Saturday, December 21, 2013

Not to be missed, believe me: Joseph Benjamin Hutto & the New Hawks - The Unreleased Album (1982-1984 (Bootleg)


Size: 84.6 MB
Bitrate: 320
mp3
Found in my BluesMobile
Some Artwork

J.B. Hutto (April 26, 1926 – June 12, 1983) was an American blues musician. Hutto was influenced by Elmore James, and became known for his slide guitar work and declamatory style of singing. He was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame two years after his death.

Joseph Benjamin Hutto was born in Blackville, South Carolina, United States, the fifth of seven children. His family moved to Augusta, Georgia when Hutto was three years old. His father, Calvin, was a preacher and Hutto, along with his three brothers and three sisters, formed a gospel group called The Golden Crowns, singing in local churches. Hutto's father died in 1949, and the family relocated to Chicago. Hutto served as a draftee in the Korean War in the early 1950s, driving trucks in combat zones.

Joseph Benjamin Hutto & the New Hawks  - Album 1968
In Chicago, Hutto took up the drums and played with Johnny Ferguson and his Twisters. He also tried the piano before settling on the guitar and playing on the streets with the percussionist Eddie 'Porkchop' Hines. After adding Joe Custom on second guitar, they started playing club gigs, and harmonica player George Mayweather joined after sitting in with the band. Hutto named his band The Hawks, after the wind that blows in Chicago.[4] A recording session in 1954 resulted in the release of two singles on the Chance label and a second session later the same year, with the band supplemented by pianist Johnny Jones, produced a third.

Later in the 1950s Hutto became disenchanted with music, and gave it up after a woman broke his guitar over her husband's head one night in a club where he was performing; during the next eleven years Hutto worked as a janitor in a funeral home to supplement his income. He returned to the music industry in the mid-1960s, with a new version of the Hawks featuring Herman Hassell on bass and Frank Kirkland on drums. His recording career resumed with, first, a session for Vanguard Records released on the compilation album Chicago/the Blues/Today! Vol. 1, and then albums for Testament and Delmark. The 1968 Delmark album, Hawk Squat!, which featured Sunnyland Slim on organ and piano, and Maurice McIntyre on tenor saxophone, is regarded as his best work on album up to this point.

J.B. Hutto - Trading Card
(click on picture for bigger size)
After Hound Dog Taylor died in 1975, Hutto took over his band the Houserockers for a time, and in the late 1970s he moved to Boston and recruited a new band which he called the New Hawks, with whom he recorded further studio albums for the Varrick label. His 1983 Varrick album Slippin' & Slidin', the last of his career and later reissued on CD as Rock With Me Tonight, has been described as "near-perfect". J.B.Hutto also Lived in Harvey in the Marshfeild Ave as a step Grandfather while together with Lula Bell Black, he practice with his Guitar in his hands and his step Grandson on his patting feet, I remember him as good man, he was all ways good to my Grandmother.

Hutto returned to Illinois in the early 1980s, where he was diagnosed with cancer. He died in 1983, at the age of 57, in Harvey. He was interred at Restvale Cemetery, Alsip, Illinois.

In 1985, the Blues Foundation inducted Hutto into its Hall of Fame. His nephew, Lil' Ed Williams (of Lil' Ed and the Blues Imperials) has carried on his legacy, playing and singing in a style close to his uncle's.
A "J.B. Hutto" model guitar is often used to refer to a mid-1960s, red, Montgomery Ward Res-O-Glas Airline guitar. Although he was not a paid endorser, Hutto made the guitar famous by appearing with it on the cover of his Slidewinder album.

Jack White of the White Stripes is another artist famous for using theMontgomery Ward Res-O-Glas Airline guitar.

01. Sweet Young Thing  02:59
02. Unknown  05:05
03. Recycled Woman  03:33
04. Hide & Seek (live) 05:34
05. Instrumental  03:30
06. Unknown  05:54
07. Whas the Matter with the Mill (live)  05:36
08. Unknown  04:43

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 Joseph Benjamin Hutto & the New Hawks - Unreleased Album Recorded 1982-1984. Recorded for Baron Records. None of these tracks have ever been released. 
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Joseph Benjamin Hutto & the New Hawks  - Promo Photo

9 comments:

  1. hi, chris, thank you very much for j.b. hutto. i never heard him before. he sounds great and his music goes into the neck ;-) lg, m

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  2. Thanks Chris for this. Never enough J.B.!

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  3. Excellent stuff by a blues artist I'd never heard of - thank you for introducing me to him!

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  4. Thanks a lot for these sides by the great JB Hutto, one of Chicago's greatest slide guitarists. Unfortunately a bit forgotten these days.

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  5. Wow! Real good with the JB Hutto. My first introduction to American blues was "Chicago: the Blues Today" with JB Hutto on it "Please Help" Etc.. and "Too Much Alcohol".
    Before that I had only ever heard the British re-interpretation of the blues, although it was the very best of them.. Fleetwood Mac, Savoy Brown, Chicken Shack etc.
    To this day JB and the Hawks is influeced how I play, when I can stil pick up a guitar..
    THX!

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  6. J. B. Hutto and Hound Dog Taylor all you could want in slide guitar. Thanks Very Much.

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  7. I'm convinced! Looking forward to hearing this. Thank you Chris!

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