Sam Collins (musician)
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Sam Collins (possibly August 11, 1887Template:Sndpossibly October 20, 1949),[1] sometimes known as Crying Sam Collins,[2] was an early American blues singer and guitarist.[3] His style has been described as "South Mississippi", rather than Delta blues and "The Jail House Blues" is his best-known recording.[3]
Biography
Collins was born in Louisiana and grew up in McComb, Mississippi, just across the state line.[4] By 1924, he was performing in local barrelhouses, often with King Solomon Hill; both of them sang falsetto parts and played slide guitar.[4] Collins's first recording in 1927 was "Yellow Dog Blues", made for Gennett Records and recorded in Richmond, Indiana. His bottleneck guitar was referred to as a "git-fiddle" on record labels of the time, and blues historian Robert Palmer noted that his guitar "seemed to literally weep".[2]
Collins recorded again in 1931; some of his later recordings appeared under different pseudonyms, such as Jim Foster,[3] Jelly Roll Hunter, Big Boy Woods, Bunny Carter, and Salty Dog Sam. His rural bottleneck guitar pieces were among the first to be compiled on LP.[3]
In the late 1930s, Collins relocated to Chicago, where he died from heart disease in October 1949, at the age of 62.[4]
Discography
Compilations
- 14 Rare Country Blues by Sam Collins & 2 Surprises by King Solomon Hill (Origin Jazz Library, 1965)
- Jailhouse Blues (Yazoo, 1990)
- King of the Blues Vol. 11 (P-Vine, 1992)
- Complete Recorded Works in Chronological Order 1927–1931 (Document, 1992)
Songs
1927, Richmond, Indiana
- "The Jailhouse Blues"
- "I Want to Be Like Jesus in My Heart"
- "Yellow Dog Blues"
- "Loving Lady Blues"
- "Riverside Blues"
- "Devil in the Lion's Den"
- "Dark Cloudy Blues"
- "Pork Chop Blues"
- "Lead Me All the Way"
- "Midnight Special Blues"
- "Do That Thing"
- "Hesitation Blues"
- "It Won't Be Long Now"
- "The Worried Man Blues"
- "The Moanin' Blues"
1931, New York City
- "Lonesome Road Blues"
- "Slow Mama Slow"
- "My Road Is Rough and Rocky"
- "New Salty Dog"
- "Graveyard Digger's Blues"
- "Signifying Blues"
- "I'm Still Sitting on Top of the World"
References
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- African-American guitarists
- American blues guitarists
- American male guitarists
- American blues singers
- Gennett Records artists
- Singers from Chicago
- Singers from Louisiana
- People from McComb, Mississippi
- Guitarists from Chicago
- Guitarists from Louisiana
- 20th-century American guitarists
- 20th-century African-American male singers
- 20th-century American male singers
- 20th-century American singers