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Hello John,

I was enthralled with the Little Richard doc last night and I heard them mention Sister Rosetta Tharpe as being the Godmother of Rock 'n' Roll. I've watched what limited video of her playing as is available. As our friend Freddie Cisnero would say "she could play the paint off that Gibson. " Check it out.

Bisbee is next weekend. That has always been a fun show, despite all the drama involved in staging the gig. I'm going. Bisbee is a very cool place to hang.

Then it's Showdown '23. There's still time to get your entry in to participate. Sept. 17 for prelims.

Then it's a new one on me. Tonapah is getting in on the scene with a cool show featuring our bud Eric Ramsey and the Sugar Thieves. Big fun!

And then Blues Blast '23 at the Rhythm Room complex. More later.

Hug, hug, hug someone this week! Good feelings.

Two digit temps, get Out & About.

Have a week.


Jim Crawford,

Phoenix Blues Society

www.phoenixblues.com

Godmother


Sam Dahrmasena

When singer Brittany Howard stepped to the mic to induct Sister Rosetta Tharpe into the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame in 2018, the Alabama Shakes frontwoman exclaimed, “It’s long overdue!” before breaking into a rocking version of Sister Rosetta’s “That’s All.”

Despite her Hall of Fame induction, Sister Rosetta Tharpe’s talent, fame, and influence remain largely obscure and barely known to most music fans today. That cries out for a correction.

As both the originator of pop gospel and a popularizer of the electric guitar, Sister Rosetta brought an emotionally charged dimension that was foundational to rock’n’roll. Her hit recordings, beginning in the late 30s and lasting into the 50s, informed a Who’s Who of early rock’n’roll.

Born in Cotton Plant, Arkansas – where a stretch of highway was renamed for her in 2017 – Sister Rosetta Tharpe had mastered the guitar by age six and attended church conventions alongside her mother, Katie Bell Nubin. They soon relocated to Chicago, where Mother Bell preached on street corners and in churches, accompanied by her daughter; she would be a constant presence for most of Tharpe’s life.

In 1934, Tharpe would marry another traveling preacher, Thomas Tharpe, who joined the mother-daughter act, but it wouldn’t last long. By 1938, mother and daughter relocated to New York City, where Tharpe’s undeniable talent quickly landed her a spot at The Cotton Club and she was on her way.

Her stint with Lucky Millander’s Orchestra found her performing and recording both gospel and – to the dismay of church folks – secular songs such as “Four Or Five Times.” A few years later, Sister Rosetta hooked up with pianist Sammy Price for her biggest hit, “Strange Things Happening Every Day.”

Tharpe recorded her first four sides in 1938 during a session that included her first hit, “Rock Me,” along with “That’s All.” She was 28 at the time, just launching her career as gospel’s first real hitmaker, its first crossover artist and first national star. Four years later, Billboard magazine’s MH Oredenker praised her for “the rock-and-roll spiritual singing” in her re-recording of “Rock Me” with the Lucky Millander Orchestra.

Even before that, she had recorded some of her best formative material, including her historic 1938 Carnegie Hall concert From Spirituals To Swing, accompanied by the great boogie-woogie pianist Albert Ammons. Though echo-drenched and not of the highest quality, these early recordings are considered some of the first rock’n’roll records.

 “She was playing rock’n’roll way before anyone else,” said keyboardist Lonnie Liston Smith in a 2018 Richmond Magazine profile. Smith, whose father was a member of The Harmonizing Four, a popular Richmond, Virginia-based gospel quartet that often appeared on shows with Tharpe, added, “That was way before Chuck Berry and all those guys. Nobody else had even come up with something like that.”

Chuck Berry once said his entire career was “one long Sister Rosetta Tharpe impersonation.” On stage, she did an early version of Berry’s duckwalk, but all you need to hear is the guitar introduction to Sister Rosetta’s 1947 hit “The Lord Followed Me” to recognize Chuck’s musical debt to her. Little Richard called her his greatest influence and Tharpe was the first to put him on stage, a tale Richard recounts in his autobiography.

Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Johnny Cash were also all inspired by Tharpe. So was Little Walter, whose 1955 No.1 R&B hit, “My Babe,” owed everything to one of her biggest hits, “This Train.”

 “She possessed a remarkably powerful mezzo-soprano voice, which she inflected with a biting attack and fiery, swinging rhythmic drive, not unlike that of the later Dinah Washington,” remarked producer Joop Visser in his notes for the compilation The Original Soul Sister.

Sister Rosetta augmented her commanding vocals with a stinging guitar sound that influenced countless guitar heroes. When compared to male guitarists of her day, she’d proclaim, “Can’t no man play like me. I play better than a man.” And she did. Check out this axe-shredding 1964 TV appearance playing one of her biggest hits to crossover from gospel to the R&B charts, “Up Above My Head.”

Few had Tharpe’s charismatic stage presence. For long stretches, she might gaze not toward the audience in the seats, but upwards towards the heavens, her greatest audience. When she’d engage the crowd, however, she was the epitome of extroversion.

“Sister Rosetta Tharpe was obviously star material,” writes Anthony Heilbut in his pioneering history, The Gospel Sound: Good News And Bad Times. “Rosetta was riding the race record charts with spirituals, packing stadiums with saints and ballrooms with sinners. In her time, she was something of a household name.”

Yes, she packed stadiums – especially in 1951 when she staged her wedding (her third) at Griffith Stadium, home to the Washington Senators and Negro League Washington Grays. About 20,000 people attended the event, which included the ceremony followed by a concert featuring Tharpe and her backing group, The Rosettes, and was later released on an LP.

In the late 40s, Tharpe formed a very successful and popular duet with a young gospel singer and pianist named Marie Knight. They played to large crowds and recorded hit versions of “Up Above My Head,” “Didn’t It Rain” and “Beams Of Heaven,” among others.

The two also became lovers, an open secret in the gospel world, until a fire in Newark, New Jersey, killed Knight’s mother and two of her children. The grief and strain proved too much, and the pair split as a duo in late 1950, though they would periodically reunite on stage and on record, including for the duet “You Gotta Move,” which highlights the gospel call-and-response technique that later emerged in soul music.

Following her gala wedding, Tharpe’s popularity waned when secular rock’n’roll and rhythm’n’blues became the rage. However, in 1957 she had a career revival when she began touring Europe and playing to audiences who had never experienced the authenticity of gospel and the blues in person. Sister Rosetta became a trailblazer again and became one of the first artists to take those sounds across the Atlantic.

She was joined in subsequent years by Muddy Waters and other American blues giants for package tours that inspired the young Keith RichardsEric Clapton, and others to create the British blues scene that transformed them into the torchbearers of the mid-60s British Invasion. Rosetta’s televised performance of “Didn’t It Rain” and “Trouble In Mind” on the platform of an old Manchester train station became something of a YouTube hit decades later.

People may be starting to appreciate Sister Rosetta Tharpe after all.

 

 


ARIZONA BLUES SHOWDOWN 2023

will take place September 17 and 24 at the Rhythm Room. Time to get it in gear gang. We've broke the bank the last two years. One first and two Seconds ain't too shabby. Let's keep it going. Whatdayasay?


Fill out your application here: https://forms.gle/CguurrnqDuqR3dPu9



OUT & ABOUT


Tuesday, Sept 5

 

Hooter & Gypsy’s Blues JAM6 p.m.Pho Cao, Scottsdale

 

Johnny’s JAM,

6:30 p.m., Jimbo’s Sports Bar & Grill, Glendale

 

JC & The Rockers, 2 p.m., The Kivel Center, Phoenix

 

Carvin Jones, 6 p.m., Florigino’s Pizza & Pasta, Gilbert

 

Wednesday, Sept 6

 

Tool Shed JAM, 7 p.m., The Blooze, Phoenix

 

JC & The Rockers, 6:30 p.m., Fuego at Clarendon, Phoenix

 

Carvin Jones, 6 p.m., The Burg Sports Grill, Phoenix

 

The Sugar Thieves, 7 p.m., Peoria Center for the Performing Arts, Peoria

 

Thursday, Sept 7 

 

Hans Olson, 6 p.m., Handlebar Grill, Apache Junction

 

Friday, Sept 8

 

Big Daddy D & The Dynamites, 7 p.m., Stacy’s at Dunlap, Phoenix

 

The Black Hole, 8 p.m., Ole Brass Rail, Phoenix

 

The Hallelujah Blues Band, 6:30 p.m., Little Bite of Italy, Sun City

 

Detroit Rocco & The Accomplices, 6:30 p.m., Main Street in Mesa

 

Saturday, Sept 9

 

The Jokerz, The Loft Again, Cave Creek

 

Sunday, Sept 10

 

Rocket 88’s JAM 1 p.m., Chopper John’s

 

The Black Hole, 1:30 p.m., The Hideaway, Cave Creek 

 

 Monday, Sept 11


GOING NORTH DURING THE SUMMER HEAT? Check Out: AZ Blues Scene for great Blues in Northern Arizona. And stay in touch with the Northern Arizona Blues Alliance.


In the Tucson Area: The Southern Arizona Blues Heritage Foundation has all the Tucson area Blues info you can use!



Music Makers


Big Pete Pearson

bigpeteblues 

Facebook

 

Cold Shott and The Hurricane Horns

www.coldshott.com

Facebook 

 

The Sugar Thieves

www.sugarthieves.com

Facebook

 

Gary Zak & The Outbacks

Facebook 

 

Hans Olson

www.hansolson.net

 Facebook

 

Rocket 88s

www.rocket88s.net

 Facebook

 

JC& The Rockers

www.thejukerockers.com

 Facebook

 

Carvin Jones

www.carvinjones.com

 Facebook

 

Hoodoo Casters

www.hoodoocasters.com

 Facebook

 

Nina Curri

www.ninacurri.com

 Facebook

 

Mother Road Trio

www.motherroadtrio.com

 Facebook

 

Blues Review Band

Reverbnationbluesmanmike

 

Mike Eldred

www.mikeeldredtrio.com

Facebook 

 

Big Daddy D & The Dynamites    

bigdaddyd.com

 Facebook

 

Eric Ramsey

ericramsey.net

 Facebook

 

Leon J

 Facebook

 

Cadillac Assembly Line

Facebook

 

Innocent Joe and the Hostile Witnesses

Facebook

 

Chuck Hall

Facebook


Dry Heat Band

 Facebook 


Genevieve (Gypsy) Castorena

 Facebook

 

Hooter's Blues

 Facebook

 

Pop Top

Facebook

 

Tommy Grills Band

Facebook

 

Sweet Baby Ray

SweetBabyRaysBlues.com

 Facebook

 

Billy G & The Kids

billgarvin.com

 Facebook 

 

Aaron McCall Band

 Facebook

 

True Flavor Blues

 Facebook

 

Michael Coleman Grodin

 Facebook

 

The Black Hole

 Facebook

theblackholeblues.com

 

Hallelujah Blues Band

Facebook

 

Dennis Hererra

Dennisherrera.com

 Facebook

 

The Jokerz

 Facebook


The Scott O'Neal Band 

Facebook

thescottonealband@gmail.com


Glenville Slim

 Facebook


West of The Blues

 Facebook


Until The Sun

 Facebook

website


Detroit Rocco and the Accomplices

facebook group: facebook/group/913968186228214


Venues


The Rhythm Room

 Facebook

Westside Blues & Jazz

 Facebook

Janey's Cave Creek

 Facebook

Chars Live

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