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Lead Belly

Huddie William Ledbetter (/ˈhjdi/; January 20, 1888 – December 6, 1949),[1] better known by the stage name Lead Belly, was an American folk and blues singer notable for his strong vocals, virtuosity on the twelve-string guitar, and the folk standards he introduced, including his renditions of "In the Pines", "Goodnight, Irene", "Midnight Special", "Cotton Fields", and "Boll Weevil".

Lead Belly
Lead Belly with a melodeon c. 1942
Background information
Birth nameHuddie William Ledbetter
Also known asLead Belly, Leadbelly
Born(1888-01-20)January 20, 1888[1]
Mooringsport, Louisiana, U.S.
DiedDecember 6, 1949(1949-12-06) (aged 61)
New York City, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)Singer, musician
Instrument(s)
  • Vocals
  • guitar
  • accordion
  • piano
Years active1903–1949

Lead Belly usually played a twelve-string guitar, but he also played the piano, mandolin, harmonica, violin, and windjammer.[2] In some of his recordings, he sang while clapping his hands or stomping his foot.

Lead Belly's songs covered a wide range of genres, including gospel music, blues, and folk music, as well as a number of topics, including women, liquor, prison life, racism, cowboys, work, sailors, cattle herding, and dancing. He also wrote songs about people in the news, such as Franklin D. Roosevelt, Adolf Hitler, Jean Harlow, Jack Johnson, the Scottsboro Boys and Howard Hughes. Lead Belly was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1988 and the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame in 2008.

Though many releases credit him as "Leadbelly", he wrote his name as "Lead Belly". This is the spelling on his tombstone[3][4] and is used by the Lead Belly Foundation.[5]

Biography edit

Personal life edit

 
Lead Belly's draft registration card in 1942 (SERIAL NUMBER U2214 and address listed as 604 E 9TH ST., N.Y. N. Y.)

The younger of two children, Lead Belly was born Huddie William Ledbetter to Sallie Brown and Wesley Ledbetter on a plantation near Mooringsport, Louisiana.[6] On his World War II draft registration card in 1942, he gave his birthplace as Freeport, Louisiana ("Shreveport"). There is uncertainty over his precise date and year of birth. The Lead Belly Foundation gives his birth date as January 20, 1889,[7] his grave marker gives the year 1889, and his 1942 draft registration card states January 23, 1889.

These records were made by census takers, and ages and dates were defined in terms of the census date. The 1900 United States Census lists "Hudy Ledbetter" as 12 years old, born January 1888, and the 1910 and 1930 censuses also give his age as corresponding to a birth in 1888. The 1940 census lists his age as 51, with information supplied by wife Martha. The books Blues: A Regional Experience by Eagle and LeBlanc and Encyclopedia of Louisiana Musicians by Tomko give January 23, 1888,[1][8] while the Encyclopedia of the Blues gives January 20, 1888.[9]

His parents had cohabited for several years. They officially married on February 26, 1888, perhaps after his birth that year. When Huddie was five years old, the family settled in Bowie County, Texas.

By the 1910 census of Harrison County, Texas, "Hudy Ledbetter" was living next door to his parents in a separate household with his first wife, Aletha "Lethe" Henderson. Aletha is recorded as age 19 and married one year. Others say she was 15 when they married in 1908. Ledbetter received his first instrument in Texas, an accordion, from his uncle Terrell. By his early twenties, having fathered at least two children, Ledbetter left home to make his living as a guitarist and occasional laborer.

Music career edit

By 1903, Huddie was already a "musicianer",[10]: 28  a singer and guitarist of some note. He performed to Shreveport audiences in St. Paul's Bottoms, a notorious red-light district. He began to develop his own style of music after exposure to the various musical influences on Shreveport's Fannin Street, a row of saloons, brothels, and dance halls in the Bottoms. This area is now referred to as Ledbetter Heights.

Between 1915 and 1939, Ledbetter served several prison and jail terms in Louisiana for a variety of criminal charges. Thirty years after starting his music career, he was "discovered" in Angola Penitentiary during a 1933 visit by folklorists John Lomax and his son Alan Lomax.[11] They were recording varieties of local music in the South as a project to preserve traditional music for the Library of Congress. This was one of numerous cultural projects during the Great Depression.[12]

Deeply impressed by Ledbetter's vibrant tenor and extensive repertoire, the Lomaxes recorded him in 1933 on portable aluminum disc recording equipment in a project for the Library of Congress. They returned with new and better equipment in July 1934, recording hundreds of his songs. While in prison, Lead Belly may have first heard the traditional prison song "Midnight Special"; his versions became famous.[13] On August 1, Ledbetter was released after having served nearly all of his minimum sentence. The Lomaxes had taken a record and a petition seeking his release to Louisiana Governor Oscar K. Allen at his urgent request. It included his signature song, "Goodnight Irene".[clarification needed]

A prison official later wrote to John Lomax denying that Ledbetter's singing had anything to do with his release from prison. (State prison records confirm he was eligible for this due to good behavior.) But, both Ledbetter and the Lomaxes believed that the record they had taken to the governor had helped gain his release from prison.

Ledbetter returned to a state in the midst of the Great Depression, and jobs were scarce. In September, needing regular work to satisfy parole, he asked John Lomax to take him on as a paid driver. For three months, he assisted the 67-year-old in his folk song collecting around the South. Son Alan Lomax was ill and did not accompany his father on this trip.[13][page needed]

In December 1934, Lead Belly participated in a "smoker" (group sing) at a Modern Language Association meeting at Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania, where the senior Lomax had a prior lecture engagement. He was written up in the press as a convict who had sung his way out of prison. On New Year's Day, 1935, the pair arrived in New York City, where Lomax was scheduled to meet with his publisher, Macmillan, about a new collection of folk songs. The newspapers were eager to write about the "singing convict". Time magazine made one of its first March of Time newsreels about him. Lead Belly attained famealthough not fortune.

On January 23–25, 1935, Lead Belly had the first of several recording sessions with American Record Corporation (ARC). These sessions, combined with two others on February 5 and March 25, yielded 53 takes. Of those recordings, only six were ever released during Lead Belly's lifetime. ARC decided to simultaneously release these songs on six different labels they owned: Banner, Melotone, Oriole, Perfect, Romeo, and Paramount.[10]: 159–60, 292–95  These recordings achieved little commercial success. Part of the reason for the poor sales may have been that ARC released only his blues songs rather than the folk songs for which he would later become better known. Lead Belly continued to struggle financially. Like many performers, what income he made during his career came from touring, not from record sales. In February 1935, he married his girlfriend, Martha Promise, who came North from Louisiana to join him.

During February Ledbetter recorded his repertoire with Alan Lomax, who also recorded other African Americans. Lomax interviewed Ledbetter about his life for their forthcoming book, Negro Folk Songs As Sung by Lead Belly (1936). But his father, who had a management contract with Lead Belly, was not able to arrange concert dates. In March 1935, Lead Belly accompanied John Lomax on a previously scheduled two-week lecture tour of colleges and universities in the Northeast, culminating at Harvard.

At the end of the month, John Lomax decided he could no longer work with Lead Belly. He gave him and Martha enough money to return by bus to Louisiana. He also gave Martha the money her husband had earned during three months of performing, but in installments, on the pretext that Lead Belly would spend it all on drinking if he was given a lump sum. From Louisiana, Lead Belly successfully sued Lomax for both the full amount of his earnings and release from his management contract. The quarrel was bitter, with hard feelings on both sides. In the midst of the legal wrangling, Lead Belly wrote to Lomax proposing they team up again, but this did not happen. The book that the Lomaxes published about Lead Belly in the fall of 1936 proved a commercial failure.[citation needed]

In January 1936, Lead Belly returned to New York on his own, without John Lomax, in an attempted comeback. He performed twice a day at Harlem's Apollo Theater during the Easter season. He developed a live dramatic recreation of the March of Time newsreel (itself a recreation), which was about his prison encounter with John Lomax, when he was still wearing uniform stripes. By this time he was no longer associated with Lomax.

 
Lead Belly at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. between 1938 and 1948

Life magazine ran a three-page article titled "Lead Belly: Bad Nigger Makes Good Minstrel" in its issue of April 19, 1937. It included a full-page, color (rare in those days) picture of him sitting on grain sacks playing his guitar and singing.[14] Also included was a striking photograph of his wife Martha Promise (identified in the article as his manager). Other photos showed Lead Belly's hands playing the guitar (with the caption "these hands once killed a man"), Texas Governor Pat M. Neff, and the "ramshackle" Texas State Penitentiary. The article attributes both of his pardons to his singing his petitions to the governors, who were so moved that they pardoned him. The article closed by saying that Lead Belly "may well be on the brink of a new and prosperous period."[14]

Lead Belly failed to stir the enthusiasm of Harlem audiences. Instead, he attained success playing at concerts and benefits for an audience of folk music aficionados. He developed his own style of singing and explaining his repertoire in the context of Southern black culture, having learned from his participation in Lomax's college lectures. He was especially successful with his repertoire of children's game songs (as a younger man in Louisiana he had sung regularly at children's birthday parties in the black community). Black novelist Richard Wright wrote about him as a heroic figure in the Daily Worker, of which Wright was the Harlem editor. The two men became personal friends. In contrast to Wright, who was then a communist, commentators described Lead Belly as apolitical. He was known to support Wendell Willkie, the centrist Republican candidate for president, for whom he wrote a campaign song. Lead Belly also wrote the song "The Bourgeois Blues", which has class-conscious and anti-racist lyrics.

In 1939, Lead Belly was convicted and sentenced again to prison. Alan Lomax, then 24, took him under his wing and helped raise money for his legal expenses, dropping out of graduate school to do so. After gaining release, Lead Belly appeared as a regular on Lomax and Nicholas Ray's groundbreaking CBS radio show Back Where I Come From, broadcast nationwide.

He also performed in nightclubs with Josh White, becoming a fixture in New York City's surging folk music scene and befriending the likes of Sonny Terry, Brownie McGhee, Woody Guthrie, and Pete Seeger, all fellow performers on Back Where I Come From.[15]

In 1940, Lead Belly recorded for RCA Victor, one of the biggest record companies at the time. These sessions in California were held on June 15 and 17, with the Golden Gate Quartet accompanying some songs. The recordings resulted in the album, The Midnight Special and Other Southern Prison Songs, being issued by Victor Records. The album included sheets with extensive notes and song texts prepared by Alan Lomax. According to Charles Wolfe and Kip Lornell, "it was one of the finest public presentations of Leadbelly's music: well recorded, well advertised, well documented. And the album justified its reputation as a landmark in African American folk music."[10]: 220–22, 298–300  Several of the recordings from these sessions were also issued as singles by Bluebird Records.[16]

In 1941, Lead Belly was introduced to Moses "Moe" Asch by mutual friends. Asch owned a recording studio and small record label, which mainly released folk records for the local New York City market. He later founded Folkways Records.[17]: 22–23  Between 1941 and 1944, Lead Belly released three albums under the Asch Recordings label.[10]: 225–26, 304–07  During the first half of the 1940s, Lead Belly also recorded for the Library of Congress.

In 1944 he went to California, where he recorded strong sessions for Capitol Records. He lodged with a studio guitar player on Merrywood Drive in Laurel Canyon. Later he returned to New York City. In 1949, Lead Belly had a regular radio show, Folk Songs of America, broadcast on station WNYC in New York, on Henrietta Yurchenco's show on Sunday nights. Later in the year he began his first European tour with a trip to France, but fell ill before its completion and was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig's disease (a motor neuron disease).[12] Lead Belly was the first American country blues musician to achieve success in Europe.[15] His final concert was at the University of Texas at Austin in a tribute to his former mentor, John Lomax, who had died the previous year. Martha also performed at that concert, singing spirituals with Lead Belly.

Lead Belly died later that year in New York City. He was buried in the Shiloh Baptist Church cemetery, in Mooringsport, Louisiana, 8 miles (13 km) west of Blanchard, in Caddo Parish.[3] He is honored with a statue across from the Caddo Parish Courthouse, in Shreveport.

Legal issues edit

 
Lead Belly inside the Angola Prison, July 1934

Lead Belly was imprisoned multiple times beginning in 1915, when he was convicted of carrying a pistol, and sentenced to time on the Harrison County chain gang. He later escaped and found work in nearby Bowie County under the assumed name of Walter Boyd.

In January 1918, he was imprisoned at the Imperial Farm (now Central Unit)[18] in Sugar Land, Texas, after being convicted of killing a relative, Will Stafford, in a fight over a woman. During his second prison term, Lead Belly was stabbed in the neck by another inmate. (The wound resulted in a fearsome scar the musician covered with a bandana). Lead Belly nearly killed his attacker at the time with his own knife.[15]

In 1925, he was pardoned and released after writing a song to Texas Governor Pat Morris Neff seeking his freedom, having served the minimum seven years of a 7-to-35-year sentence. He was credited with good behavior, which included entertaining the guards and fellow prisoners. He also appealed for mercy to Neff's known religious beliefs. It was a testament to his persuasive powers, as Neff had run for governor on a pledge not to issue pardons (most Southern judicial systems had no provision for approving parole from prison).[19] After meeting Lead Belly in 1924, Neff returned to the prison several times after he was incarcerated again. He brought guests to the prison on Sunday picnics to hear Ledbetter perform.[10]: 85 

In 1930, Ledbetter was sentenced to Louisiana State Penitentiary (nicknamed "Angola") after a summary trial for attempted homicide for stabbing a man in a fight. In 1939, Lead Belly served his final jail term for assault after stabbing a man in a fight in Manhattan.

Nicknamed "Lead Belly" edit

 
Lead Belly and Martha Promise Ledbetter, Wilton, Connecticut, February 1935

There are several conflicting stories about how Ledbetter acquired the nickname "Lead Belly", it probably happened while he was in prison. Some claim his fellow inmates called him "Lead Belly" as a play on his family name and his physical toughness. Others say he earned the name after being wounded in the stomach with buckshot.[15] Another theory is that the name refers to his ability to drink moonshine, the homemade liquor that Southern farmers, black and white, made to supplement their incomes.[20]

Blues singer Big Bill Broonzy thought it came from a supposed tendency to lie about as if "with a stomach weighted down by lead" in the shade when the chain gang was supposed to be working.[21]

However, his strong local accent is most likely to have led to the nickname. Huddie William Leadbetter from Shreveport, became Huddie Weem Leadbelly from Freeport.

Technique edit

Lead Belly styled himself "King of the Twelve-String Guitar", and despite his use of other instruments, such as the accordion, the most enduring image of Lead Belly as a performer is wielding his unusually large Stella twelve-string.[22] This guitar had a slightly longer scale length than a standard guitar, increasing the tension on the instrument, which, given the added tension of the six extra strings, meant that a trapeze-style tailpiece was needed to help resist bridge lifting. It had slotted tuners and ladder bracing.[citation needed]

Lead Belly played with finger picks much of the time, using a thumb pick to provide walking bass lines described as "tricky" and "inventive",[23] and occasionally to strum.[citation needed] This technique, combined with low tunings and heavy strings, gives many of his recordings a piano-like sound. Scholars have suggested much of his guitar playing was inspired equally by barrelhouse piano and the Mexican Bajo Sexto, a type of guitar that he encountered in Texas and Louisiana.[24]

Lead Belly's tunings are debated by both modern and contemporary musicians and blues enthusiasts alike, but it seems to be a down-tuned variant of standard tuning. Footage of his chording is scarce, so trying to decode his chords is difficult. It is likely that he tuned his guitar strings relative to one another, so that the actual notes shifted as the strings wore. Such down-tuning was a common technique before the development of truss rods, and was intended to prevent the instrument's neck from warping. Lead Belly's playing style was popularized by Pete Seeger, who adopted the twelve-string guitar in the 1950s and released an instructional LP and book using Lead Belly as an exemplar of technique.

In some of the recordings in which Lead Belly accompanied himself, he made an unusual type of grunt between his verses, sometimes described as "haah!" Songs such as "Looky Looky Yonder", "Take This Hammer",[12] "Linin' Track", and "Julie Ann Johnson" feature this unusual vocalization. In "Take This Hammer", Lead Belly explained: "Every time the men say, 'Haah,' the hammer falls. The hammer rings, and we swing, and we sing."[25] The "haah" sound can also be heard in work chants sung by Southern railroad section workers, "gandy dancers", in which it was used to coordinate work crews as they laid and maintained tracks.

Legacy edit

In 1976, a biopic titled Leadbelly was released, directed by Gordon Parks and featuring Roger E. Mosley as Lead Belly.

In 1951, the Weavers' recording of their arrangement of Lead Belly's "Irene", released as "Good Night, Irene", was the first folk song to reach #1 on the U.S. charts, selling some two million copies.[26]

Kurt Cobain promoted the legacy of Lead Belly, and some modern rock audiences owe their familiarity with Lead Belly to Nirvana's performance of "Where Did You Sleep Last Night" (which Lead Belly called "In the Pines") on a televised concert later released as MTV Unplugged in New York.[27] Cobain refers to his attempt to convince David Geffen to purchase Lead Belly's guitar for him in an interval before the song is played. In his notebooks, Cobain listed Lead Belly's Last Session Vol. 1 as one of the 50 albums most influential in the formation of Nirvana's sound.[28] It was included in NME's "The 100 Greatest Albums You've Never Heard list".[29]

Ram Jam, an American rock band, had a hit with the song "Black Betty" which they remade as a rock song in 1977. "Black Betty" was recorded by Lead Belly in 1939.

Bob Dylan credits Lead Belly for getting him into folk music. In his Nobel Prize Lecture, Dylan said "somebody – somebody I'd never seen before – handed me a Lead Belly record with the song 'Cotton Fields' on it. And that record changed my life right then and there. Transported me into a world I'd never known. It was like an explosion went off. Like I'd been walking in darkness and all of the sudden the darkness was illuminated. It was like somebody laid hands on me. I must have played that record a hundred times."[30] Dylan also pays homage to him in "Song to Woody" on his self-titled debut album.

Lead Belly recordings were instrumental in starting the British skiffle revival, which in turn produced several musicians prominent during the British Invasion. Lonnie Donegan's recording of "Rock Island Line", released as a single in late 1955, signaled the start of the skiffle craze. George Harrison of The Beatles was quoted as saying, "if there was no Lead Belly, there would have been no Lonnie Donegan; no Lonnie Donegan, no Beatles. Therefore no Lead Belly, no Beatles."[31] In a BBC tribute in 1999, which marked the 50th anniversary of Lead Belly's death, Van Morrison – while sitting alongside Ronnie Wood of The Rolling Stones – claimed that the British popular music scene of the 1960s wouldn't have happened if it weren't for Lead Belly's influence. "I'd put my money on that," he said. Wood concurred.[32]

Indian singer Bhupen Hazarika—who was, in general, influenced by spirituals during his days as a student in the US—transcreated Lead Belly's singing of "We're in the Same Boat Brother" [33] into the Assamese language as "Ami ekekhon nawore zatri" (আমি একেখন নাৱৰে যাত্ৰী).[34][35] Later, he also released a Bengali language version as "Mora jatri eki toronir" (মোরা যাত্রী একই তরণীর).[36]

In 2001 English-Canadian blues singer Long John Baldry released his final studio album, Remembering Leadbelly. It contains cover versions of Lead Belly songs, and features a six-minute Alan Lomax interview.

George Ezra developed his singing style from trying to sing like Lead Belly. "On the back of the record, it said his voice was so big, you had to turn your record player down," Ezra says. "I liked the idea of singing with a big voice, so I tried it, and I could."[37]

In 2015, in celebration of Lead Belly's 125th birthday, several events were held. The Kennedy Center, in collaboration with the Grammy Museum held Lead Belly at 125: A Tribute to an American Songster, a musical event featuring Robert Plant, Alison Krauss, and Buddy Miller with Viktor Krauss as headliners and Dom Flemons as host, with special appearances by Lucinda Williams, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Billy Hector, Valerie June, Shannon McNally, Josh White Jr., and Dan Zanes, among others [38] Also in Washington, D.C., Bourgeois Town: Lead Belly in Washington DC by the Library of Congress was held where Todd Harvey interviewed Lead Belly family members about their relative, his contributions to American culture and world music and an overview of the significant Lead Belly materials in the center's archive [39] In London, England, the Royal Albert Hall held Lead Belly Fest, a musical event featuring Van Morrison, Eric Burdon, Jools Holland, Billy Bragg, Paul Jones, and more.[40]

The Titanic edit

Influenced by the sinking of the Titanic in April 1912, Ledbetter wrote the song "The Titanic",[41] his first composition on the twelve-string guitar, which later became his signature instrument. Initially played when performing with Blind Lemon Jefferson (1893–1929) in and around Dallas, Texas, the song is about champion African-American boxer Jack Johnson's being denied passage on the Titanic. Johnson had in fact been denied passage on a ship for being black, but it was not the Titanic.[42] Still, the song includes the lyric "Jack Johnson tried to get on board. The Captain, he says, 'I ain't haulin' no coal!' Fare thee, Titanic! Fare thee well!" Ledbetter later noted he had to leave out this passage when playing in front of white audiences.[43]

"Stay woke" edit

In possibly the earliest audio recording of the phrase, Lead Belly urged Black listeners to "stay woke" in the spoken afterword to a 1938 recording of his song "Scottsboro Boys", which tells the story of nine Black teenagers and young men falsely accused of raping two white women in Alabama in 1931. Lead Belly warns his listeners, "So I advise everybody, be a little careful when they go along through there—best stay woke, keep their eyes open."[44][45]

Discography edit

Singles edit

Release Year Title

(A-side/B-side)

Label Catalog Number Recording Date Matrix Number Notes
1935 "All Out and Down"

"Packin' Trunk"

Banner 33359 January 23, 1935 16688-2

16685-1

American Record Corporation decided to simultaneously release these songs on six different labels they owned
Melotone M13326
Oriole 8438
Perfect 0314
Romeo 5438
Paramount 14006
1935 "Four Day Worry Blues"

"New Black Snake Moan"

Banner 33360 January 23, 1935 16689-2

16691-2

American Record Corporation decided to simultaneously release these songs on six different labels they owned
Melotone M13327
Oriole 8439
Perfect 0315
Romeo 5439
Paramount 14017
1936 "Becky Deem, She Was a Gamblin' Girl"

"Pig Meat Papa"

Banner 6-04-55 January 23, 1935,

March 25, 1935

16678-1

17181-1

American Record Corporation decided to simultaneously release these songs on six different labels they owned
Melotone 6-04-55
Oriole 6-04-55
Perfect 6-04-55
Romeo 6-04-55
Paramount 6-04-55
1940 "Sail On, Little Girl, Sail On"

"Don't You Love Your Daddy No More?"

Bluebird B-8550 June 15, 1940,

June 17, 1940

051505

051325

1940 "Alberta"

"T.B. Blues"

Bluebird B-8559 June 15, 1940 051507

051503

1940 "Easy Rider"

"Worried Blues"

Bluebird B-8570 June 17, 1940 051322

051324

1941 "Roberta"

"The Red Cross Store Blues"

Bluebird B-8709 June 15, 1940 051506

051504

1941 "New York City"

"You Can't Lose-a Me Cholly"

Bluebird B-8750 June 17, 1940 051323-1

051326-1

1941 "Good Morning Blues"

"Leaving Blues"

Bluebird B-8791 June 15, 1940 051501

051502

1942 "I'm on My Last Go-Round" Bluebird B-8981 June 15, 1940 051508-1 This was the b-side to "Thirsty Mama Blues" by the Hot Lips Page Trio
1945[46] "Rock Island Line"

"Eagle Rock Rag"

Capitol 10021 October 4, 1944,

October 27, 1944

398-3A1

457-2A

Included in the five-disc Capitol Album CE-16, The History of Jazz Vol. 1: The 'Solid' South
1946[47] "Yellow Gal"

"When the Boys Were on the Western Plain"

Musicraft 310 February 17, 1944 5129

5130-1

1946 "Roberta"

"John Hardy"

Musicraft 311 February 17, 1944 5126-3

5133

1946 "Where Did You Sleep Last Night?"

"In New Orleans"

Musicraft 312 February 17, 1944 5128

5132

1946 "Bill Brady"

"Pretty Flowers in Your Back Yard"

Musicraft 313 February 17, 1944 5127

5131

1946[48] "Easy Rider"

"Pigmeat"

Disc 5501 June 1946
1947[49] "Sweet Mary Blues"

"Grasshopers in My Pillow"

Capitol A40038 October 27, 1944 459-2A

460-3A

1948 "Irene"

"Backwater Blues"

Capitol 40130 October 11, 1944 413-3A

416-3A

1948[50] "Digging My Potatoes"

"Defense Blues"

Disc 5085 June 1946 D-385

D-386

Albums edit

Release Year Title Label Catalog Number Notes
1939 Negro Sinful Songs Musicraft Album 31
1940 The Midnight Special and Other Southern Prison Songs Victor P-50
1941 Play Parties in Song and Dance Asch
1942 Work Songs of the U.S.A. Asch
1944 Songs by Lead Belly Asch A-343
1946 Negro Folk Songs Disc 660
1947 Midnight Special Disc 726 Featuring Woody Guthrie and Cisco Huston

Posthumous discography edit

The Library of Congress recordings edit

The Library of Congress recordings, made by John and Alan Lomax from 1934 to 1943, were released in a six-volume series by Rounder Records:

  • Midnight Special (1991)
  • Gwine Dig a Hole to Put the Devil In (1991)
  • Let It Shine on Me (1991)
  • The Titanic (1994)
  • Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen (1994)
  • Go Down Old Hannah (1995)

Folkways recordings edit

The Folkways recordings, done for Moses Asch from 1941 to 1947, were released in a three-volume series by Smithsonian Folkways:

  • Where Did You Sleep Last Night, Lead Belly Legacy, Vol. 1 (1996)
  • Bourgeois Blues, Lead Belly Legacy, Vol. 2 (1997)
  • Shout On, Lead Belly Legacy, Vol. 3 (1998)

Smithsonian Folkways has released several other collections of his recordings:

Live recordings edit

  • Leadbelly Recorded in Concert, University of Texas, Austin, June 15, 1949 (1973, Playboy Records PB 119)

Other compilations edit

  • Huddie Ledbetter's Best (1989, BGO Records), containing recordings made for Capitol Records in 1944 in California
  • King of the 12-String Guitar (1991, Sony/Legacy Records), a collection of blues songs and prison ballads recorded in 1935 in New York City for the American Record Company, including previously unreleased alternate takes
  • Private Party November 21, 1948 (2000, Document Records), containing Lead Belly's intimate performance at a private party in late 1948 in Minneapolis
  • Take This Hammer, When the Sun Goes Down series, vol. 5 (2003, RCA Victor/Bluebird Jazz), CD collection of all 26 songs Lead Belly recorded for Victor Records in 1940, half of which feature the Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet (a 1968 LP released by RCA Victor included about half of these recordings)
  • A Leadbelly Memorial, Vol II (1963, Stinson Records, SLP 19), red vinyl pressing
  • The Definitive Lead Belly (2008, Not Now Music), a 50-song retrospective on two CDs
  • Leadbelly – American Folk & Blues Anthology (2013, Not Now Music), 75 songs on three CDs
  • American Epic: The Best of Lead Belly (2017, Lo-Max, Sony Legacy, Third Man)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Eagle, Bob; LeBlanc, Eric S. (2013). Blues – A Regional Experience. Santa Barbara: Praeger Publishers. p. 301. ISBN 978-0-313-34423-7.
  2. ^ Snyder, Jared (Summer 1994). "Leadbelly and His Windjammer: Examining the African American Button Accordion Tradition". American Music. 12 (2): 148–166. doi:10.2307/3052520. JSTOR 3052520.
  3. ^ a b Huddie William "Lead Belly" Ledbetter at Find a Grave
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on September 19, 2010. Retrieved September 22, 2010.
  5. ^ . LeadBelly.org. Archived from the original on January 23, 2010. Retrieved September 22, 2010.
  6. ^ Laberge, Yves (2006). Komara, Edward (ed.). The Blues Encyclopedia. Routledge. pp. 586–587. ISBN 0-415-92699-8.
  7. ^ "About Lead Belly", The Lead Belly Foundation. Retrieved March 8, 2020
  8. ^ Tomko, Gene (2020). Encyclopedia of Louisiana Musicians: Jazz, Blues, Cajun, Creole, Zydeco, Swamp Pop, and Gospel. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. p. 155. ISBN 978-0-8071-6932-2.
  9. ^ Komara, Edward M. (March 8, 2006). Encyclopedia of the Blues. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-92699-7. Retrieved March 8, 2021 – via Google Books.
  10. ^ a b c d e Wolfe, Charles; Lornell, Kip (1992). The Life and Legend of Leadbelly. New York City: HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-06-016862-5.
  11. ^ Santelli, Robert, 2015, Lead Belly: A Man of Contradiction and Complexity, p. 17. Smithsonian Folkways Recordings
  12. ^ a b c Gilliland, John (May 18, 1969). "Show 18 – Blowin' in the Wind: Pop Discovers Folk Music. Part 1". Pop Chronicles. UNT Digital Library, University of North Texas, Digital.library.unt.edu. Retrieved September 22, 2010.
  13. ^ a b Lomax, Alan, ed. Folk Song USA. New American Library.
  14. ^ a b LIFE Magazine – Google Books. April 19, 1937. pp. 38–40. Retrieved December 30, 2011.
  15. ^ a b c d The Mudcat Cafe. Leadbelly – King of the 12 String Guitar January 2, 2016, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on January 30, 2007
  16. ^ UC Santa Barbara Library. "Leadbelly". Discography of American Historical Recordings. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
  17. ^ Place, Jeff (2015). "The Life and Legacy of Lead Belly". (PDF). Washington: Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. ISBN 978-0-9704942-5-2. UPC 093074020128. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 13, 2022. Retrieved April 6, 2021.
  18. ^ Perkinson, Robert (2010). Texas Tough: The Rise of America's Prison Empire. Metropolitan Books. 184. ISBN 978-0-8050-8069-8.
  19. ^ "Today in Masonic History". MASONRYTODAY.com. November 26, 2017. Retrieved October 31, 2019.
  20. ^ Neff, Kyle. "Research Guides: Louisiana Music History: Materials in Special Collections: Huddie William "Lead Belly" Ledbetter". guides.lib.lsu.edu. Retrieved August 29, 2022.
  21. ^ Terkel, Studs (2005). And They All Sang. New Press.
  22. ^ Ohara, Marcus (November 22, 2009). "The Unique Guitar Blog: The Stella 12 String Guitar". Uniqueguitar.blogspot.com.
  23. ^ Turner, Dale (February 23, 2017). "12-String King:Lead Belly's Big-Bottom Blues". Guitarworld.com. Retrieved January 6, 2020.
  24. ^ Komara, Edward M. Encyclopedia of the Blues. 2006, Psychology Press, p. 434.
  25. ^ Lead Belly singing "Take This Hammer" on YouTube. Retrieved January 30, 2008.
  26. ^ Seeger, Pete (1972). Schwartz, Jo Metcalf (ed.). The Incompleat Folksinger. New York: Fireside Books, Simon and Schuster. p. 461. ISBN 0-671-22304-6.
  27. ^ "Where Did You Sleep Last Night". YouTube. January 10, 2011. Archived from the original on November 7, 2021.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on October 18, 2014. Retrieved May 8, 2013.
  29. ^ "The 100 Greatest Albums You've Never Heard". NME. August 30, 2018. Retrieved October 11, 2018.
  30. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Literature 2016". NobelPrize.org.
  31. ^ Catlin, Roger. "The Incomparable Legacy of Lead Belly". Smithsonian.
  32. ^ Fitzpatrick, Richard (June 10, 2015). "Lead Belly has inspired a music generation". Irishexaminer.com.
  33. ^ "Earl Robinson Sings: Folkways Records FG3545" (PDF). media.smithsonianfolkways.org. 1963.
  34. ^ Majaw, Lou; Lyngdoh, Andrew. "We are in the same boat brother..." The Telegraph.
  35. ^ Dutta, Pranjal (November 5, 2020). "The African American Bhupen Hazarika". The Sentinel.
  36. ^ "More jatri eki toronir testo". MTV Testi Canzoni.
  37. ^ "On the Verge: George Ezra arrives by way of 'Budapest'". Usatoday.com.
  38. ^ "Lead Belly at 125: A Tribute to an American Songster | GRAMMY Museum". Grammymuseum.org.
  39. ^ "Bourgeois Town: Lead Belly in Washington DC". Library of Congress.
  40. ^ "Lead Belly Fest | Royal Albert Hall". Royal Albert Hall.
  41. ^ "The Titanic" by Leadbelly on YouTube
  42. ^ Dinerstein, Joel (April 1, 2003). Swinging the Machine: Modernity, Technology, and African American Culture. Univ of Massachusetts Press. p. 124. Retrieved November 18, 2011. Jack Johnson denied access on Titanic.
  43. ^ Lead Belly's Last Sessions, disc 2, track 15, "The Titanic". Smithsonian Folkways.
  44. ^ Romano, Aja (October 9, 2020). "A history of 'wokeness'". Vox. Retrieved June 28, 2023.
  45. ^ Quarshie, Mabinty (March 9, 2023). "What is the meaning of 'woke'? Once a term used by Black Americans, it's now a rallying cry for GOP". USA Today. Retrieved June 28, 2023.
  46. ^ "Advance Record Releases". Billboard. Vol. 57, no. 39. October 6, 1945. p. 85. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  47. ^ "Advance Record Releases". Billboard. Vol. 58, no. 15. April 13, 1946. p. 124. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
  48. ^ "Advance Record Releases". Billboard. Vol. 58, no. 26. June 29, 1946. p. 30. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  49. ^ "Advance Record Releases". Billboard. Vol. 59, no. 35. September 6, 1947. p. 31. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved May 30, 2021.
  50. ^ "Advance Record Releases". Billboard. Vol. 60, no. 7. February 14, 1948. p. 123. ISSN 0006-2510. Retrieved July 5, 2021.
  51. ^ Leadbelly's Last Sessions, vol. 1. Folkways Records (FP 241) U.S.
  52. ^ Mazor, Barry (February 25, 2015). "Going From Prison Zero to Folk Hero". The Wall Street Journal. p. D5.
  53. ^ The Smithsonian Folkways Collection, 2015 remastered compilation. Smithsonian Folkways Recordings (SFW 40201) U.S.

Sources edit

  • White, Gary; Stuart, David; Aviva, Elyn (2001). Music in Our World. p. 196. ISBN 0-07-027212-3.
  • Wolfe, Charles; Lornell, Kip (1992). The Life and Legend of Leadbelly . New York City: HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0060168625

External links edit

  • The Lead Belly Foundation
  • The Official Lead Belly Website
  • "Ledbetter, Huddie (Leadbelly)" in the Handbook of Texas Online
  • AllMusic
  • Lead Belly discography at Discogs  
  • Discography for Lead Belly on Folkways
  • Lead Belly And The Lomaxes: Myths and Realities A FAQ and Timeline Lead Belly's relationship with John and Alan Lomax
  • Louisiana Music Hall of Fame Induction Page June 2, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  • Lead Belly: Entries|KnowLA, Encyclopedia of Louisiana February 22, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  • Huddie William "Lead Belly" Ledbetter at Find a Grave

lead, belly, leadbelly, redirects, here, biographical, film, this, person, leadbelly, film, huddie, william, ledbetter, january, 1888, december, 1949, better, known, stage, name, american, folk, blues, singer, notable, strong, vocals, virtuosity, twelve, strin. Leadbelly redirects here For the biographical film on this person see Leadbelly film Huddie William Ledbetter ˈ h j uː d i January 20 1888 December 6 1949 1 better known by the stage name Lead Belly was an American folk and blues singer notable for his strong vocals virtuosity on the twelve string guitar and the folk standards he introduced including his renditions of In the Pines Goodnight Irene Midnight Special Cotton Fields and Boll Weevil Lead BellyLead Belly with a melodeon c 1942Background informationBirth nameHuddie William LedbetterAlso known asLead Belly LeadbellyBorn 1888 01 20 January 20 1888 1 Mooringsport Louisiana U S DiedDecember 6 1949 1949 12 06 aged 61 New York City U S GenresFolk blues folk gospel songsterOccupation s Singer musicianInstrument s Vocals guitar accordion pianoYears active1903 1949 Lead Belly usually played a twelve string guitar but he also played the piano mandolin harmonica violin and windjammer 2 In some of his recordings he sang while clapping his hands or stomping his foot Lead Belly s songs covered a wide range of genres including gospel music blues and folk music as well as a number of topics including women liquor prison life racism cowboys work sailors cattle herding and dancing He also wrote songs about people in the news such as Franklin D Roosevelt Adolf Hitler Jean Harlow Jack Johnson the Scottsboro Boys and Howard Hughes Lead Belly was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1988 and the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame in 2008 Though many releases credit him as Leadbelly he wrote his name as Lead Belly This is the spelling on his tombstone 3 4 and is used by the Lead Belly Foundation 5 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Personal life 1 2 Music career 1 3 Legal issues 1 4 Nicknamed Lead Belly 2 Technique 3 Legacy 3 1 The Titanic 3 2 Stay woke 4 Discography 4 1 Singles 4 2 Albums 5 Posthumous discography 5 1 The Library of Congress recordings 5 2 Folkways recordings 5 3 Live recordings 5 4 Other compilations 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksBiography editPersonal life edit nbsp Lead Belly s draft registration card in 1942 SERIAL NUMBER U2214 and address listed as 604 E 9TH ST N Y N Y The younger of two children Lead Belly was born Huddie William Ledbetter to Sallie Brown and Wesley Ledbetter on a plantation near Mooringsport Louisiana 6 On his World War II draft registration card in 1942 he gave his birthplace as Freeport Louisiana Shreveport There is uncertainty over his precise date and year of birth The Lead Belly Foundation gives his birth date as January 20 1889 7 his grave marker gives the year 1889 and his 1942 draft registration card states January 23 1889 These records were made by census takers and ages and dates were defined in terms of the census date The 1900 United States Census lists Hudy Ledbetter as 12 years old born January 1888 and the 1910 and 1930 censuses also give his age as corresponding to a birth in 1888 The 1940 census lists his age as 51 with information supplied by wife Martha The books Blues A Regional Experience by Eagle and LeBlanc and Encyclopedia of Louisiana Musicians by Tomko give January 23 1888 1 8 while the Encyclopedia of the Blues gives January 20 1888 9 His parents had cohabited for several years They officially married on February 26 1888 perhaps after his birth that year When Huddie was five years old the family settled in Bowie County Texas By the 1910 census of Harrison County Texas Hudy Ledbetter was living next door to his parents in a separate household with his first wife Aletha Lethe Henderson Aletha is recorded as age 19 and married one year Others say she was 15 when they married in 1908 Ledbetter received his first instrument in Texas an accordion from his uncle Terrell By his early twenties having fathered at least two children Ledbetter left home to make his living as a guitarist and occasional laborer Music career edit By 1903 Huddie was already a musicianer 10 28 a singer and guitarist of some note He performed to Shreveport audiences in St Paul s Bottoms a notorious red light district He began to develop his own style of music after exposure to the various musical influences on Shreveport s Fannin Street a row of saloons brothels and dance halls in the Bottoms This area is now referred to as Ledbetter Heights Between 1915 and 1939 Ledbetter served several prison and jail terms in Louisiana for a variety of criminal charges Thirty years after starting his music career he was discovered in Angola Penitentiary during a 1933 visit by folklorists John Lomax and his son Alan Lomax 11 They were recording varieties of local music in the South as a project to preserve traditional music for the Library of Congress This was one of numerous cultural projects during the Great Depression 12 Deeply impressed by Ledbetter s vibrant tenor and extensive repertoire the Lomaxes recorded him in 1933 on portable aluminum disc recording equipment in a project for the Library of Congress They returned with new and better equipment in July 1934 recording hundreds of his songs While in prison Lead Belly may have first heard the traditional prison song Midnight Special his versions became famous 13 On August 1 Ledbetter was released after having served nearly all of his minimum sentence The Lomaxes had taken a record and a petition seeking his release to Louisiana Governor Oscar K Allen at his urgent request It included his signature song Goodnight Irene clarification needed A prison official later wrote to John Lomax denying that Ledbetter s singing had anything to do with his release from prison State prison records confirm he was eligible for this due to good behavior But both Ledbetter and the Lomaxes believed that the record they had taken to the governor had helped gain his release from prison Ledbetter returned to a state in the midst of the Great Depression and jobs were scarce In September needing regular work to satisfy parole he asked John Lomax to take him on as a paid driver For three months he assisted the 67 year old in his folk song collecting around the South Son Alan Lomax was ill and did not accompany his father on this trip 13 page needed In December 1934 Lead Belly participated in a smoker group sing at a Modern Language Association meeting at Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania where the senior Lomax had a prior lecture engagement He was written up in the press as a convict who had sung his way out of prison On New Year s Day 1935 the pair arrived in New York City where Lomax was scheduled to meet with his publisher Macmillan about a new collection of folk songs The newspapers were eager to write about the singing convict Time magazine made one of its first March of Time newsreels about him Lead Belly attained fame although not fortune On January 23 25 1935 Lead Belly had the first of several recording sessions with American Record Corporation ARC These sessions combined with two others on February 5 and March 25 yielded 53 takes Of those recordings only six were ever released during Lead Belly s lifetime ARC decided to simultaneously release these songs on six different labels they owned Banner Melotone Oriole Perfect Romeo and Paramount 10 159 60 292 95 These recordings achieved little commercial success Part of the reason for the poor sales may have been that ARC released only his blues songs rather than the folk songs for which he would later become better known Lead Belly continued to struggle financially Like many performers what income he made during his career came from touring not from record sales In February 1935 he married his girlfriend Martha Promise who came North from Louisiana to join him During February Ledbetter recorded his repertoire with Alan Lomax who also recorded other African Americans Lomax interviewed Ledbetter about his life for their forthcoming book Negro Folk Songs As Sung by Lead Belly 1936 But his father who had a management contract with Lead Belly was not able to arrange concert dates In March 1935 Lead Belly accompanied John Lomax on a previously scheduled two week lecture tour of colleges and universities in the Northeast culminating at Harvard At the end of the month John Lomax decided he could no longer work with Lead Belly He gave him and Martha enough money to return by bus to Louisiana He also gave Martha the money her husband had earned during three months of performing but in installments on the pretext that Lead Belly would spend it all on drinking if he was given a lump sum From Louisiana Lead Belly successfully sued Lomax for both the full amount of his earnings and release from his management contract The quarrel was bitter with hard feelings on both sides In the midst of the legal wrangling Lead Belly wrote to Lomax proposing they team up again but this did not happen The book that the Lomaxes published about Lead Belly in the fall of 1936 proved a commercial failure citation needed In January 1936 Lead Belly returned to New York on his own without John Lomax in an attempted comeback He performed twice a day at Harlem s Apollo Theater during the Easter season He developed a live dramatic recreation of the March of Time newsreel itself a recreation which was about his prison encounter with John Lomax when he was still wearing uniform stripes By this time he was no longer associated with Lomax nbsp Lead Belly at the National Press Club in Washington D C between 1938 and 1948Life magazine ran a three page article titled Lead Belly Bad Nigger Makes Good Minstrel in its issue of April 19 1937 It included a full page color rare in those days picture of him sitting on grain sacks playing his guitar and singing 14 Also included was a striking photograph of his wife Martha Promise identified in the article as his manager Other photos showed Lead Belly s hands playing the guitar with the caption these hands once killed a man Texas Governor Pat M Neff and the ramshackle Texas State Penitentiary The article attributes both of his pardons to his singing his petitions to the governors who were so moved that they pardoned him The article closed by saying that Lead Belly may well be on the brink of a new and prosperous period 14 Lead Belly failed to stir the enthusiasm of Harlem audiences Instead he attained success playing at concerts and benefits for an audience of folk music aficionados He developed his own style of singing and explaining his repertoire in the context of Southern black culture having learned from his participation in Lomax s college lectures He was especially successful with his repertoire of children s game songs as a younger man in Louisiana he had sung regularly at children s birthday parties in the black community Black novelist Richard Wright wrote about him as a heroic figure in the Daily Worker of which Wright was the Harlem editor The two men became personal friends In contrast to Wright who was then a communist commentators described Lead Belly as apolitical He was known to support Wendell Willkie the centrist Republican candidate for president for whom he wrote a campaign song Lead Belly also wrote the song The Bourgeois Blues which has class conscious and anti racist lyrics In 1939 Lead Belly was convicted and sentenced again to prison Alan Lomax then 24 took him under his wing and helped raise money for his legal expenses dropping out of graduate school to do so After gaining release Lead Belly appeared as a regular on Lomax and Nicholas Ray s groundbreaking CBS radio show Back Where I Come From broadcast nationwide He also performed in nightclubs with Josh White becoming a fixture in New York City s surging folk music scene and befriending the likes of Sonny Terry Brownie McGhee Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger all fellow performers on Back Where I Come From 15 In 1940 Lead Belly recorded for RCA Victor one of the biggest record companies at the time These sessions in California were held on June 15 and 17 with the Golden Gate Quartet accompanying some songs The recordings resulted in the album The Midnight Special and Other Southern Prison Songs being issued by Victor Records The album included sheets with extensive notes and song texts prepared by Alan Lomax According to Charles Wolfe and Kip Lornell it was one of the finest public presentations of Leadbelly s music well recorded well advertised well documented And the album justified its reputation as a landmark in African American folk music 10 220 22 298 300 Several of the recordings from these sessions were also issued as singles by Bluebird Records 16 In 1941 Lead Belly was introduced to Moses Moe Asch by mutual friends Asch owned a recording studio and small record label which mainly released folk records for the local New York City market He later founded Folkways Records 17 22 23 Between 1941 and 1944 Lead Belly released three albums under the Asch Recordings label 10 225 26 304 07 During the first half of the 1940s Lead Belly also recorded for the Library of Congress In 1944 he went to California where he recorded strong sessions for Capitol Records He lodged with a studio guitar player on Merrywood Drive in Laurel Canyon Later he returned to New York City In 1949 Lead Belly had a regular radio show Folk Songs of America broadcast on station WNYC in New York on Henrietta Yurchenco s show on Sunday nights Later in the year he began his first European tour with a trip to France but fell ill before its completion and was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ALS or Lou Gehrig s disease a motor neuron disease 12 Lead Belly was the first American country blues musician to achieve success in Europe 15 His final concert was at the University of Texas at Austin in a tribute to his former mentor John Lomax who had died the previous year Martha also performed at that concert singing spirituals with Lead Belly Lead Belly died later that year in New York City He was buried in the Shiloh Baptist Church cemetery in Mooringsport Louisiana 8 miles 13 km west of Blanchard in Caddo Parish 3 He is honored with a statue across from the Caddo Parish Courthouse in Shreveport Legal issues edit nbsp Lead Belly inside the Angola Prison July 1934Lead Belly was imprisoned multiple times beginning in 1915 when he was convicted of carrying a pistol and sentenced to time on the Harrison County chain gang He later escaped and found work in nearby Bowie County under the assumed name of Walter Boyd In January 1918 he was imprisoned at the Imperial Farm now Central Unit 18 in Sugar Land Texas after being convicted of killing a relative Will Stafford in a fight over a woman During his second prison term Lead Belly was stabbed in the neck by another inmate The wound resulted in a fearsome scar the musician covered with a bandana Lead Belly nearly killed his attacker at the time with his own knife 15 In 1925 he was pardoned and released after writing a song to Texas Governor Pat Morris Neff seeking his freedom having served the minimum seven years of a 7 to 35 year sentence He was credited with good behavior which included entertaining the guards and fellow prisoners He also appealed for mercy to Neff s known religious beliefs It was a testament to his persuasive powers as Neff had run for governor on a pledge not to issue pardons most Southern judicial systems had no provision for approving parole from prison 19 After meeting Lead Belly in 1924 Neff returned to the prison several times after he was incarcerated again He brought guests to the prison on Sunday picnics to hear Ledbetter perform 10 85 In 1930 Ledbetter was sentenced to Louisiana State Penitentiary nicknamed Angola after a summary trial for attempted homicide for stabbing a man in a fight In 1939 Lead Belly served his final jail term for assault after stabbing a man in a fight in Manhattan Nicknamed Lead Belly edit nbsp Lead Belly and Martha Promise Ledbetter Wilton Connecticut February 1935There are several conflicting stories about how Ledbetter acquired the nickname Lead Belly it probably happened while he was in prison Some claim his fellow inmates called him Lead Belly as a play on his family name and his physical toughness Others say he earned the name after being wounded in the stomach with buckshot 15 Another theory is that the name refers to his ability to drink moonshine the homemade liquor that Southern farmers black and white made to supplement their incomes 20 Blues singer Big Bill Broonzy thought it came from a supposed tendency to lie about as if with a stomach weighted down by lead in the shade when the chain gang was supposed to be working 21 However his strong local accent is most likely to have led to the nickname Huddie William Leadbetter from Shreveport became Huddie Weem Leadbelly from Freeport Technique editLead Belly styled himself King of the Twelve String Guitar and despite his use of other instruments such as the accordion the most enduring image of Lead Belly as a performer is wielding his unusually large Stella twelve string 22 This guitar had a slightly longer scale length than a standard guitar increasing the tension on the instrument which given the added tension of the six extra strings meant that a trapeze style tailpiece was needed to help resist bridge lifting It had slotted tuners and ladder bracing citation needed Lead Belly played with finger picks much of the time using a thumb pick to provide walking bass lines described as tricky and inventive 23 and occasionally to strum citation needed This technique combined with low tunings and heavy strings gives many of his recordings a piano like sound Scholars have suggested much of his guitar playing was inspired equally by barrelhouse piano and the Mexican Bajo Sexto a type of guitar that he encountered in Texas and Louisiana 24 Lead Belly s tunings are debated by both modern and contemporary musicians and blues enthusiasts alike but it seems to be a down tuned variant of standard tuning Footage of his chording is scarce so trying to decode his chords is difficult It is likely that he tuned his guitar strings relative to one another so that the actual notes shifted as the strings wore Such down tuning was a common technique before the development of truss rods and was intended to prevent the instrument s neck from warping Lead Belly s playing style was popularized by Pete Seeger who adopted the twelve string guitar in the 1950s and released an instructional LP and book using Lead Belly as an exemplar of technique In some of the recordings in which Lead Belly accompanied himself he made an unusual type of grunt between his verses sometimes described as haah Songs such as Looky Looky Yonder Take This Hammer 12 Linin Track and Julie Ann Johnson feature this unusual vocalization In Take This Hammer Lead Belly explained Every time the men say Haah the hammer falls The hammer rings and we swing and we sing 25 The haah sound can also be heard in work chants sung by Southern railroad section workers gandy dancers in which it was used to coordinate work crews as they laid and maintained tracks Legacy editFurther information List of cover versions of Lead Belly songs In 1976 a biopic titled Leadbelly was released directed by Gordon Parks and featuring Roger E Mosley as Lead Belly In 1951 the Weavers recording of their arrangement of Lead Belly s Irene released as Good Night Irene was the first folk song to reach 1 on the U S charts selling some two million copies 26 Kurt Cobain promoted the legacy of Lead Belly and some modern rock audiences owe their familiarity with Lead Belly to Nirvana s performance of Where Did You Sleep Last Night which Lead Belly called In the Pines on a televised concert later released as MTV Unplugged in New York 27 Cobain refers to his attempt to convince David Geffen to purchase Lead Belly s guitar for him in an interval before the song is played In his notebooks Cobain listed Lead Belly s Last Session Vol 1 as one of the 50 albums most influential in the formation of Nirvana s sound 28 It was included in NME s The 100 Greatest Albums You ve Never Heard list 29 Ram Jam an American rock band had a hit with the song Black Betty which they remade as a rock song in 1977 Black Betty was recorded by Lead Belly in 1939 Bob Dylan credits Lead Belly for getting him into folk music In his Nobel Prize Lecture Dylan said somebody somebody I d never seen before handed me a Lead Belly record with the song Cotton Fields on it And that record changed my life right then and there Transported me into a world I d never known It was like an explosion went off Like I d been walking in darkness and all of the sudden the darkness was illuminated It was like somebody laid hands on me I must have played that record a hundred times 30 Dylan also pays homage to him in Song to Woody on his self titled debut album Lead Belly recordings were instrumental in starting the British skiffle revival which in turn produced several musicians prominent during the British Invasion Lonnie Donegan s recording of Rock Island Line released as a single in late 1955 signaled the start of the skiffle craze George Harrison of The Beatles was quoted as saying if there was no Lead Belly there would have been no Lonnie Donegan no Lonnie Donegan no Beatles Therefore no Lead Belly no Beatles 31 In a BBC tribute in 1999 which marked the 50th anniversary of Lead Belly s death Van Morrison while sitting alongside Ronnie Wood of The Rolling Stones claimed that the British popular music scene of the 1960s wouldn t have happened if it weren t for Lead Belly s influence I d put my money on that he said Wood concurred 32 Indian singer Bhupen Hazarika who was in general influenced by spirituals during his days as a student in the US transcreated Lead Belly s singing of We re in the Same Boat Brother 33 into the Assamese language as Ami ekekhon nawore zatri আম এক খন ন ৱৰ য ত ৰ 34 35 Later he also released a Bengali language version as Mora jatri eki toronir ম র য ত র একই তরণ র 36 In 2001 English Canadian blues singer Long John Baldry released his final studio album Remembering Leadbelly It contains cover versions of Lead Belly songs and features a six minute Alan Lomax interview George Ezra developed his singing style from trying to sing like Lead Belly On the back of the record it said his voice was so big you had to turn your record player down Ezra says I liked the idea of singing with a big voice so I tried it and I could 37 In 2015 in celebration of Lead Belly s 125th birthday several events were held The Kennedy Center in collaboration with the Grammy Museum held Lead Belly at 125 A Tribute to an American Songster a musical event featuring Robert Plant Alison Krauss and Buddy Miller with Viktor Krauss as headliners and Dom Flemons as host with special appearances by Lucinda Williams Alvin Youngblood Hart Billy Hector Valerie June Shannon McNally Josh White Jr and Dan Zanes among others 38 Also in Washington D C Bourgeois Town Lead Belly in Washington DC by the Library of Congress was held where Todd Harvey interviewed Lead Belly family members about their relative his contributions to American culture and world music and an overview of the significant Lead Belly materials in the center s archive 39 In London England the Royal Albert Hall held Lead Belly Fest a musical event featuring Van Morrison Eric Burdon Jools Holland Billy Bragg Paul Jones and more 40 The Titanic edit Influenced by the sinking of the Titanic in April 1912 Ledbetter wrote the song The Titanic 41 his first composition on the twelve string guitar which later became his signature instrument Initially played when performing with Blind Lemon Jefferson 1893 1929 in and around Dallas Texas the song is about champion African American boxer Jack Johnson s being denied passage on the Titanic Johnson had in fact been denied passage on a ship for being black but it was not the Titanic 42 Still the song includes the lyric Jack Johnson tried to get on board The Captain he says I ain t haulin no coal Fare thee Titanic Fare thee well Ledbetter later noted he had to leave out this passage when playing in front of white audiences 43 Stay woke edit In possibly the earliest audio recording of the phrase Lead Belly urged Black listeners to stay woke in the spoken afterword to a 1938 recording of his song Scottsboro Boys which tells the story of nine Black teenagers and young men falsely accused of raping two white women in Alabama in 1931 Lead Belly warns his listeners So I advise everybody be a little careful when they go along through there best stay woke keep their eyes open 44 45 Discography editFurther information List of songs recorded by Lead Belly Singles edit Release Year Title A side B side Label Catalog Number Recording Date Matrix Number Notes1935 All Out and Down Packin Trunk Banner 33359 January 23 1935 16688 2 16685 1 American Record Corporation decided to simultaneously release these songs on six different labels they ownedMelotone M13326Oriole 8438Perfect 0314Romeo 5438Paramount 140061935 Four Day Worry Blues New Black Snake Moan Banner 33360 January 23 1935 16689 2 16691 2 American Record Corporation decided to simultaneously release these songs on six different labels they ownedMelotone M13327Oriole 8439Perfect 0315Romeo 5439Paramount 140171936 Becky Deem She Was a Gamblin Girl Pig Meat Papa Banner 6 04 55 January 23 1935 March 25 1935 16678 1 17181 1 American Record Corporation decided to simultaneously release these songs on six different labels they ownedMelotone 6 04 55Oriole 6 04 55Perfect 6 04 55Romeo 6 04 55Paramount 6 04 551940 Sail On Little Girl Sail On Don t You Love Your Daddy No More Bluebird B 8550 June 15 1940 June 17 1940 051505 0513251940 Alberta T B Blues Bluebird B 8559 June 15 1940 051507 0515031940 Easy Rider Worried Blues Bluebird B 8570 June 17 1940 051322 0513241941 Roberta The Red Cross Store Blues Bluebird B 8709 June 15 1940 051506 0515041941 New York City You Can t Lose a Me Cholly Bluebird B 8750 June 17 1940 051323 1 051326 11941 Good Morning Blues Leaving Blues Bluebird B 8791 June 15 1940 051501 0515021942 I m on My Last Go Round Bluebird B 8981 June 15 1940 051508 1 This was the b side to Thirsty Mama Blues by the Hot Lips Page Trio1945 46 Rock Island Line Eagle Rock Rag Capitol 10021 October 4 1944 October 27 1944 398 3A1 457 2A Included in the five disc Capitol Album CE 16 The History of Jazz Vol 1 The Solid South1946 47 Yellow Gal When the Boys Were on the Western Plain Musicraft 310 February 17 1944 5129 5130 11946 Roberta John Hardy Musicraft 311 February 17 1944 5126 3 51331946 Where Did You Sleep Last Night In New Orleans Musicraft 312 February 17 1944 5128 51321946 Bill Brady Pretty Flowers in Your Back Yard Musicraft 313 February 17 1944 5127 51311946 48 Easy Rider Pigmeat Disc 5501 June 19461947 49 Sweet Mary Blues Grasshopers in My Pillow Capitol A40038 October 27 1944 459 2A 460 3A1948 Irene Backwater Blues Capitol 40130 October 11 1944 413 3A 416 3A1948 50 Digging My Potatoes Defense Blues Disc 5085 June 1946 D 385 D 386Albums edit Release Year Title Label Catalog Number Notes1939 Negro Sinful Songs Musicraft Album 311940 The Midnight Special and Other Southern Prison Songs Victor P 501941 Play Parties in Song and Dance Asch1942 Work Songs of the U S A Asch1944 Songs by Lead Belly Asch A 3431946 Negro Folk Songs Disc 6601947 Midnight Special Disc 726 Featuring Woody Guthrie and Cisco HustonPosthumous discography editThe Library of Congress recordings edit The Library of Congress recordings made by John and Alan Lomax from 1934 to 1943 were released in a six volume series by Rounder Records Midnight Special 1991 Gwine Dig a Hole to Put the Devil In 1991 Let It Shine on Me 1991 The Titanic 1994 Nobody Knows the Trouble I ve Seen 1994 Go Down Old Hannah 1995 Folkways recordings edit The Folkways recordings done for Moses Asch from 1941 to 1947 were released in a three volume series by Smithsonian Folkways Where Did You Sleep Last Night Lead Belly Legacy Vol 1 1996 Bourgeois Blues Lead Belly Legacy Vol 2 1997 Shout On Lead Belly Legacy Vol 3 1998 Smithsonian Folkways has released several other collections of his recordings Leadbelly Sings Folk Songs 1989 Lead Belly s Last Sessions 4 CD box set 1994 recorded late 1948 in New York City 51 his only commercial recordings on magnetic tape Lead Belly Sings for Children 1999 Folkways The Original Vision Woody Guthrie and Lead Belly 2004 expanded version of the 1989 compilation Lead Belly The Smithsonian Folkways Collection 2015 52 53 Live recordings edit Leadbelly Recorded in Concert University of Texas Austin June 15 1949 1973 Playboy Records PB 119 Other compilations edit Huddie Ledbetter s Best 1989 BGO Records containing recordings made for Capitol Records in 1944 in California King of the 12 String Guitar 1991 Sony Legacy Records a collection of blues songs and prison ballads recorded in 1935 in New York City for the American Record Company including previously unreleased alternate takes Private Party November 21 1948 2000 Document Records containing Lead Belly s intimate performance at a private party in late 1948 in Minneapolis Take This Hammer When the Sun Goes Down series vol 5 2003 RCA Victor Bluebird Jazz CD collection of all 26 songs Lead Belly recorded for Victor Records in 1940 half of which feature the Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet a 1968 LP released by RCA Victor included about half of these recordings A Leadbelly Memorial Vol II 1963 Stinson Records SLP 19 red vinyl pressing The Definitive Lead Belly 2008 Not Now Music a 50 song retrospective on two CDs Leadbelly American Folk amp Blues Anthology 2013 Not Now Music 75 songs on three CDs American Epic The Best of Lead Belly 2017 Lo Max Sony Legacy Third Man References edit a b c Eagle Bob LeBlanc Eric S 2013 Blues A Regional Experience Santa Barbara Praeger Publishers p 301 ISBN 978 0 313 34423 7 Snyder Jared Summer 1994 Leadbelly and His Windjammer Examining the African American Button Accordion Tradition American Music 12 2 148 166 doi 10 2307 3052520 JSTOR 3052520 a b Huddie William Lead Belly Ledbetter at Find a Grave Delta Blues net Archived from the original on September 19 2010 Retrieved September 22 2010 Lead Belly Foundation LeadBelly org Archived from the original on January 23 2010 Retrieved September 22 2010 Laberge Yves 2006 Komara Edward ed The Blues Encyclopedia Routledge pp 586 587 ISBN 0 415 92699 8 About Lead Belly The Lead Belly Foundation Retrieved March 8 2020 Tomko Gene 2020 Encyclopedia of Louisiana Musicians Jazz Blues Cajun Creole Zydeco Swamp Pop and Gospel Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press p 155 ISBN 978 0 8071 6932 2 Komara Edward M March 8 2006 Encyclopedia of the Blues Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 92699 7 Retrieved March 8 2021 via Google Books a b c d e Wolfe Charles Lornell Kip 1992 The Life and Legend of Leadbelly New York City HarperCollins Publishers ISBN 0 06 016862 5 Santelli Robert 2015 Lead Belly A Man of Contradiction and Complexity p 17 Smithsonian Folkways Recordings a b c Gilliland John May 18 1969 Show 18 Blowin in the Wind Pop Discovers Folk Music Part 1 Pop Chronicles UNT Digital Library University of North Texas Digital library unt edu Retrieved September 22 2010 a b Lomax Alan ed Folk Song USA New American Library a b LIFE Magazine Google Books April 19 1937 pp 38 40 Retrieved December 30 2011 a b c d The Mudcat Cafe Leadbelly King of the 12 String Guitar Archived January 2 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on January 30 2007 UC Santa Barbara Library Leadbelly Discography of American Historical Recordings Retrieved December 5 2020 Place Jeff 2015 The Life and Legacy of Lead Belly Lead Belly The Smithsonian Folkways Collection PDF Washington Smithsonian Folkways Recordings ISBN 978 0 9704942 5 2 UPC 093074020128 Archived from the original PDF on April 13 2022 Retrieved April 6 2021 Perkinson Robert 2010 Texas Tough The Rise of America s Prison Empire Metropolitan Books 184 ISBN 978 0 8050 8069 8 Today in Masonic History MASONRYTODAY com November 26 2017 Retrieved October 31 2019 Neff Kyle Research Guides Louisiana Music History Materials in Special Collections Huddie William Lead Belly Ledbetter guides lib lsu edu Retrieved August 29 2022 Terkel Studs 2005 And They All Sang New Press Ohara Marcus November 22 2009 The Unique Guitar Blog The Stella 12 String Guitar Uniqueguitar blogspot com Turner Dale February 23 2017 12 String King Lead Belly s Big Bottom Blues Guitarworld com Retrieved January 6 2020 Komara Edward M Encyclopedia of the Blues 2006 Psychology Press p 434 Lead Belly singing Take This Hammer on YouTube Retrieved January 30 2008 Seeger Pete 1972 Schwartz Jo Metcalf ed The Incompleat Folksinger New York Fireside Books Simon and Schuster p 461 ISBN 0 671 22304 6 Where Did You Sleep Last Night YouTube January 10 2011 Archived from the original on November 7 2021 Top 50 by Nirvana Archived from the original on October 18 2014 Retrieved May 8 2013 The 100 Greatest Albums You ve Never Heard NME August 30 2018 Retrieved October 11 2018 The Nobel Prize in Literature 2016 NobelPrize org Catlin Roger The Incomparable Legacy of Lead Belly Smithsonian Fitzpatrick Richard June 10 2015 Lead Belly has inspired a music generation Irishexaminer com Earl Robinson Sings Folkways Records FG3545 PDF media smithsonianfolkways org 1963 Majaw Lou Lyngdoh Andrew We are in the same boat brother The Telegraph Dutta Pranjal November 5 2020 The African American Bhupen Hazarika The Sentinel More jatri eki toronir testo MTV Testi Canzoni On the Verge George Ezra arrives by way of Budapest Usatoday com Lead Belly at 125 A Tribute to an American Songster GRAMMY Museum Grammymuseum org Bourgeois Town Lead Belly in Washington DC Library of Congress Lead Belly Fest Royal Albert Hall Royal Albert Hall The Titanic by Leadbelly on YouTube Dinerstein Joel April 1 2003 Swinging the Machine Modernity Technology and African American Culture Univ of Massachusetts Press p 124 Retrieved November 18 2011 Jack Johnson denied access on Titanic Lead Belly s Last Sessions disc 2 track 15 The Titanic Smithsonian Folkways Romano Aja October 9 2020 A history of wokeness Vox Retrieved June 28 2023 Quarshie Mabinty March 9 2023 What is the meaning of woke Once a term used by Black Americans it s now a rallying cry for GOP USA Today Retrieved June 28 2023 Advance Record Releases Billboard Vol 57 no 39 October 6 1945 p 85 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved May 30 2021 Advance Record Releases Billboard Vol 58 no 15 April 13 1946 p 124 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved July 7 2021 Advance Record Releases Billboard Vol 58 no 26 June 29 1946 p 30 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved May 30 2021 Advance Record Releases Billboard Vol 59 no 35 September 6 1947 p 31 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved May 30 2021 Advance Record Releases Billboard Vol 60 no 7 February 14 1948 p 123 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved July 5 2021 Leadbelly s Last Sessions vol 1 Folkways Records FP 241 U S Mazor Barry February 25 2015 Going From Prison Zero to Folk Hero The Wall Street Journal p D5 The Smithsonian Folkways Collection 2015 remastered compilation Smithsonian Folkways Recordings SFW 40201 U S Sources editWhite Gary Stuart David Aviva Elyn 2001 Music in Our World p 196 ISBN 0 07 027212 3 Wolfe Charles Lornell Kip 1992 The Life and Legend of Leadbelly New York City HarperCollins Publishers ISBN 0060168625External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lead Belly The Lead Belly Foundation The Official Lead Belly Website Ledbetter Huddie Leadbelly in the Handbook of Texas Online AllMusic Lead Belly discography at Discogs nbsp Discography for Lead Belly on Folkways Leadbelly and Lomax Together at the American Music Festival on WNYC Lead Belly And The Lomaxes Myths and Realities A FAQ and Timeline Lead Belly s relationship with John and Alan Lomax Louisiana Music Hall of Fame Induction Page Archived June 2 2017 at the Wayback Machine Lead Belly Entries KnowLA Encyclopedia of Louisiana Archived February 22 2013 at the Wayback Machine Huddie William Lead Belly Ledbetter at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lead Belly amp oldid 1184984937, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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