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Little Walter
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Who's the king of all postwar blues harpists, Chicago division or otherwise? Why, the virtuosic
Little Walter
, without a solitary doubt. The fiery harmonica wizard took the humble mouth organ in dazzling amplified directions that were unimaginable prior to his ascendancy. His daring instrumental innovations were so fresh, startling, and ahead of their time that they sometimes sported a jazz sensibility, soaring and swooping in front of snarling guitars and swinging rhythms perfectly suited to
Walter
's pioneering flights of fancy.
Marion Walter Jacobs
was by most accounts an unruly but vastly talented youth who abandoned his rural Louisiana home for the bright lights of New Orleans at age 12.
Walter
gradually journeyed north from there, pausing in Helena (where he hung out with the wizened
Sonny Boy Williamson
), Memphis, and St. Louis before arriving in Chicago in 1946.
The thriving Maxwell Street strip offered a spot for the still-teenaged phenom to hawk his wares. He fell in with local royalty --
Tampa Red
and
Big Bill Broonzy
-- and debuted on wax that same year for the tiny Ora-Nelle logo (
"I Just Keep Loving Her"
) in the company of
Jimmy Rogers
and guitarist
Othum Brown
.
Walter
joined forces with
Muddy Waters
in 1948; the resulting stylistic tremors of that coupling are still being felt today. Along with
Rogers
and
Baby Face Leroy Foster
, this super-confident young aggregation became informally known as
the Headhunters
. They would saunter into South side clubs, mount the stage, and proceed to calmly "cut the heads" of whomever was booked there that evening.
By 1950,
Walter
was firmly entrenched as
Waters
's studio harpist at Chess as well (long after
Walter
had split the
Muddy Waters
band,
Leonard Chess
insisted on his participation on waxings -- why split up an unbeatable combination?). That's how
Walter
came to record his breakthrough 1952 R&B chart-topper
"Juke"
-- the romping instrumental was laid down at the tail end of a
Waters
session. Suddenly
Walter
was a star on his own, combining his stunning talents with those of
the Aces
(guitarists
Louis
and
David Myers
and drummer
Fred Below
) and advancing the conception of blues harmonica another few light years with every session he made for Checker Records.
From 1952 to 1958,
Walter
notched 14 Top Ten R&B hits, including
"Sad Hours,"
"Mean Old World,"
"Tell Me Mama,"
"Off the Wall,"
"Blues with a Feeling,"
"You're So Fine,"
a threatening
"You Better Watch Yourself,"
the mournful
"Last Night,"
and a rocking
"My Babe"
that was
Willie Dixon
's secularized treatment of the traditional gospel lament
"This Train."
Throughout his Checker tenure,
Walter
alternated spine-chilling instrumentals with gritty vocals (he's always been underrated in that department; he wasn't
Muddy Waters
or
the Wolf
, but who was?).
Walter
utilized the chromatic harp in ways never before envisioned (check out his 1956 free-form instrumental
"Teenage Beat,"
with
Robert Jr. Lockwood
and
Luther Tucker
manning the guitars, for proof positive). 1959's determined
"Everything Gonna Be Alright"
was
Walter
's last trip to the hit lists; Chicago blues had faded to a commercial non-entity by then unless your name was
Jimmy Reed
.
Tragically, the '60s saw the harp genius slide steadily into an alcohol-hastened state of unreliability, his once-handsome face becoming a roadmap of scars. In 1964, he toured Great Britain with
the Rolling Stones
, who clearly had their priorities in order, but his once-prodigious skills were faltering badly. That sad fact was never more obvious than on 1967's disastrous summit meeting of
Waters
,
Bo Diddley
, and
Walter
for Chess as
the Super Blues Band
; there was nothing super whatsoever about
Walter
's lame remakes of
"My Babe"
and
"You Don't Love Me."
Walter
's eternally vicious temper led to his violent undoing in 1968. He was involved in a street fight (apparently on the losing end, judging from the outcome) and died from the incident's after-effects at age 37. His influence remains inescapable to this day -- it's unlikely that a blues harpist exists on the face of this earth who doesn't worship
Little Walter
. ~ Bill Dahl, All Music Guide
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Last Night
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Juke
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My Babe
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Blue Light
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Key To The Highway
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Mean Old World
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Nobody But You
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You're So Fine
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My Babe - Little Walter
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Blues With A Feeling
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Albums (25)
The Complete Chess Masters (1950 - 1967)
(126 songs)
Blowin' the Blues
(41 songs)
1953-1955
(20 songs)
Best
(15 songs)
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