He was born Milton Campbell in a modest sharecroppers home on the outskirts of Inverness, Mississippi, on September 7th 1934. As a child, he was drawn by a very popular radio shows of the day (and still is): The Grand Ole Opry. He found an early connection to Country and western music and later fused it with the other two predominant musical influences of the Mississippi Delta: Gospel & Blues. A youthful Little Milton began studying what he heard and practiced; mastering songs and reciting them, no matter what the style or difficulty. By his early teens, he was performing in local clubs and bars across the Delta. | |
As Milton grew into a young man, he didn't waste any time learning the ropes or absorbing all the musical possibilities that existed at the time. He played street corners, alleys, dives, you name it, carefully developing his craft and attracting the attention of established acts and local record labels. By the time Ike Turner introduced Milton to Sam Phillips of Sun Records in the early 50's, he was a young but seasoned performer with a momentous live show that created a buzz in every town he played. His debut single Beggin My Baby was recorded and released at the same time Sam Phillips was molding the sound of another unknown talent from Mississippi: Elvis Presley.
After recording a series of sides at Sun without great fanfare, Milton moved to East St. Louis Bobbin Records, where his recording career flourished. He also became Bobbin's A&R chief and working partner to its owner, Bob Lyons. During this era, Milton signed such artists as Albert King and Fontella Bass to the label. Most importantly, he cut his own first hit, I'm A Lonely Man, in 1958.
Milton's skyrocketing success soon drew the attention of Chess Records executives in Chicago, who signed him to Chess Checkers label and moved him north.At Stax, he joined a virtual whos who of influential black recording artist of the day including Isaac Hayes, Rufus & Carla Thomas, Booker T. & The M.G.'s, Albert King and, coincidentally, another future Malaco star, the late Johnnie Taylor. When Stax filed bankruptcy in 1975, Milton joined TK/Glades Records in Miami, then home to such artist as Betty Wright, K. C. & The Sunshine Band and Latimore. There, he racked up another charted hit, Friend of Mine. But the Glade label also went out of business. In 1984, Little Milton united with Malaco Records and began the longest professional association of his career. He continued his exceptional vocal and guitar styles and quickly became one of Malaco's biggest selling artists. He swept up such honors as the 1988 W. C. Handy Blues Entertainer of the Year Award and the 2000 Grammy award nomination. He also was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame. Over the years, Malaco has released 14 of Little Milton's albums, including the critically acclaimed, Billboard blues smash hit Cheatin Habit. |
The year 2001 marked a successful run of sold out shows in the United States and Europe and the release of Feel It. Malaco doubled back in September, 2002, with the release CD number 14, Guitar Man. It's celebrated cuts include Guitar Man, Still Some Meat Left on this Bone, and Milton's soulful rendition of My Way.
In 2005, after more than a half century after his early SUN recordings, Little Milton made his debut on the TELARC label with the release of THINK OF ME, a mesmerizing CD consisting of a dozen tracks distilling a lifetime of rich guitar skills, compelling vocals and deft songwriting all wrapped into a single high powered package. It would be his last studio recording.
The man who made the THE BLUES IS ALRIGHT a national anthem with blues enthusiasts around the globe, passed away on August 4, 2005, after suffering a massive brain stroke. Hundreds of family, friends, and fans attended his memorial on August 10, 2005 in South Haven, Mississippi in a final farewell to "MR. C".
Official Discography
http://www.littlemilton.com/music%20catalog.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Milton
- We're Gonna Make It (1965, Chess) (R&B #3 U.S. #101)
- Sings Big Blues (1966, Checker)
- Grits Ain't Groceries (1969, Stax) (R&B #41 U.S. #159)
- If Walls Could Talk (1970, MCA/Chess) (R&B #23 U.S. #197)
- Waiting for Little Milton (1973, Stax) (R&B #39)
- What It Is: Live at Montreux (1973, Stax)
- Blues 'n' Soul (1974, Stax) (R&B #45)
- Tin Pan Alley (1975, Stax)
- Friend of Mine (1976, Glades) (R&B #50)
- Me For You, You For Me (1977, Glades)
- Walkin' the Back Streets (1981, Stax)
- The Blues Is Alright (1982, Evidence)
- Age Ain't Nothin' But a Number (1983, Mobile Fidelity) (R&B #53)
- Playing for Keeps (1984, Malaco) (R&B #55)
- I Will Survive (1985, Malaco)
- Annie Mae's Cafe (1986, Malaco)
- Movin' to the Country (1987, Malaco)
- Back to Back (1988, Malaco) (R&B #73)
- Too Much Pain (1990, Malaco) (R&B #40)
- Reality (1991, Malaco) (R&B #57)
- I Need Your Love So Bad (1991, Golden Ear)
- Strugglin' Lady (1992, Malaco) (R&B #63)
- I'm a Gambler (1994, Malaco)
- Live at Westville Prison (1995, Delmark)
- Cheatin' Habit (1996, Malaco) (Blues #14)
- For Real (1998, Malaco) (Blues #13)
- Welcome to Little Milton (1999, Malaco) (Blues #10)
- Feel It (2001, Malaco)
- Guitar Man (2002, Malaco) (Blues #8)
- The Blues Is Alright: Live at Kalamazoo (2004, Varèse Sarabande)
- Think of Me (2005, Telarc) (Blues #14)
- Live at the North Atlantic Blues Festival: His Last Concert (2006 Camil)
Singles
Incomplete listing- "So Mean to Me" (1962) (R&B #14)
- "Blind Man" (1965) (R&B #86)
- "We're Gonna Make It" (1965) (R&B #1 U.S. #25)
- "Who's Cheating Who?" (1965) (R&B #4 U.S. #43)
- "Man Loves Two" (1966) (R&B #45)
- "We Got the Winning Hand" (1966) (U.S. #100)
- "Feel So Bad" (1967) (R&B #7, U.S. #91)
- "I'll Never Turn My Back on You" (1967) (R&B #31)
- "Let Me Down Easy" (1968) (R&B #27)
- "More and More" (1968) (R&B #45)
- "Grits Ain't Groceries" (1969) (R&B #13, U.S. #73)
- "Just a Little Bit" (1969) (R&B #13, U.S. #97)
- "Baby, I Love You" (1970) (R&B #6, U.S. #82)
- "If Walls Could Talk" (1970) (R&B #10, U.S. #71)
- "Somebody's Changin' My Sweet Baby's Mind" (1970) (R&B #22)
- "I Play Dirty" (1971) (R&B #37)
- "If That Ain't a Reason" (1971) (R&B #41)
- "That's What Love Will Make You Do" (1972) (R&B #9, U.S. #59)
- "What It Is" (1973) (R&B #51)
- "Behind Closed Doors" (1974) (R&B #31)
- "Tin Pan Alley" (1974) (R&B #51)
- "Let Me Back In" (1974) (R&B #38)
- "If You Talk In Your Sleep" (1975) (R&B #34)
- "Friend of Mine" (1976) (R&B #15)
- "Baby, It Ain't No Way" (1977) (R&B #94)
- "Loving You" (1977) (R&B #47)
- "Just One Step" (1977) (R&B #59)
- "Age Ain't Nothin' But a Number" (1983) (R&B #89)
Compilation albums
Incomplete Listing- Greatest Hits (1972, MCA/Chess)
- Sun Masters (1990, Rounder)
- Welcome to the Club: The Essential Chess Recordings (1994, MCA/Chess)
- The Complete Stax Singles (1994, Fantasy)
- Stand By Me: The Blues Collection [#48] (1995, Orbis)
- Greatest Hits (1995, Malaco)
- Rockin' the Blues (1996, MCA Special)
- Greatest Hits (The Chess 50th Anniversary Collection) (1997, MCA/Chess)
- Chess Blues Guitar: Two Decades of Killer Fretwork (1998 MCA/Chess)
- Count the Days (1997, 601 Records)
- The Complete Checker Hit Singles (2001, Connoisseur Collection)
- Anthology 1953-1961 (2002, Varèse Sarabande)
- Running Wild Blues (2006, Charly)
- Stax Profiles (2006, Stax)
- The Very Best of Little Milton (2007, Stax)
No comments:
Post a Comment