Charlie Patton, better known as Charley Patton (May 1, 1891 - April 28, 1934)
is best known as an American Delta blues musician. He is considered by many to
be the "Father of Delta Blues" and therefore one of the oldest known
figures of American popular music. Many sources, including some musical
releases and even his gravestone, misspell his name Charley even though
the musician himself spelled his name Charlie. Charlie Patton was one
of the first mainstream stars of the Delta blues genre. Patton, who was born
in Hinds County, Mississippi near Edwards, lived most of his life in Sunflower
County, in the Mississippi Delta. He was born in 1891, but there is still some
debate about this. In 1900, however, his family moved 100 miles north to the
legendary 10,000 Acre Dockery Plantation sawmill and cotton farm near
Ruleville, Mississippi. It was here that both
John Lee Hooker and
Howlin' Wolf
fell under the Patton spell. It was also here that
Robert Johnson
played his first guitar. At Dockery, Charlie fell under the spell of
Henry Sloan
who had an unusual new style of playing music which we would recognize today
as very early blues. Charlie followed
Henry Sloan
around and by the time he was about 19 in 1910 he was an accomplished
performer and composer, having already composed his theme song Pony
Blues. He was extremely popular across the U.S. South, and (in contrast to
the itinerant wandering of most blues musicians of his time) was invited to
perform at plantations and taverns. Long before Jimi Hendrix he was the
entertainer's entertainer with dazzling showmanship, often playing guitar on
his knees and behind his head, as well as behind his back. Although Patton was
a small man at about 5 foot 5 and 135 pounds, the sound of his whiskey- and
cigarette-scarred voice was rumored to have carried for over 500 yards without
amplification. This gritty voice was a major influence in the singing style of
one of his students,
Howlin' Wolf.
Patton settled in Holly Ridge, Mississippi with his common-law wife and
recording partner
Bertha Lee
in 1933. He died on the Heathman-Dedham plantation near Indianola from heart
disease on April 28, 1934 and is buried in Holly Ridge (both towns are located
in Sunflower County). There apparently exists only one photograph of Charlie
Patton, although its authenticity is disputed. Rights to it are owned by a
collecter named John Tefteller. It is of minor debate which race Charlie
Patton was. Though he was most likely African-American like most of his
contemporaries in the blues field, because of his light complexion there have
been rumors that he was Mexican, full-blood Cherokee
(Howlin' Wolf
himself endorsed this theory) and many others.
(quoted from wikipedia.org)
Where is Charley Patton's official website?
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Visit also these related Sites:
Charley Patton Tribute Pages
Charley Patton tribute page at myspace.com.
Biographical Information on Charley Patton
Charley Patton biography (part 1) by Dr. David Evans.
Charley Patton biography by Cub Koda.
Charley Patton biography at southernmusic.net.
Charley Patton biography at Trail of the Hellhound.
Charley Patton biography by Don Ely.
Various Articles on Charley Patton
This is underground comic book genius R. Crumb's retelling of the life of
Delta bluesman Charlie Patton, based on the biography by Stephen Calt and
Gayle Dean Wardlow.
Article by Elijah Wald.
Charley Patton Lyrics
Lyrics of numerous Charley Patton songs.
Charley Patton Audio Files
Charley Patton - Screamin' And Hollerin' The Blues. MP3 file, runtime 03:09.
Charley Patton - A Spoonful Blues. MP3 file, runtime 03:11.
Charley Patton - Bird Nest Bound. MP3 file, runtime 03:09.
Charley Patton - Green River Blues. MP3 file, runtime 03:06.
Charley Patton - When Your Ways Get Dark. MP3 file, runtime 03:07.
Charley Patton - Mississippi Boweavil Blues. MP3 file, runtime 03:09.
Charley Patton - It Won't Be Long. MP3 file, runtime 03:24.
Bertha Lee w. Charley Patton - Mind Reader Blues. MP3 file, runtime 02:56.
Bertha Lee w. Charley Patton - Yellow Bee. MP3 file, runtime 02:54.
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