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Son Bonds

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Name
  
Son Bonds


Role
  
Guitarist

Genres
  
Country blues

Son Bonds Son Bonds March 16 1909 August 31 1947 was an country blues

Also known as
  
"Brownsville" Son Bonds, Brother Son Bonds

Born
  
March 16, 1909 Brownsville, Tennessee, United States (
1909-03-16
)

Occupation(s)
  
Singer, guitarist, songwriter

Died
  
August 31, 1947, Dyersburg, Tennessee, United States

Albums
  
Legendary Country Blues Artists - CD B

Associated acts
  
Sleepy John Estes, Hammie Nixon

Similar People
  
Hammie Nixon, Sleepy John Estes, Charlie Pickett, Ray Thomas, Werly Fairburn

Instruments
  
Vocals, guitar, kazoo

Son Bonds 80 Highway Blues (1941)


Abraham John Bond Jr., known as Son Bonds (March 16, 1909 – August 31, 1947), was an American country blues guitarist, singer and songwriter. He was a working associate of Sleepy John Estes and Hammie Nixon. He was similar to Estes in his guitar-playing style. According to the music journalist Jim O'Neal, "the music to one of Bonds's songs, 'Back and Side Blues' (1934), became a standard blues melody when Sonny Boy Williamson I, from nearby Jackson, Tennessee, used it in his classic "Good Morning, School Girl". The best-known of Bonds's other works are "A Hard Pill to Swallow" and "Come Back Home."

Contents

Biography

Bonds was born in Brownsville, Tennessee. He was also billed on records as "Brownsville" Son Bonds and Brother Son Bonds.

Sleepy John Estes, in his earlier recordings, was backed by Yank Rachell (mandolin) or Hammie Nixon (harmonica), but by the late 1930s he was accompanied in the recording studio by either Bonds or Charlie Pickett (guitar). Bonds also backed Estes on a couple of recording sessions in 1941. In return, either Estes or Nixon played on every one of Bonds's own recordings. In the latter part of his career, Bonds played the kazoo as well as the guitar on several tracks.

According to Nixon's later accounts of the event, Bonds suffered an accidental death in August 1947. While sitting on his front porch late one evening in Dyersburg, Tennessee, Bonds was shot to death by his nearsighted neighbor, who mistook him for another man, with whom the neighbor was having a protracted disagreement.

Discography

  • Complete Recorded Works in Chronological Order (1991), Wolf Records
  • This compilation album contains all known recordings by Bonds, made between September 1934 and September 1941.

    References

    Son Bonds Wikipedia


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