Charley Patton

American Delta blues musician (1891–1934) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charley Patton

Charlie Patton (April 1891 (probable) – April 28, 1934), more often spelled Charley Patton, was an American Delta blues musician and songwriter. Considered by many to be the "Father of the Delta Blues", he created an enduring body of American music and inspired most Delta blues musicians. The musicologist Robert Palmer considered him one of the most important American musicians of the twentieth century.

Quick Facts Background information, Also known as ...
Charley Patton
Publicity photo for Paramount Records, the only confirmed extant photograph of Patton, c. 1929
Background information
Also known as
  • The Masked Marvel
  • Elder J. J. Hadley
Bornc. April 1891
Hinds County, Mississippi, U.S.
Died28 April 1934(1934-04-28) (aged 43)
Heathman Plantation, Mississippi, U.S.
Genres
Occupations
  • Musician
  • songwriter
Instruments
Years active1916–1934
Labels
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Patton (who was well educated by the standards of his time) spelled his name Charlie,[1] but many sources, including record labels and his gravestone, use the spelling Charley.[2]

Biography

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Patton was born in Hinds County, Mississippi, near the town of Edwards and lived most of his life in Sunflower County, in the Mississippi Delta. Most sources say he was born in April 1891, but the years 1881, 1885, and 1887 have also been suggested.[3] Patton's parentage and race also are uncertain. His parents were Bill and Annie Patton, but locally he was regarded as having been fathered by former slave Henderson Chatmon. Several of Chatmon's children became popular Delta musicians, as solo performers and as members of groups including the Mississippi Sheiks.[4] Biographer John Fahey described Patton as having "light skin and Caucasian features."[5]

Patton was considered African-American, but because of his light complexion there has been much speculation about his ancestry over the years. One theory endorsed by blues musician Howlin' Wolf was that Patton was Mexican or Cherokee. It is generally agreed that Patton was of Black, White, and Native heritage.[6] Some believe he had a Cherokee grandmother;[7] however, it is also widely asserted by historians that he was between one-quarter and one-half Choctaw.[8] In 1897, his family moved 100 miles (160 km) north to the 10,000-acre (40 km2) Dockery Plantation, a cotton farm and sawmill near Ruleville, Mississippi.[9] There, Patton developed his musical style, influenced by Henry Sloan, who had a new, unusual style of playing music, which is now considered an early form of the blues.[10] Patton performed at Dockery and nearby plantations and began an association with Willie Brown.[11] Tommy Johnson, Fiddlin' Joe Martin, Robert Johnson, and Chester Burnett (who later became famous in Chicago as Howlin' Wolf) also lived and performed in the area. Patton served as a mentor to these younger performers.[12]

Robert Palmer described Patton as a "jack-of all-trades bluesman", who played "deep blues, white hillbilly songs, nineteenth-century ballads, and other varieties of black and white country dance music with equal facility".[13] He was popular across the southern United States and performed annually in Chicago; in 1934, he performed in New York City. Unlike most blues musicians of his time who were often itinerant performers, Patton played scheduled engagements at plantations and taverns. He gained popularity for his showmanship, sometimes playing with his guitar down on his knees, behind his head, or behind his back.

Patton was a small man, about 5 feet 5 inches tall (1.65m),[14] but his gravelly voice was reputed to have been loud enough to carry 500 yards without amplification; a singing style which particularly influenced Howlin' Wolf (even though Jimmie Rodgers, the "singing brakeman", has to be cited there primarily).[15] Patton settled in Holly Ridge, Mississippi, with his common-law wife and recording partner, Bertha Lee, in 1933. His relationship with Bertha Lee was a turbulent one. In early 1934, both of them were incarcerated in a Belzoni, Mississippi jailhouse after a particularly harsh fight.[16] W. R. Calaway from Vocalion Records bailed them out of jail and escorted them to New York City, for what would be Patton's final recording sessions (on January 30 and February 1).[17] They later returned to Holly Ridge and Lee was with Patton in his final days.[17]

Patton died on the Heathman-Dedham plantation, near Indianola on April 28, 1934. He is buried in Holly Ridge (both towns are in Sunflower County). His death certificate says that he died of a mitral valve disorder.[18] The death certificate does not mention Bertha Lee; the only informant listed is one Willie Calvin.[19] Patton's death was not reported in the newspapers.[20] A memorial headstone was erected on his grave (the location of which was identified by the cemetery caretaker, C. Howard, who claimed to have been present at the burial), paid for by musician John Fogerty through the Mt. Zion Memorial Fund in July 1990. The spelling of Patton's name was dictated by Jim O'Neal, who composed the epitaph.[citation needed]

Recognitions

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Screamin' and Hollerin' the Blues: The Worlds of Charley Patton, a boxed set collecting Patton's recorded works, was released in 2001. It also features recordings by many of his friends and associates. The set won three Grammy Awards in 2003, for Best Historical Album, Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package, and Best Album Notes.[21] Another collection of Patton recordings, The Definitive Charley Patton, was released by Catfish Records in 2001.[22]

Patton's song "Pony Blues" (1929) was included by the National Recording Preservation Board in the National Recording Registry of the Library of Congress in 2006.[23] The board annually selects recordings that are "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."

In 2017, Patton's story was told in the award-winning documentary series American Epic.[24] The film featured unseen film footage of Patton's contemporaries[25][26] and radically improved restorations of his 1920s and 1930s recordings.[27][28] Director Bernard MacMahon observed that "we had a strong feeling that the music of Patton and his peers reflected the local geography, and I was struck by the extent to which that belief was already shared by people who were living in the Delta back then, when it was a center of musical innovation. Listening to interviews with H. C. Speir, who owned a furniture store in Jackson, Mississippi in the 1920s and was responsible for virtually all the recordings of early Delta blues, he clearly linked the music to its surroundings."[29] Patton's story was profiled in the accompanying book, American Epic: The First Time America Heard Itself.[30]

In May, 2021, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame posthumously inducted Patton into the 2021 class as an Early Influence.[31]

Historical marker

The Mississippi Blues Trail placed its first historical marker at the cemetery where Patton's grave is in Holly Ridge, Mississippi, in recognition of his legendary status as a bluesman and his importance in the development of the blues in Mississippi.[32] It placed another historic marker at the site where the Peavine Railroad intersects Highway 446 in Boyle, Mississippi, designating it as a second site related to Patton on the Mississippi Blues Trail. The marker commemorates the lyrics of Patton's "Peavine Blues", which refer to the branch of the Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railroad which ran south from Dockery Plantation to Boyle. The marker notes that riding on the railroad was a common theme of blues songs and was seen as a metaphor for travel and escape.[33]

Discography

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Paramount recordings

More information Recording Date, Recording Location ...
Recording DateRecording LocationMatrixSongParamount Issue #Release Date
June 14, 1929Richmond, IndianaG15216"Pony Blues"12792-A1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15211"Mississippi Boweavil Blues"12805-B1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15214"Screamin' and Hollerin' the Blues"12805-A1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15215"Down the Dirt Road Blues"12854-A1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15217"Banty Rooster Blues"12792-B1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15221"Pea Vine Blues"12877-A1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15220"It Won't Be Long"12854-B1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15222"Tom Rushen Blues"12877-B1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15223"A Spoonful Blues"12869-B1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15224"Shake It and Break It (But Don't Let It Fall Mama)"12869-A1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15225"Prayer of Death, Part 1"12799-A1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15225A"Prayer of Death, Part 2"12799-B1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15226"Lord, I'm Discouraged"12883-A1929
June 14, 1929RichmondG15227"I'm Going Home"12883-B1929
November 1929Grafton, WisconsinL0038=1"Elder Green Blues" ≠12972-A1929
November 1929GraftonL0041"Mean Black Cat Blues"12943-A1929
November 1929GraftonL0050"Heart Like Railroad Steel"12953-B1929
November 1929GraftonL0047"Hammer Blues"12998-A1929
November 1929GraftonL0051"Some Happy Day"13031-A1930
November 1929GraftonL0049"When Your Way Gets Dark"12998-B1929
November 1929GraftonL0040"Devil Sent the Rain" ≠13040-B1929
November 1929GraftonL0052"You're Gonna Need Somebody When You Die"13031-B1930
November 1929GraftonL0039"Circle Round the Moon" ≠13040-A1930
November 1929GraftonL0048"Magnolia Blues"12943-B1929
November 1929GraftonL0043"Some Of These Days, I'll Be Gone"13110-B1930
December 1929GraftonL0077"Mean Black Moan" ≠12953-A1929
December 1929GraftonL0044=3"Green River Blues"12972-A1929
December 1929GraftonL0061"Jesus Is a Dying Bed Maker" ≠12986-A1929
December 1929GraftonL0037=1"Going Move to Alabama" ≠13014-B1930
December 1929GraftonL0059"High Water Everywhere, Part 1"12909-A1929
December 1929GraftonL0060"High Water Everywhere, Part 2"12909-B1929
December 1929GraftonL0062=2"I Shall Not Be Moved"12986-B1929
December 1929GraftonL0064=1"Runnin' Wild Blues" ≠12924-B1929
December 1929GraftonL0063=2"Rattlesnake Blues" ≠12924-A1929
December 1929GraftonL0057"Jim Lee Blues, Part 1"13080-A1930
December 1929GraftonL0058"Jim Lee Blues, Part 2"13133-B1930
December 1929GraftonL0042=1"Frankie and Albert"13110-A1930
December 1929GraftonL0067"Joe Kirby" ≠13133-A1930
May 28, 1930GraftonL0432=1"Moon Going Down" 13014-A1930
May 28, 1930GraftonL0433"Bird Nest Bound" 13070-A1930
May 28, 1930GraftonL0431"Some Summer Day" 13080-B1930
May 28, 1930GraftonL0429"Dry Well Blues" 13070-B1930
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≠ Vocals and guitar by Patton with Henry "Son" Sims on fiddle.

Willie Brown on accompanying guitar

1929; Henry "Son" Sims (vocals), Patton accompanying on guitar
More information Recording Date, Recording Location ...
Recording DateRecording LocationMatrixSongParamount Issue #Release Date
November 1929GraftonL0046"Come Back Corrinna"12912-A1929
November 1929GraftonL0045"Farrell Blues"12912-B1929
December 1929GraftonL0066"Be True, Be True Blues"12940-A1929
December 1929GraftonL0065"Tell Me Man Blues"12940-B1929
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Vocalion recordings

More information Recording Date, Recording Location ...
Recording DateRecording LocationMatrixSongVocalion Issue #Release Date
January 30, 1934New York City14723=1"Jersey Bull Blues"02782-A1934
January 30, 1934New York City14725=2"High Sheriff Blues"02680-A1934
January 30, 1934New York City14727=1"Stone Pony Blues"02680-B1934
January 31, 1934New York City14739=1"34 Blues"02651-B1934
January 31, 1934New York City14746"Love My Stuff"02782-B1934
January 31, 1934New York City14747"Revenue Man Blues"02931-A1934
February 1, 1934New York City14749"Oh Death" ‡02904-A1934
February 1, 1934New York City14749"Troubled 'Bout My Mother" ‡02904-B1934
February 1, 1934New York City14757"Poor Me"02651-A1934
February 1, 1934New York City14758"Hang It On the Wall"02931-B1934
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‡ Vocal duet with Bertha Lee

1934; Bertha Lee (vocals), Patton accompanying guitar
More information Recording Date, Recording Location ...
Recording DateRecording LocationMatrixSongVocalion Issue #Release Date
January 31, 1934New York City14735=1"Yellow Bee"02650-A1934
January 31, 1934New York City14736=1"Mind Reader Blues"02650-B1934
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Citations

References

Relevant literature

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