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Ernest Lawlars

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Also known as
  
Little Son Joe

Role
  
Guitarist

Instruments
  
Guitar, drums

Genres
  
Blues

Years active
  
1930s – 1950s

Associated acts
  
Memphis Minnie

Name
  
Ernest Lawlars



Born
  
May 18, 1900 Hughes, Arkansas, United States (
1900-05-18
)

Occupation(s)
  
Guitarist, vocalist, composer

Died
  
November 14, 1961, Memphis, Tennessee, United States

Record labels
  
Vocalion Records, Columbia Records

Similar People
  
Memphis Minnie, Sunnyland Slim, Little Brother Montgomery

Little son joe ernest lawlars with memphis minnie a b c blues


Ernest Lawlars (May 18, 1900 – November 14, 1961) was an American blues guitarist, vocalist, and composer, known professionally as Little Son Joe.

Contents

Life and career

Lawlars (sometimes spelled "Lawlers" or "Lawlar") was born in Hughes, Arkansas, United States. From around 1931 to 1936 he worked around Memphis with Robert Wilkins, who he accompanied on a recording session in 1935. The same session also produced Lawlers's first recorded side, under the name Son Joe, although this was not issued.

By 1939, he was working with, and married to, Memphis Minnie. Their first recording session together, for Vocalion in February 1939, produced six released sides by Lawlers as well as four under Minnie's name. Lawlars recorded in his own right under the name Little Son Joe, but most of his recorded work was as an accompanist to Minnie. In 1942, and billed as Little Son Joe, he had a hit with "Black Rat Swing". He mostly retired from music from around 1957 because of ill-health, although after moving to Memphis in 1958 he and Minnie had a regular Saturday night gig at the Red Light in Millington, Tennessee, and he played drums on Minnie's final recording session in 1959.

He died in John Gaston Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, in November 1961 from heart disease, and was buried in the New Hope Cemetery in Walls, Mississippi.

References

Ernest Lawlars Wikipedia