Junior Wells' Chicago Blues Band -- Help Me (A Tribute to Sonny Boy Williamson)
From the
album:
Chicago/
The Blues/
Today!
Vol. 1.
Buddy Guy on guitar,
Jack Meyers bass,
Fred Below drums.
Junior Wells (
December 9, 1934 --
January 15,
1998[1]), born
Amos Wells Blakemore Jr. was a blues vocalist and harmonica player and recording artist based in Chicago, who was also famous for playing with
Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy,
Bonnie Raitt,
The Rolling Stones and
Van Morrison.
He was possibly born in
Memphis, Tennessee,[1] and raised in
West Memphis, Arkansas though other sources report his birth was in West Memphis, Arkansas.[2] Initially taught by his cousin,
Junior Parker, and artist
Sonny Boy Williamson[disambiguation needed], Wells learned how to play the harmonica by the age of seven with surprising skill. He moved to Chicago in 1948 with his mother after her divorce and began sitting in with local musicians at house parties and taverns.[3]
Wild and rebellious but needing an outlet for his talents, he began performing with
The Aces (guitarist brothers
Dave and
Louis Myers and drummer Fred Below) and developed a more modern amplified harmonica style influenced by
Little Walter.[3] He made his first recordings at age 19, when he replaced Little Walter in Muddy Waters' band and appeared on one of
Waters' sessions for
Chess Records in
1952. (
Born December 9,1934, Wells would likely be only 17 for a 1952 session.)[3] His first recordings as a band leader were made in the following year for
States Records.[4] In the later
1950s and early
1960s he also recorded
singles for
Chief Records and its
Profile Records subsidiary, including "
Messin' with the Kid", "Come on in
This House", and "
It Hurts Me Too", which would remain in his repertoire throughout his career. His 1960
Profile single "
Little by Little" (written by
Chief owner and producer
Mel London) reached #23 in the
Billboard R&B; chart, making it the first of two Wells' singles to enter the chart.[5]
Junior Wells worked with guitarist Buddy Guy in the 1960s, and featured Guy on guitar when he recorded his first album,
Hoodoo Man Blues for
Delmark Records.[6][3]" Wells and Guy supported the
Rolling Stones on numerous occasions in the
1970s.[6] Although his albums
South Side Blues Jam (
1971) and On Tap (
1975) proved he had not lost his aptitude for
Chicago blues, his
1980s and
1990s discs were inconsistent.[6] However,
1996's
Come On in This House was an intriguing set of classic blues songs with a rotating cast of slide guitarists, among them
Alvin Youngblood Hart,
Corey Harris,
Sonny Landreth.[6] and
Derek Trucks.
Wells made an appearance in the
1998 movie,
Blues Brothers 2000, the sequel to
The Blues Brothers.[3] The film was released less than a month after his death.[3] He had continued performing until he was diagnosed with cancer in the summer of
1997.[3] That fall, he suffered a heart attack while undergoing treatment, sending him into a coma.[3]
Wells was interred in the
Oak Woods Cemetery, Chicago after succumbing to lymphoma on January 15, 1998.[1]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junior_Wells