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Mac users have been experiencing problems in unpacking the WinRAR archives used on this blog. Two solutions have been suggested.

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Sunday 25 November 2012

Walkin’ The Chalk Line / Bradshaw Boogie – Tiny Bradshaw (King 4457)



“Walkin’ The Chalk Line” was recorded in Cincinnati on February 8th, 1950. Personnel : Tiny Bradshaw (lead vocal); Jimmy Robinson piano); Clarence Mack (bass); Calvin Shields (drums). Also present at the session, but sitting this track out, were Leslie Ayres (trumpet); Orrington Hall (alto and baritone sax); Rufus Gore (tenor sax) and Leroy Harris (guitar).
“Bradshaw Boogie” was recorded in New York on January 16th, 1951. Personnel: Tiny Bradshaw (vocal); Leslie Ayres (trumpet); Andrew Penn (trombone); Orrington Hall (alto and baritone sax); Red Prysock (tenor sax); Jimmy Robinson (organ); Willie Gaddy (guitar); Eddie Smith (bass); Calvin Shields (drums).



King 4457 was released in mid-June 1951. The disc was reviewed in Billboard on June 30th. Of “Walkin’ The Chalk Line” Billboard said – “Bradshaw and male trio, backed by rhythm section only here, register with a hard-hitting little jingle with a recurring refrain.” And on “Bradshaw Boogie” the comment was: “Tiny and the boys come thru with one of their typical hard driving boogie blues novelties.”

“Walkin’ The Chalk Line” wasn’t a big seller despite being featured in the King / Federal / DeLuxe adverts in Billboard during July and August alongside Lucky Millinder’s “I’m Waiting Just For You,” “Sleep” by Earl Bostic, “Bloodshot Eyes” by Wynonie Harris, “Sixty Minute Man” and “Do Something For Me” by The Dominoes and Roy Brown’s “Wrong Woman Blues.”

Enough platters were sold to make King 4457 the 90th best-selling R&B record of 1951. The really big hits around the middle of the year included the aforementioned “I’m Waiting Just For You,” “Sixty Minute Man” and “Do Something For Me” plus “Don’t You Know I Love You” by The Clovers, “Chains Of Love” by Big Joe Turner, “Rocket 88” by Jackie Brenston and “Too Young” by Nat King Cole.

The “Bradshaw Boogie” session marked Red Prysock’s recording debut with the band and his fiery, rabble rousing tenor sax solo really brings what could have been a formulaic side to life.


As always we have El Enmascarado to thank for yet another slice of R&B history from his growing stash of 78 rpm discs. The sound quality on these two rips is remarkable, considering that they originate from shellac that is over sixty years old. I’ve been listening to these sides on my new laptop (a necessary buy after my 11 year old Pentium 4 PC took its final, fatal crash) which I’ve hooked up to my hifi and they pack quite a wallop. Thank you, o masked one!

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm really happy with this one. The record was in unusually good condition, which helped a lot. Both tunes have a "stick in your head" quality to them, too. I'm not surprised that Walkin' The Chalk Line wasn't a big seller, despite it's fine musicality. It's subservient lyrical message would seem to have limited appeal to male record buyers, as if Gloria Steinem suddenly became a jump blues songwriter. As Woody noted, Bradshaw Boogie has some extra-fine sax playing. Listen for the band's tempo lurching in the organ-flavored introduction, settling down by the time
Tiny's vocal enters. You've gotta love old school "everybody in a room" recordings! - The Masked One

Anonymous said...

The link in your sidebar for Catch That Train and Testify blog is dead.

boogiewoody said...

Yeah, I know my blog lists need updated. Quite a few have fallen by the wayside although the sites linger on unupdated. Catch That Train was a particularly sad loss as the blog host put a lot of work into the posts.

Anonymous said...

Love these Tiny Bradshaw cuts. I have some random tracks of his on compilation CDs, great to hear some more!! Thanks!!!