Roots of Blues -- Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup "My Mama Don't Allow"

Feb
8

Roots of Blues -- Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup "My Mama Don't Allow"
 
Posted by Slowtubbi
July 16, 2008

Video Description:
This is a sound file of Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup with one photograph.

2 comments

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Selected YouTube video viewer comments from http://www.youtube.com/comment_servlet?all_comments&v=tNaBDmrIrKM&fromurl=/watch%3Fv%

3DtNaBDmrIrKM%26feature%3Dplayer_embedded yourpaljc (1 year ago) First to say Whoa!! What a killer voice...

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JosephNScott (1 year ago) Number of Top Ten hit singles on "black" charts Lightnin' Hopkins 4 John Lee Hooker 5 Arthur Crudup 6

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pcrudup (1 year ago) YeaH!!! Thank you.

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magnnum01 (7 months ago) Awesome!

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nestosolo (6 months ago) WOW!!! That's the BLUES...I never heard of this guy. Wish i did...I will listen to him from now on. He's great!!! **** Diatton (6 months ago) He is Great, he is GREAT and if i try to say something else, finally i 'll say. He is G R E A T !!!

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ironbuttermilk (6 months ago) I've heard About this guy, but this is the first time I've actually heard him. I like it!

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Here's the summary from the video poster:

"Big Boy" Crudup was a great blues singer and writer who was well-known throughout the United States. He was born on August 24, 1905. Arthur Crudup began his musical career singing gospel in church choirs.He began playing the blues for parties in Clarksdale, Mississippi, in 1939, but Crudup moved to Chicago in the hopes of making a better living. For awhile he played street corners in Chicago blues, but what he earned was not enough to live on. He lived in a packing crate underneath an elevated train track until he was found by blues producer Lester Melrose. Crudup was hired to play at a party at Tampa Red's house in 1941, and as a result of that night, was signed to record for RCA/Bluebird. However, the relationship with Melrose deteriorated after Crudup found out that he was not being paid royalties for the songs he wrote in 1947. By this time Crudup had become an innovator because his sound was his own. He returned to Mississippi after his falling out with Melrose and ran a successful bootlegging business. He did continue to record with RCA in the late 1940's and 50's, and he also toured with Sonny Boy Williamson (Rice Miller) and Elmore James. "

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