Jefferson, Blind Lemon
Blind Lemon Jefferson
Guitarist, singer, songwriter
Played for Tips as Street Musicican
Played with “T-Bone” Walker in Early Days
Influenced Generations of Music-Makers
Blind Lemon Jefferson emerged in the 1920s as one of the most popular and imitated blues guitarists of the decade. As an early exponent of the Texas blues style, Jefferson’s recorded performances exhibited an array of unique and inventive musical ideas. His sides for the Paramount label found their way into the repertoires of numerous bluesmen, influencing both country and urban blues stylists throughout the 1930s and 1940s. Despite Jefferson’s musical contribution, information regarding his life—limited to one surviving photograph and scant recollections by local eyewitnesses and fellow musicians—has left little to reveal the man behind the music. Sixty years after his death, Jefferson’s catalogue of nearly one hundred recordings reveal the musical power and poetic storytelling ability of an American folk music legend.
Lemon Jefferson—the 1900 Freestone census lists one member of the Jefferson family as Lemmon B. Jefferson—was born the youngest child of Alec Jefferson and Classie Banks near Couchman, Texas on July 11, 1897. Believed to be blind at birth, Jefferson was able to offer little help to his farming family. Without an education he took up music and worked as an itinerant musician, performing on streets and local functions outside Wortham, Texas. He also appeared as a singer at local church events such as the General Association of Baptist Churches in Buffalo, Texas.
Played for Tips as Street Musicican
Jefferson later traveled through towns along the H & TC Railroad—Groesbeck, Martin, and Kosse—and around 1912 performed in the Deep Ellum section of Dallas. With a tin cup wired to the neck of his guitar, he played for tips on the streets, often performing slide guitar numbers, a technique which utilized a small metal or glass cylinder on a finger of the chord hand to produce voice-like chords and melodies. While in Dallas in 1912, Jefferson joined up with an older musician, Huddie “Leadbelly” Ledbetter. Years later, Leadbelly recalled, in The Life and Legend of Leadbelly, his experiences performing with Jefferson: “Him and me was buddies. Used to play all up and around Dallas-Fort Worth. In them times, we’d get on the Interurban line that runs from Waco to Dallas, Corsicana, Waxahacie, from Dallas.” For an intermittent period of several years the pair traveled extensively, sometimes taking in $150 each weekend. While Jefferson sang and played slide, Leadbelly accompanied his younger companion on accordion, guitar, or mandolin.
In 1917 Jefferson worked at Al Bonner’s Place in Gill, Arkansas, and continued to hobo around the deep
For the Record…
Born Lemon Jefferson, July 11, 1897 (some sources say 1880), in Couchman, TX; died of a heart attack in 1929 in Chicago, IL; son of Alec Jefferson (a farmer) and Classie Banks; married, 1922; wife’s name, Roberta.
Began playing guitar at functions around Wortham, TX; worked in East Dallas, Silver City, and Galveston, TX, 1914; performed on streets of Dallas, 1915; traveled extensively from 1917 until early 1920s; recorded for Paramount label in Chicago 1926-29; in mid-1920s, performed at Booker T. Washington Theatre in St. Louis; recorded for Okeh label in Atlanta, GA, 1927; took part in last recording session at Gennett studio in Richmond, IN, 1929; Blind Lemon Jefferson Clubs formed in San Pablo, CA, in 1960, then in New York City in 1962.
South, often returning to his home base of Dallas. In Meeting the Blues, Bluesman Mance Lipscomb, who encountered Jefferson in Dallas around 1917, told how the guitarist’s popularity on the street led whites to prohibit him from performing downtown: “They gave him the privilege to play in a certain district in Dallas, and they call that ‘on the track.’ Right beside the place where he stood ‘round there under a big old shade tree, call it a standpoint, right off the railroad track. And people started coming in there, from nine thirty until six o’clock that evening, then he would go home because it was getting dark and someone [led] him home.” The spot described by Lipscomb was located on the corner of Elm and Central Tracks in Dallas’s ethnic enclave known as Deep Ellum.
Played with “T-Bone” Walker in Early Days
A few years after Lipscomb’s encounter with Jefferson, Aaron “T-Bone” Walker also accompanied the blind guitarist around Deep Ellum. In Meeting the Blues Walker stated, “I used to lead Blind Lemon Jefferson around playing and passing the cup, take him from one beer joint to another. I liked hearing him play. He would sing like nobody’s business … People used to crowd around so you couldn’t see him.” “Afterwards,” as Walker related to Helen Dance in Stormy Monday, “I’d guide him back up the hill, and Mama would fix supper. She’d pour him a little taste.”
Around 1922 Jefferson married a woman named Roberta. At that time, “he’d gotten so fat,” wrote SamuelCharters in The Country Blues, “that when he played, the guitar sat up on his stomach, the top just under his chin.” In the slum areas of Dallas he emerged as the city’s most popular street singer. As a songster he entertained crowds by performing a wide musical repertoire such as vaudeville songs, rags, Tin Pan Alley tunes, spirituals, and blues numbers. In the mid 1920s pianist Sam Price brought Jefferson to the attention of his employer, R.T. Ashford, the owner of a Dallas record store and a talent scout for several recording companies (other accounts contend that Price wrote to Para-mount’s recording director and informed him about Jefferson). Ashford then brought the guitarist to the notice of a Paramount record executive A.C. Bailey. After locating Jefferson on a street in Deep Ellum, Bailey invited the guitarist to attend a recording at the company’s Chicago studio.
Debuted on Paramount Label
In the 1920s, when most other major labels sent field units to the South to record blues artists, Jefferson attended out-of-town sessions in the cities of Chicago, Atlanta, and Richmond Indiana. During his first trip to the studio in 1926 he cut his first side, “That Black Snake Moan,” in Chicago’s Paramount studio. The number became a immediate commercial success and prompted the recording of many more sides. In February 1926 Paramount released the 78 featuring “Got the Blues” and “Long Lonesome,” rumored to have sold over one hundred thousand copies. Because of the company’s extensive mail order system, there were few African-American folk musicians from Texas to the eastcoast who were not aware of Jefferson’s music. As Paul Oliver stated in The New Grove, Jefferson’s “Lone Lonesome Blues” brought the “authentic sound of rural blues to thousands of black homes.” Jefferson’s “Matchbox Blues” was recorded twice by Paramount in 1927, and several decades later found its way into the repertoires of Carl Perkins, Elvis Presley, and the Beatles. Another of Jefferson’s popular numbers, “See That My Grave is Kept Clean,” was re-recorded by numerous blues artists throughout the South. This number, observed John Cowley in The Blackwell Guide, “has lyrical antecedents to several earlier pieces, among them ‘Old Blue,’ the nineteenth-century sea shanty ‘Stormalong,’ the British folk song ‘Who Killed Cock Robin’ and several spirituals.”
Recorded Final Songs in 1929
In 1927 Jefferson also recorded for the Okeh label in Atlanta, Georgia. Though sales of Jefferson’s records waned by the late 1920s, he continued to wear immaculate suits and employed a full-time chauffeur. In 1929 Jefferson recorded his last sides for the Paramount at the Gennett label in Richmond, Indiana. Among the numbers recorded for the Gennett session were “Pneumonia Blues,” “The Cheater’s Spell,” and “Southern Women Blues.”
In December 1929, Jefferson died of a heart attack and exposure on a Chicago street, reportedly after his chauffeur abandoned him and his automobile during a snow storm. His body was brought back to Texas and interned in the Negro burying ground of Wortham cemetery. For decades, while Jefferson’s unmarked and weed-ridden gravesite existed in small country cemetery, enthusiasts around the world formed societies and publications in his honor. In October 1967 the Texas State Historical Society placed a plaque marking the resting place of one of America’s most enduring folk music legends.
Influenced Generations of Music-Makers
Jefferson is considered a musical idol by musicians such as B.B. King, and his recordings continue to awe listeners. In the New Grove, British music writer Paul Oliver described Jefferson’s enduring vocal sound: “His voice was high, piercing the traffic noise, but could also have a low, moaning quality extended by ‘bending’ the notes on his guitar to produce crying sounds or imitative passages on the strings.” Jefferson’s intricate and erratic guitar work followed broken-time patterns with standard four-four measures and tempo altered to fit spontaneous vocal lines or guitar.
Apart from his stunning and inventive guitar work, Jefferson authored many songs that found their way into the repertoires of musicians from John Lee Hooker to Bob Dylan. “Lemon sang things he wrote himself about life—good times and bad. Mostly bad, I guess,” stated T-Bone Walker in Stormy Monday. “Everyone knew what he was singing about.” Over a half century after his death, Jefferson’s music still haunts listeners with descriptions of a time and culture that existed outside the popular and glamorous images of America’s roaring twenties.
Selected discography
Singles
“That Black Snake Moan,” Paramount, 1926.
“Broke and Hungry Blues,” Paramount, 1926.
“Match Box Blues,” Paramount, 1927.
“See That My Grave is Kept Clean,” Paramount, 1928.
“Prison Cell Blues,” Paramount, 1928.
“That Crawling Baby Blues,” Paramount, 1929.
“Big Night Blues,” Paramount, 1929.
“Tin Cup Blues,” Paramount, 1929.
“Mosquito Moan,” Paramount, 1929.
“Pneumonia Blues,” Paramount, 1929.
“Cheater’s Spell,” Paramount, 1929.
“Southern Woman Blues,” Paramount, 1929.
Albums
Blind Lemon Jefferson, Milestone.
King of the Country Blues, Yazoo.
Compilations
The Story of the Blues, Columbia, 1969.
The Blues: A Smithsonian Collection of Classic Blues Singers, Sony, 1993.
Blues Masters Vol. 3: Texas Blues, Rhino.
Sources
Charters, Samuel B., The Country Blues, Da Capo, 1975.
Dance, Helen Oakley, Stormy Monday: The T-Bone Walker Story, Da Capo, 1987.
Govenar, Alan, Meeting the Blues, The Rise of the Texas Sound, Taylor Publishing, 1988.
Kennedy, Rick, Jelly Roll, Bix, and Hoagy: Gennett Studios and the Birth of Recorded Jazz, Indiana University Press, 1994.
Oliver, Paul, Max Harrison, William Bolcom, The New Grove Gospel, Blues and Jazz with Spirituals and Ragtime, W.W.Norton, 1986.
Wolfe, Charles and Kip Lornell, The Life and Legend of Leadbelly, Harper Collins, 1992.
—John Cohassey
Jefferson, Blind Lemon
Jefferson, Blind Lemon
July 1897
December 1929
Although the circumstances of his birth are obscure, the blues guitarist and singer Blind Lemon Jefferson's birthplace is often given as Couchman, Texas. He is thought to have been born blind, but several of his songs indicate that he lost his sight in childhood. Jefferson learned to play guitar as a teenager, and he was soon performing on the streets of nearby Wortham, as well as at barber shops and parties. He also sang spirituals at the family's church, Shiloh Baptist Church in Kirvin.
Jefferson moved to Dallas in 1912. He weighed almost 250 pounds at the time, and for a brief time earned money as a novelty wrestler in theaters. He met Huddie "Leadbelly" Ledbetter (1885–1949) in Dallas's Deep Ellum neighborhood, and they played and traveled together throughout East Texas until Leadbelly was jailed for murder in 1918. Jefferson also performed for spare change on Dallas streets, at times assisted by T-Bone Walker (1910–1975) and Josh White (1915–1969). He was noted for his ability to hear pennies (and reject them) by the sound they made in his tin cup. In the early 1920s Jefferson married and had a son.
Jefferson's first recordings were spirituals, including "All I Want is That Pure Religion" and "I Want to be Like Jesus in my Heart," made under the name Deacon L. J. Bates. "Long Lonesome Blues" (1926), his first popular success, displayed his clear, high-pitched voice, accentuated by hums and moans. His guitar playing was marked by a subtle, almost contrapuntal use of hammered bass and treble lines. Like many East Texas and Delta bluesmen, Jefferson sang of day-to-day life ("Corinna Blues" [1926], "Jack of Diamonds" [1926], "Rising High Water Blues" [1927], "Piney Woods Money Mama" [1928], "See That My Grave Is Kept Clean" [1928], "Pneumonia Blues" [1929]) as well as travel ("Sunshine Special" [1927], "Rambler Blues" [1927], "Matchbox Blues" [1927]). He sang lyrics filled with sexual innuendo ("That Black Snake Moan" [1926], "Oil Well Blues" [1929], "Baker Shop Blues" [1929]), and many of his songs were about jail ("Blind Lemon's Penitentiary Blues" [1928], "Hangman's Blues" [1928]), although he was never incarcerated. In the late 1920s Jefferson's recordings made him a wealthy, nationally recognized figure. He traveled throughout the South and Midwest, and even kept an apartment in Chicago. However, his popularity lasted only briefly, and by 1929 he was no longer performing and recording as frequently. In December 1929, on a date that has never been verified, Jefferson froze to death in a Chicago blizzard. His body was transported back to Wortham, Texas, after his death, but his grave was poorly marked. In 1967 friends of Jefferson put a marker in the approximate location of his grave, and in 1997 money was raised for a real headstone to be placed in the spot.
See also Blues, The; Leadbelly (Ledbetter, Hudson William)
Bibliography
Govenar, Alan. "That Black Snake Moan: The Music and Mystery of Blind Lemon Jefferson." In Bluesland, edited by Peter Welding and Toby Byron. New York: Dutton, 1991.
Groom, Bob. Blind Lemon Jefferson. Knutsford, UK: Blues World, 1970.
Uzzel, Robert L. Blind Lemon Jefferson: His Life, His Death, and His Legacy. Austin, Tex.: Eakin, 2002.
jonathan gill (1996)
Updated by publisher 2005