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Robert Curtis Smith

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Also known as
  
R. C. Smith

Name
  
Robert Smith

Instruments
  
Vocals, guitar

Role
  
Singer


Years active
  
1960s

Genres
  
Piedmont blues

Labels
  
Bluesville Records

Record label
  
Bluesville Records

Robert Curtis Smith Hello There Universe Council Spur Blues Robert Curtis Smith RIP

Occupation(s)
  
Singer, guitarist, songwriter

Died
  
November 10, 2010, Chicago, Illinois, United States

Similar People
  
Wade Walton, K C Douglas, Chris Strachwitz, Black Ace, Melvin Jackson

Robert curtis smith catfish


Robert Curtis Smith (February 17, 1930 – November 10, 2010) was an African-American Piedmont blues singer, guitarist and songwriter.

Contents

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Smith was influenced by Big Bill Broonzy. He recorded one album, for Bluesville Records, released in 1963.

Council spur blues robert curtis smith


Biography

Smith was born in or near Cruger, Holmes County, Mississippi, United States. He worked as a farm labourer, where he and his wife raised eight children. He first played the blues guitar in 1948. He left Mississippi twice in hope of finding alternative employment in either Chicago or Texas, but each time he returned to his home state.

In 1960, by chance, he met Paul Oliver and Chris Strachwitz in Wade Walton's Big Six barber shop in Clarksdale, Mississippi. This led him to record some tracks that year and in 1961, and the album Clarksdale Blues: The Blues of Robert Curtis Smith was released in 1963. One of his songs, "Council Spur Blues", made direct references to the conditions on the plantation where he worked.

In 1968, he left Mississippi again for Chicago, where he spent the remainder of his life. Around this time he auditioned for a place in Willie Dixon's backing band. He later joined the church and played gospel music instead of the blues. Walton eventually tracked him down, and in 1997 Smith appeared at the Sunflower River Blues Festival in Clarksdale, playing only gospel songs.

Death

Smith died in Chicago in November 2010, aged 80.

References

Robert Curtis Smith Wikipedia