPHY & SONGS


  • 34 Blues

  • A Spoonful Blues

  • Banty Rooster Blues

  • Be True Be True Blues

  • Bird Nest Bound

  • Circle Round The Moon

  • Come Home Corrina

  • Devil Sent The Rain Blues

  • Down The Dirt Road Blues

  • Dry Well Blues

  • Elder Greene Blues Take 1

  • Elder Greene Blues Take 2

  • Farrell Blues

  • Frankie And Albert

  • Going To Move To Alabama

  • Green River Blues

  • Hammer Blues

  • Hang It On The Wall

  • Heart Like Railroad Steel

  • High Sheriff Blues

  • High Water Everywhere Take 1

  • High Water Everywhere Take 2

  • I Shall Not Be Moved

  • I'm Goin' Home

  • It Won't Be Long

  • Jersey Bull Blues

  • Jesue Is A Dying-Bed Maker

  • Jim Lee Blues - Take 1

  • Jim Lee Blues - Take 2

  • Joe Kirby

  • Lord I'm Discouraged

  • Love My Stuff

  • Magnolia Blues

  • Mean Black Cat Blues

  • Mean Black Moan

  • Mind Reader Blues

  • Mississippi Boweavil Blues

  • Moon Goin' Down

  • Oh Death

  • Pea Vine Blues

  • Pony Blues

  • Poor Me

  • Prayer Of Death (Part 1)

  • Prayer Of Death (Part 2)

  • Rattlesnake Blues

  • Revenue Man Blues

  • Running Wild Blues

  • Screamin' And Hollerin' The Blues

  • Shake It And Break It (But Don't Let It Fall Mama)

  • Some Happy Day

  • Some Summer Day

  • Some These Days I'll Be Gone Take 1

  • Some These Days I'll Be Gone Take 2

  • Stone Pony Blues

  • Tell Me Man Blues

  • Tom Rushen Blues

  • Troubled 'Bout My Mother

  • When Your Way Gets Dark

  • Yellow Bee

  • You're Gonna Need Somebody When You Die



REFERENCES

  • Calt, Stephen & Wardlow, Gayle (1988). ''King of the Delta Blues, The Life and Music of Charlie Patton''. ISBN 0961861002.

  • Robert Palmer (1995). ''Deep Blues''. ISBN 0140062238.



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