MERCURY RECORDS
VA - Mercury Records, The New Orleans Sessions 1950 - 1953 [2007] (2 x CDs)
The Mercury New Orleans sessions began with William B. Allen, who owned a radio supply store at Orleans and North Robertson streets and also distributed Mercury records in New Orleans. In late 1949 Allen talked to Mercury’s main office about recording black artists in New Orleans. “He had impressed the people in Chicago in knowing something about it and having something to offer,” recalled Murray Nash, Mercury’s primary Southern A&R (artists and repertoire) man of the time, “and they sent me down there to check it out.”
Allen acted as Mercury’s talent scout. He didn’t have to look very far, as his business was on the border between the French Quarter, where George Miller & His Mid-Driffs often performed, and the black Treme district, where Professor Longhair and Alma Mondy played the’Caldonia Inn,’ though one or two of the Mercury artists were chosen from an audition at the ‘Club Desire,’ a swanky black nightclub in the middle of a poor Upper Ninth Ward neighborhood a few miles to the east of the downtown area on Desire Street, likely after Nash, who usually recorded country music, arrived from his home in Knoxville, Tennessee.
Before signing with Mercury in 1948, Nash had been a successful distributor and A&R man for RCA Victor, where over the course of a decade his many achievements included the creation of several innovative distributing practices, persuading producer Steve Sholes to sign Hank Snow, and the recording of the original version of Tennessee Waltz by Pee Wee King and the Golden West Cowboys (after Sholes had rejected the song), Nash would later recommend the song to Mitch Miller, the pop A&R man at Mercury, for either Patti Page or Eddy Howard to Record. Of course, Miller recorded the song with Page and the rest is pop music history – perhaps (an alternate story suggests that ‘Billboard’ writer Jerry Wexler, having liked Erskine Hawkins’ pop cover version, recommended the song to Jack Rael, Page’s manager).
In early 1950 Murray traveled to one of his favorite cities, New Orleans, where segregation was obvious. “New Orleans was divided and there was a regular black section, and they had their clubs and businesses,”sremembered Nash. “Whites normally didn’t go into the colored section at all.” Nash and Allen went to segregated black clubs and had to stand behind the bar to watch the artists. On one memorable night Allen enjoyed a black hairdresser’s convention at a nightclub, watching women wearing hairdos “three or four feet” above their heads!
From all indications – the releases of the records and mentions of the recording in the media – the first sessions were probably held in February 1950. Likely because of economic considerations – seven artists recorded in marathon sessions over two nights – the recordings were made at National Recorders in the Godchaux Building on Canal Street, instead of at Cosimo Matassa’s J&M studio. The songs were recorded primarily on 33 1/3rpm acetates. “That’s all they had at National at the time,” says Cosimo Matassa. “Two engineers from WWL and another guy named Ray McNamara, an organist, owned National. They got all of the aircheck business from WWL (radio)… They weren’t around a terribly long time after that.”
The musicians on the session were George Miller’s Mid-Driffs, including Miller on bass, Lester Alexis on drums, Alex ‘Duke’ Burrell on piano, and Leroy ‘Batman’ Rankin and Lee Allen on tenor saxophones. Alexis recalled that former Paul Gayten sideman Jack Scott, husband of Jewel King of ‘3×7=21’ fame, played the guitar.
“He (Allen) knowed how good we was,” claimed Lester Alexis. “He wanted to invest some money. So he used Fess, Alma and all them recording and we backed all of them up… We started playing early that night and recorded all night, man. We ate and drank and everything (in the studio).”
In April 1950 ‘Billboard’ reported, “Murray Nash did his first Southern blues and rhythm waxing, cutting Roy Byrd and his Blues Jumpers, New Orleans group, and Alma Mondy, blues singer… (www.louisianamusicfactory.com)
==========================================================
OR
===========================================================
Track lists
CD1
01 Alma Mondy (Alma Lollypop) - Miss Lollypop's Confession 2:43
02 Alma Mondy (Alma Lollypop) - Love Troubles 2:36
03 Alma Mondy (Alma Lollypop) - Baby Get Wise 2:33
04 Alma Mondy (Alma Lollypop) - Just as Soon as I Go Home 2:52
05 Alma Mondy (Alma Lollypop) - Street Walkin' Daddy 2:43
06 Alma Mondy (Alma Lollypop) - A Job for A Jockey 2:30
07 Alma Mondy (Alma Lollypop) - Still My Angel Child 2:37
08 Alma Mondy (Alma Lollypop) - No Stuff for Me 2:25
09 Alma Mondy (Alma Lollypop) - I Need You Baby 2:46
10 Alma Mondy (Alma Lollypop) - You Done Me Wrong 2:31
11 Roy Byrd (Professor Longhair) & His Blues Jumpers - Byrd's Blues 2:45
12 Roy Byrd (Professor Longhair) & His Blues Jumpers - Her Mind is Gone 2:37
13 Roy Byrd (Professor Longhair) & His Blues Jumpers - Bald Head 2:30
14 Roy Byrd (Professor Longhair) & His Blues Jumpers - Hey Now Baby 2:47
15 Roy Byrd (Professor Longhair) & His Blues Jumpers - Oh Well 2:25
16 Roy Byrd (Professor Longhair) & His Blues Jumpers - Hadacol Bounce 2:59
17 Roy Byrd (Professor Longhair) & His Blues Jumpers - Longhair Stomp 2:44
18 Roy Byrd (Professor Longhair) & His Blues Jumpers - Been Foolin' Around 2:58
19 Roy Byrd (Professor Longhair) & His Blues Jumpers - Between The Night and Day 2:43
20 Theard Johnson - I Walk in My Sleep 2:24
21 Theard Johnson - Lost Love 2:29
22 George Miller & His Mid-Driffs - Boogie's The Thing 2:44
23 George Miller & His Mid-Driffs - Bat-Lee Swing 2:48
CD2
01 Little Joe Gaines - She Won't Leave No More 2:26
02 Little Joe Gaines - Snuff Dipper 2:50
03 Dwine Craven - Mercury Boogie 2:37
04 Dwine Craven - New Way of Loving 2:40
05 Silvertone Singers - Bye and Bye 2:49
06 Silvertone Singers - What Are They Doing in Heaven Today 3:04
07 Silvertone Singers - Call on Jesus in Secret Prayer 3:00
08 Silvertone Singers - Rest From Labor 2:59
09 Pat Valdelar - Keey Your Hands on Your Heart 2:48
10 Pat Valdelar - Baby, Rock Me 2:42
11 Ray Johnson - Boogie The Blues 2:47
12 Ray Johnson - House of Blues 2:40
13 Ray Johnson - I'll Never Let Your Goe 2:45
14 Ray Johnson - Smilin' Blues 2:28
15 Herbert Moore - Something's Wrong 2:15
16 Herbert Moore - Five Long Letters 2:48
17 Alma Mondy - Miss Lollypop's Confession 2:49
18 Alma Mondy - Love Troubles 2:16
19 Alma Mondy - Just as Soon as I Go Home 2:46
20 Roy Byrd - Her Mind is Gone 2:53
21 Roy Byrd - Hadacol Bounce 2:55
22 Roy Byrd - Longhair Stomp 2:41
23 Roy Byrd - Between The Night and Day 2:37
24 George Miller & His Mid-Driffs - Bat-Lee Swing 2:53
=============================================================
=============================================================
I love anything New Orleans and both of these Mercury posts are great and worthy of more research, I smiled at the "hairdresser’s convention at a nightclub" just brilliant and many thanks !!
ReplyDelete