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Smokey Hogg

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Birth name
  
Andrew Hogg

Name
  
Smokey Hogg

Years active
  
1930s–1950s


Instruments
  
Guitar

Occupation(s)
  
Musician

Role
  
Musician

Smokey Hogg Smokey39 Hogg


Born
  
January 27, 1914 Westconnie, Texas, United States (
1914-01-27
)

Died
  
May 1, 1960, Texas, United States

Albums
  
Deep Ellum Rambler, Sings The Blues, Angels In Harlem

Genres
  
Texas blues, Country blues

Record labels
  
Modern Records, Decca Records

Similar People
  
Lowell Fulson, Lightnin' Hopkins, John Lee Hooker, Clifton Chenier, George "Harmonica" Smith

Smokey hogg crawdad


Andrew "Smokey" Hogg (January 27, 1914 – May 1, 1960) was an American post-war Texas blues and country blues musician.

Contents

Smokey Hogg Texas Blues Guitar Long Tall Mama SMOKEY HOGG YouTube

Smokey Hogg-Great Big Mama


Life and career

Smokey Hogg Smokey Hogg Big Road Blues

Hogg was born near Westconnie, Texas, and grew up on a farm. He was taught to play the guitar by his father, Frank Hogg. While still in his teens he teamed up with the slide guitarist and vocalist B. K. Turner, also known as Black Ace, and the pair travelled together, playing a circuit of turpentine and logging camps, country dance halls and juke joints around Kilgore, Tyler, Greenville and Palestine, in East Texas.

Smokey Hogg httpsimgdiscogscomVNnwga1g2SjTjLRP3eXnYqsvf

In 1937 Decca Records brought Hogg and Black Ace to Chicago to record. Hogg's first record, "Family Trouble Blues" backed with "Kind Hearted Blues", was released under the name of Andrew Hogg. It was an isolated occurrence—he did not make it back into a recording studio for over a decade. By the early 1940s Hogg was married and making a good living busking around the Deep Ellum area of Dallas, Texas.

Hogg was drafted in the mid-1940s. After a brief spell with the U.S. military, he continued working in the Dallas area, where he was becoming well known. In 1947 he came to the attention of Herbert T. Rippa Sr., the head of the Dallas-based record label Bluebonnet Records, who recorded several sides with him and leased the masters to Modern Records.

The first release on Modern was the Big Bill Broonzy song "Too Many Drivers". It sold well enough that Modern brought Hogg to Los Angeles to cut more sides with their team of studio musicians. These songs included his two biggest hits, "Long Tall Mama" in 1949 and another Broonzy tune, "Little School Girl" (number 9 on the U.S. R&B chart) in 1950.

His two-part "Penitentiary Blues" (1952) was a remake of the prison song "Ain't No More Cane on the Brazos".

Hogg's country blues style, influenced by Broonzy, Peetie Wheatstraw and Black Ace, was popular with record buyers in the South during the late 1940s and early 1950s. He continued to work and record until the end of the 1950s.

He died of anal cancer in McKinney, Texas in 1960.

Relatives and others

Hogg was reputed to be a cousin of Lightnin' Hopkins and to be distantly related to Alger "Texas" Alexander, but both claims are ambiguous.

Hogg's cousin John Hogg was also a blues musician; he recorded for Mercury Records in 1951.

He is not to be confused with Willie "Smokey" Hogg, a musician based in New York City in the 1960s.

References

Smokey Hogg Wikipedia