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Daddy Stovepipe

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Birth name
  
Johnny Watson

Record label
  
Role
  
Singer


Name
  
Daddy Stovepipe

Albums
  
Tuxedo Blues

Daddy Stovepipe The Beautiful New Johnny Daddy Stovepipe Watson one

Also known as
  
Jimmy Watson, Sunny Jim, Rev. Alfred Pitts

Born
  
April 12, 1867Mobile, Alabama, United States (
1867-04-12
)

Occupation(s)
  
One-man band, singer, guitarist, harmonicist, songwriter

Instruments
  
Vocals, guitar, harmonica

Associated acts
  
Mississippi Sarah, Sunny Jim and Whistlin' Joe

Died
  
November 1, 1963, Chicago, Illinois, United States

Genres
  
Country blues, Mariachi, Jug band, Cajun music, Traditional pop music

Similar People
  
Jaybird Coleman, Ed Bell, Rabbit Brown, Cannon's Jug Stompers, Papa Charlie Jackson

Years active
  
Late 1890s–early 1960s

Daddy Stovepipe - Stove Pipe Blues


Johnny Watson (April 12, 1867 – November 1, 1963) was an African American blues singer, guitarist and harmonica player, best known for his recordings under the name Daddy Stovepipe. Watson also recorded as Jimmy Watson, Sunny Jim and Rev. Alfred Pitts. He may have been the earliest-born blues performer to record.

Contents

Daddy Stovepipe image1findagravecomphotos200810110662120792

Many of his recordings were jug band duets with his wife, Sarah Watson, who was usually credited as Mississippi Sarah.

Daddy Stovepipe daddystovepipejpg

Life

Daddy Stovepipe Carl Bludts daddystovepipe The Country Blues

Watson was born in Mobile, Alabama. His career began before 1900 in Mexico as a twelve-string guitarist in early mariachi bands. He then established himself as an entertainer with the Rabbit's Foot Minstrels touring around the southern states.

Daddy Stovepipe The Spasm by Mississippi Sarah amp Daddy Stovepipe YouTube

By the 1920s, he was working as a one-man band on Maxwell Street in Chicago, where he acquired the name "Daddy Stovepipe" from the characteristic top hat he wore. He first recorded in 1924, in Richmond, Indiana, recording "Sundown Blues" which is regarded as one of the most primitive blues on record. In 1927 he made more recordings, this time in Birmingham, Alabama for Gennett Records, as one half of the duo "Sunny Jim and Whistlin' Joe".

He made more recordings back in Chicago in 1931 for the Vocalion label with his wife, "Mississippi Sarah", a singer and jug player. The couple's humorous banter made their recordings unique. They recorded together again in 1935 for Bluebird Records, by which time they were living in Greenville, Mississippi, but Sarah's death in 1937 sent her husband back out on the road. He then worked for a while around Texas, playing in cajun bands and, again, with Mexican mariachi bands.

By 1948 he had returned to work as a street musician in Chicago, and was recorded in 1960, aged 93, with his repertoire having widened to include traditional popular music tunes such as "The Tennessee Waltz". He died in Chicago in 1963, from bronchial pneumonia after a gall bladder operation, aged 96.

On May 5, 2012 the fifth annual White Lake Blues Festival took place at the Howmet Playhouse Theater in Whitehall, Michigan. The event was organized by Steve Salter of the nonprofit organization Killer Blues to raise monies to honor Watson's unmarked grave with a headstone. The concert was a success, and a headstone was placed in July, 2012.

Similarly named musicians

Daddy Stovepipe should not be confused with two other musicians:

  • Stovepipe No.1 – (real name Samuel Chambers Jones, August 7, 1890 – unknown death), who also first recorded as a one-man band in 1924. Daddy Stovepipe and Stovepipe No.1 were deemed to be the first blues one-man bands ever to be recorded on disc.
  • Sweet Papa Stovepipe – (real name Thomas McKinley Peebles, May 15, 1897 – January 24, 1985), who recorded "All Birds Look Like Chicken to Me," and "Mama's Angel Child" (both circa 1926).
  • References

    Daddy Stovepipe Wikipedia