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Authors: Lightnin' Hopkins: His Life,Blues

Tags: #Biography, #Hopkins; Lightnin', #United States, #General, #Music, #Blues Musicians - United States, #Biography & Autobiography, #Blues, #Genres & Styles, #Composers & Musicians, #Blues Musicians

Alan Govenar (11 page)

BOOK: Alan Govenar
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Bill “Rascal” McCaskill, a white deejay on KCOH, says he played Lightnin' on his show as early as 1952. “When I first started the ‘Harlem Boogie' on KCOH in 1952,” McCaskill says, “Lightning Hopkins was one of my most requested singers. He was, in my opinion, a super talented artist who could really make a guitar talk. I also remember that when I was at KLEE that he was one of Trummie Cain's favorite talents, too. Perhaps it was the advent of rhythm and blues and rock music that outdated his numbers as the requests for his songs dwindled down a great deal, but he was still one of the top music makers in the Houston area. I met him one time at the Club Matinee in late 1952.”
50
In the summer of 1953 a group of black businessmen headed by Robert C. Meeker bought KCOH, making it the first black-owned station in Texas and the first station in Houston to target black listeners. KCOH was followed in late 1954 by KYOK. According to Texas Johnny Brown, once KCOH became a black-owned station, they rarely “aired any of Lightnin's music. They were much more geared to the mainstream rhythm and blues of the day, which featured the Duke/Peacock sound.”
51

Despite the limited airplay that Lightnin' got on Houston radio stations after the mid-1950s, he had already become well known, especially in the segregated Third Ward where he lived and worked most of the time. Lightnin's music had an edge that he had honed in the gritty juke joints of the Third Ward, and he had built his reputation by giving voice to the downtrodden. In fact, his first song to make it to a national chart was a very unlikely hit. The Gold Star release of Hopkins's song “Tim Moore's Farm” on February 12, 1949, went to #13 for one week on
Billboard
magazine's “Most Played Juke Box Race Records.”
52
Within weeks, Quinn had leased the record, called “a sleeper in the South” by
Billboard,
to the Modern label for national distribution.
53
His strategy worked, and in many ways its success was unprecedented. It was a protest song unique to Texas and was one of the only unambiguous black protest songs to ever become commercially viable. Like his decision to release “Jole Blon,” Quinn was not guided by the usual commercial ideas that drove the record business, and this unpredictability is what makes Gold Star and other small regional labels like it especially interesting. A more experienced A&R man may have rejected “Tim Moore's Farm” on the basis that few would know who “Tim Moore” was, or what exactly Lightnin' was singing about, making it unfit for commercial release. Quinn was unintentionally oblivious to such considerations.

“Tim Moore's Farm” was about the infamous
Tom
Moore, who owned a plantation in Grimes County, Texas, and was known for his cruelty to the blacks who toiled there. The song itself was traditional with as many as twenty-seven distinct verses that were added by the different singers who performed it. According to Mack McCormick, the song originated in the mid-1930s with a field hand named Yank Thornton who worked on the Moore plantation. McCormick first collected the song with Chris Strachwitz in 1960 from Mance Lipscomb, who at the time wished to remain anonymous on record because he feared reprisal from Moore. Lipscomb sang: “Tom Moore'll whip you, dare you not to tell.” He believed that if Moore found out that “I put out a song like that I couldn't live here no more…. ‘Goddam, you put out a song about me and you made a record of it—I'm gonna kill you!' Or if he didn't do it, he'd have it done.”

The song, McCormick wrote, was “a brutally truthful characterization of one particular hardened opportunist who has taken advantage and mistreated his laborers. It is a protest against ‘them bad farm' where a farmer can get started with only a borrowed five or ten dollar bill, the ease of which dupes him into working against an ever increasing debt, his life circumscribed by fear of the big boss, and the bells which call him from the field to meals and then call him back to the field where the landlord stands with ‘spurs in his horse's flank' and ‘the whip in his hand.'”
54

Lightnin' said he had heard Texas Alexander sing a version of the song, and when he recorded it, he thinly disguised the subject by changing the name from Tom to Tim. But anyone black in East Texas knew whom he was singing about.

Yes, you know, I got a telegram this morning, boy,

it say, “Your wife is dead.”

I show it to Mr. Moore, he said, “Go ahead, nigger,

you know you got to plow a ridge.”

That white man said, “It's been raining, yes, and I'm way behind
I may let you bury that woman one of these dinner times”
I told him, “No, Mr. Moore, somebody's got to go”
He says, “If you ain't able to plow, Sam, stay up there and grab you a hoe”

While Lightnin' never worked for Tom Moore, he inserted himself into the song, personalizing it and identifying himself with the hardships of those who did. For listeners in 1949, many of whom had already migrated from the country to the city, “Tim Moore's Farm” epitomized the plight of black sharecroppers and the inhumane conditions to which they were subjected.

After the success of “Tim Moore's Farm,” Lightnin' wanted to get back in the studio at Gold Star as quickly as possible. On August 13, 1949,
Billboard
reviewed Lightnin's recording of “Jail House Blues,” which was based on Bessie Smith's song by the same title. He was accompanied on it by the steel guitar of Hop Wilson, not Frankie Lee Sims, as has been written for decades. The review doomed its potential by calling it “an old-style, sorrowful blues, warbled and guitared in the ancient manner. Staple fare for the Deep South market.” Still, on October 8, 1949, Lightnin's song “'T' Model Blues” made it to #8 on the
Billboard
R & B jukebox charts for one week, even though when it was reviewed with “Jail House Blues” it was called “a provocative double entendre slow blues in the same authentic manner.”
55

A year later, in September 1950, Lightnin's “Shotgun Blues,” which he had recorded for Aladdin in 1948, was a hit for four weeks on
Billboard's
“Best-Selling Retail Race Records” chart and peaked at #5. Hopkins was more popular than ever, and Quinn, probably because “Shotgun Blues” had sold so well, thought he might be able to boost his revenues with the sales of Lightnin's records. On December 16, 1950, Quinn entered into another contract with Lightnin' that gave him a two-hundred-dollar advance at each recording session at which four sides are recorded and a royalty of one and a half cents for each side of the record used for recordings.
56

A two-hundred-dollar advance at
every
recording session was generous of Quinn, particularly at a time when even bigger labels were paying less to similar blues artists, such as John Lee Hooker and Muddy Waters, but it also points out how well Lightnin's records were actually selling, or perhaps, how Quinn expected them to perform in the marketplace. In fact, it was highly unusual for a label to give an artist an advance on every single release, much less an advance of two hundred dollars. How much money Quinn ultimately made from these releases is unknown, and there are no records to indicate whether or not Lightnin' was ever paid any royalties.

By the early 1950s, Lightnin' was nationally known and was firmly part of the R & B mainstream that updated older styles of down-home country blues. In many ways, Hopkins's career paralleled many of his contemporaries. In Texas, Frankie Lee Sims, one of Lightnin's cousins, had two acoustic releases on Blue Bonnet around 1948, but then was discovered in Dallas in 1953 by Specialty, which recorded him with electric guitar, bass, and drums. L. C. Williams, Lightnin's friend in Houston, who was sometimes billed as Lightnin' Jr. on his Gold Star releases, had a national hit with “Ethel Mae” on Freedom. Lil' Son Jackson, who probably had little or no direct contact with Lightnin', was also recorded by Gold Star and then Imperial. Decca discovered Andrew “Smokey” Hogg with B. K. “Black Ace” Turner and brought him to Chicago to record in 1937, and during or right after World War II, he recorded for Modern: his rendition of Big Bill Broonzy's “Little School Girl” went to #9 on the
Billboard
R & B charts in 1950. Lightnin', however, was the most successful of his generation of down-home blues singers from Texas, and the arc of his achievement was comparable to those of both Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker.

Like Hopkins, Waters and Hooker came from rural farming backgrounds in the South and had ambiguous dates of birth; Waters was born in 1913, but always told people it was 1915, and Hooker's birth has been variously reported as 1915, 1917, 1920, and 1923. All three had limited educations and moved to the city as soon as they were able. All three switched from acoustic guitar to electric, and in time, put together small bands that included bass and drums. Waters, of course, added the harmonica, and Hooker the saxophone, and their fuller and tighter band sounds certainly propelled them forward. However, during the late 1940s Hopkins was getting paid more than twice the union rate ($82.50) per session that Waters was likely earning, making him almost certainly the best-paid country blues singer of that era. By the early 1950s, Hopkins, Waters, and Hooker were competing with each other on the
Billboard
charts, and Waters ultimately became more famous, with sixteen charting hits between 1948 and 1958.

What hurt Lightnin' the most during the early years of his career with Gold Star was that he didn't want to go out on the road with the so-called Chitlin' Circuit tours. These concerts at black-owned venues were organized by the Theater Owners Booking Association and promoted the records of those blues artists who were part of the touring package shows.
57
Lightnin' wanted to stay close to home and didn't seem to understand that touring with his records would have made him considerably more money. Consequently, his records did not sell as well as they might have to the people who listened to them on jukeboxes and radios around the country. The early 1950s were the beginning of one of the most lucrative eras for blues, if the performers were willing and able to travel and promote their records.

By late 1950, Quinn was finding it increasingly difficult to sustain his label. His wife was dying of cancer. Harry Choates had left him for his rival Macy's early in the year, and his country and blues series were selling poorly. Despite several national hits, Quinn had refused to aggressively market his label, and it remained, by all appearances, more of a personal hobby than a commercial firm. It must have come as a shock to him, then, when he received a fine from the Internal Revenue Service in early 1951 totaling an astonishing twenty-six thousand dollars. A 10 percent federal excise tax had long been established on the sale of records, but Quinn either didn't know about the tax or had ignored it on his tax returns since forming the label five years earlier.
58
The penalty probably represented the government's account of the taxable percentage on the total number of records sold on Gold Star from 1946 to 1950. Quinn couldn't pay the fine, and Gold Star was soon to be another casualty in the indie record business.
59

On September 22, 1951,
Billboard
reported that the Modern label had “shelled out $2,500 for 32 unreleased Lightning Hopkins and L'il Son Jackson masters and the disk contract of the former. Deal was made thru' Bill Quinn, Gold Star Records' topper, who this week shut down his Houston diskery. Hopkins' sides will be issued on Modern's subsidiary…. Diskery will release two sides on each artist 1 October.”
60

Relatively speaking, $2,500 was a fair sum to pay for thirty-two masters in 1951; Lightnin' was still perceived as having commercial potential. Modern was quick to release Lightnin's unissued masters on its subsidiary RPM label, including “Begging You to Stay,” “Jake Head Boogie,” and “Some Day Baby.” A standout in the RPM releases was the single “Black Cat,” for which Lightnin' took the guts out of the Memphis Minnie and Little Son Joe 1942 hit “Black Rat Swing” and transformed the male “rat” in the original song into a female “cat” in his version.

Well I took you in my home, you ate up all my bread
I left there this mornin', you tried to mess up in my bed
Well you're one black cat, some day you'll find your tree
Then I'll hide my shoe somewhere near your cherry tree

Quinn had tried to salvage his business by issuing one final release from Lightnin', “Jackstropper Blues,” but ultimately had to discontinue his blues series.
61
Any hope that his December 1950 contract with Lightnin' would reverse his fortunes and revive Gold Star as a blues label were dashed when he learned that Lightnin' had already recorded with another producer, Bobby Shad. Shad had founded the Sittin' In With label in New York in the late 1940s, and had come to Houston in 1950 to record Peppermint Harris, among others, but also met up with Hopkins. He asked Hopkins if he was under contract to anybody, and Lightnin', as usual, said no. In 1951, Shad brought him to New York and recorded eight sides with him, including “Coffee Blues” and “Give Me Central 209,” both of which would become hits. When Quinn found out about this, he was furious and told Shad that Lightnin' was under contract to him and that he had already been paid. To placate Quinn, Shad bought a bunch of old masters from him and proceeded to release them. Quinn was essentially powerless; his business was collapsing. When Quinn shut down operations, Shad seized the opportunity to record Lightnin' in Houston and produced another fourteen sides with him. Some of these recordings were done with portable equipment that Shad brought with him, and others were done at Bill Holford's ACA studio.
62

Texas Johnny Brown recalled one such session at ACA: “They had a little recording studio out Washington Avenue…. And we used to go out there, and he'd sit and play…. And I remember Lightnin' used to take a board, put a board down underneath his feet. And if he didn't have a drum, he'd just pat his feet real hard—on that board—and play right along with it. It always amazed me how he did it, because his timing was his own timing as far as rhythm is concerned.”
63

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