|
Complete Vol 1 | 
enlarge | Creator: Arbee Stidham Label: Phantom Sound & Vision Category: Music
List Price: $31.98 Buy New: $16.40 You Save: $15.58 (49%)
New (2) Used (1) from $16.40
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 663758
Format: Import Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
EAN: 8427328060387 ASIN: B0001P1DVY
Release Date: August 5, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new Item. CD, DVD, Book, VHS more than 400 000 titles to choose from. ALL days Low Price !
|
| Customer Reviews:
A Talented Bluesman Who Deserved More Fame October 18, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Arbee Stidham, born on February 9, 1917 in Devalls Bluff, Arkansas, was a child musical prodigy who came by his talent honestly (he could play the clarinet, alto sax and harmonica and formed a band called The Southern Syncopaters before he hit his teens), as his father Luddie performed with the Jimmie Lunceford orchestra while an uncle, at one time, headed the famous Memphis Jug Band. By 1945 he had relocated to Chicago where, after working in Lucky Millinder's orchestra, Stidham eventually came into contact with Lester Melrose who, in 1947, got him a contract with one of the giants of the industry, RCA Victor. That, you would think, would lead, if not necessarily to a long, successful recording career, then at least to a modest string of hits, considering their ability to promote their artists - unlike some smaller independent labels.
And it certainly looked that way when My Heart Belongs to You rocketed to # 1 Most Played Juke Box Race Records - a forerunner of what is now known as the R&B charts - in the summer of 1948 b/w I Found Out For Myself on RCA Victor 20-2572. But that was to be it insofar as a hit record was concerned as the next RCA release, In Love With You b/w I Don't Know How To Cry (RCA Victor 20-2767) failed to even dent the lower regions of those same charts. Nothing else he turned out would work either, and that included recording for a multitude of companies through the 1950s, a period where he was injured in a car accident, the results of which left him unable to play the sax. So, with the guidance of R&B legend Big Bill Broonzy, he turned to the guitar with equal dexterity.
Output in that decade included three singles for Morty and Bob Shad's Sittin' In With in New York City in 1951 (Nothing Seems Right b/w Sixty Minutes To Wait on Sittin' In With 596, Feelin' Blue And Low b/w I've Got News For You Baby on Sittin' In With 606, and Bad Dream Blues b/w Why Did I Fall In Love With You? on Sittin' In With 617), two for the Checker subsidiary of Chess belonging to Leonard and Phil Chess in 1953 (Someone To Tell My Troubles To b/w Mr. Commissioner on Checker 751, and Don't Set Your Cap For Me b/w I Don't Play on Checker 778), and one as a vocalist with the Lefty Banks Band on States in 1957 (I Stayed Away Too Long b/w Look Me Straight In The Eye on States 164. There may also have been a release or two by Eli Toscana and Joe Brown's Abco Records in Chicago in 1956.
In terms of albums, Arbee had one for Prestige Records' Bluesville label in 1960 titled Tired Of Waiting For You (also available here), and a couple more for Folkways and Mainstream, right into the early 1970s, while also lecturing on the Blues at Cleveland State University. He passed away at age 71 in April 1988.
The tracks in this first of two volumes covering his complete output, with excellent sound reproduction, are: 1. In Love With You; 2. I Found Out For Myself; 3. I Don't Know How To Cry; 4. My Heart Belongs To You; 5. Your Heart Belongs To Me; 6. Stidham Jumps; 7. What The Blues Will Do; 8. A Heart Full Of Misery; 9. Falling Blues; 10. You'll Be Sorry; 11. I've Got So Many Worries; 12. So Tired Of Dreaming; 13. I Send My Regrets; 14. Barbecue Lounge; 15. Feel Like I'm Losing You; 16. Let My Dreams Come True; 17. Squeeze Me Baby; 18. Any Time You Ring My Bell; 19. Nothing Seems Right; 20. Sixty Minutes To Wait.
|
|
|
|