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Little Willy Foster

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Died
  
November 25, 1987

Role
  
Singer


Name
  
Little Foster

Years active
  
Mid 1940s-1973

Genres
  
Chicago blues

Little Willy Foster wwwwirzdemusicfostergrafikfoster24jpg

Born
  
April 20, 1922 Dublin, Mississippi, United States (
1922-04-20
)

Origin
  
Chicago, Illinois, United States

Occupation(s)
  
Harmonicist, singer, songwriter

Instruments
  
Harmonica, guitar, vocals

Record labels
  
Cobra Records, Parrot Records

Similar People
  
Lazy Bill Lucas, Floyd Jones, Leroy Foster, John Brim, Homesick James

Also known as
  
Little Willie Foster

Little Willy Foster - Blue Lake Records 78 Falling Rain Blues


Little Willy Foster or Little Willie Foster (April 20, 1922 – November 25, 1987) was an American Chicago blues harmonicist, singer, and songwriter.

Contents

Biography

Foster was born in Dublin, Mississippi, to Major Foster and Rosie Brown. He was raised on a plantation about ten miles south of Clarksdale. His mother died when he was aged five, and he was raised by his father, who was a local musician. Willy worked the fields from an early age and had little formal education. His father taught him to play the family's piano, and Willy later taught himself to master both the guitar and the harmonica. By 1942, he was working in Clarksdale. Around 1943, he relocated to Chicago. He played the blues around the city and teamed up with Floyd Jones, Lazy Bill Lucas, and his cousin Leroy Foster. Having befriended Big Walter Horton, Foster learned to play the harmonica in Horton's Chicago blues style. Beginning in the mid-1940s, this led to periodic work for Foster on Maxwell Street and in clubs in the city for over a decade. He also worked during this time in a band with Homesick James, Moody Jones and Floyd Jones.

In January 1955, Foster recorded two sides for Parrot Records, his own compositions "Falling Rain Blues" and "Four Day Jump", with accompaniment by Lucas, Jones and Eddie Taylor. Foster reportedly incurred the displeasure of the record label's owner, Al Benson, for reporting him to the American Federation of Musicians for underpaid dues on the recordings. In March 1957, Foster was back in a recording studio in Chicago, where he recorded two more of his songs, "Crying the Blues" and "Little Girl". Regarding the former, AllMusic noted that it "reflected both his emotional singing and his wailing, swooping harmonica".

From this point onwards, his personal life started to degenerate. Attending a house party, Foster was accidentally shot in the head by a woman playing with a handgun. The shoooting caused partial paralysis and severely affected his ability to speak. He made a slow recovery but rarely played in public thereafter. In January 1974, Foster voluntarily surrendered himself to the local police after he shot and killed his roommate. Pleading self-defense and impairment of judgement due to his brain injury, he was found not guilty by reason of insanity and was sent to a state hospital in 1975.

Foster died of cancer on November 25, 1987, aged 65, in Chicago.

His four released recordings are available on numerous compilation albums, issued both before and after his death.

Confusion

The variant spelling of his first name is due to the different spellings on his two singles.

He is not to be confused with (but has been, in literature and record listings, etc.) another blues harmonica player, Willie James Foster (September 19, 1921 – May 20, 2001).

References

Little Willy Foster Wikipedia