American singer and guitarist
Little Joe Blue
Birth name Joseph Valery, Jr. Born (1934-09-23 ) September 23, 1934Vicksburg , Mississippi , United StatesDied April 22, 1990(1990-04-22) (aged 55)Reno , Nevada , United States Genres Electric blues [ 1] Occupation(s) Guitarist, singer Instrument(s) Guitar, vocals Years active Late 1950s–1990 Labels Kent , Jewel , Checker , Evejim and others
Musical artist
Little Joe Blue (September 23, 1934 – April 22, 1990)[ 1] was an American electric blues singer and guitarist. His musical style was often compared to B. B. King .[ 1]
His most notable track was "Dirty Work Going On",[ 2] which was written by Ferdinand "Fats" Washington,[ 3] and originally recorded by Little Joe Blue in 1966. It was released by Checker Records .[ 4] The track peaked at No. 40 in the US Billboard R&B chart .[ 5]
Career
He was born Joseph Valery, Jr. in Vicksburg , Mississippi , United States.[ 1] He was brought up in Tallulah, Louisiana , before he relocated in 1951 to Detroit , Michigan , to work in the automobile plants.[ 6] He also spent over two years in Korea, having been drafted in the United States Army in 1954.[ 6]
Returning to Detroit, he formed the band the Midnighters in the late 1950s. He moved to Los Angeles , California , where he cut some records for Kent , Jewel and Checker Records in the 1960s.[ 1] His 1966 song, "Dirty Work Going On" (US Billboard R&B , No. 40),[ 7] was covered by Magic Sam ,[ 8] and Shakey Jake Harris ,[ 9] and by Willie Kent & His Gents.[ 10]
In 1975, he travelled to Europe to take part in the American Blues Legends tour and album recording, organised by the UK-based Big Bear Records .[ 11]
Little Joe Blue recorded for various labels, including Evejim Records , throughout the 1980s.[ 1] He played at the San Francisco Blues Festival in 1974, travelled to Europe in 1982, and appeared at the Chicago Blues Festival in 1986.[ 12]
Little Joe Blue's Greatest Hits (1996), a two-album set available on CD via Evejim , included (among others) the tracks "Dirty Work Going On", "Encourage Me Baby", "Don't Start Me to Talkin' " and Little Milton 's "How Could You Do It to Me".[ 13]
He died in Reno , Nevada , United States,[ 1] in April 1990 at the age of 55, from stomach cancer .[ 6] He had two children: one son and one daughter.
Discography
Studio albums
Southern Country Boy (Jewel , 1972; Paula, 1997 [CD])
Happy Here – Earthy Blues (Space, 1973)
Blue & The Blues Are Back (Kris, 1978)
Just Like B. (Jewel, 1980)
Best Of The Blues (Kris, 1981)
It's My Turn Now (Empire Enterprise, 1984) - with Smokin' Joe Kubek
Dirty Work Goin' On (Blues Reference) (Black & Blue , 1986 [1993]; 2005 [CD]) - with Melvin Taylor and Billy Branch [ 14]
Dirty Work Going On (Evejim , 1987)
I'm Doing All Right Again (Evejim, 1989)
Collaborative albums
Compilation albums
Blue's Blues (Charly , 1987) - Jewel material
Little Joe Blue's Greatest Hits (Evejim, 1996)
The Very Best of Little Joe Blue (Collectables , 2006) - Space and Kris material
The Very Best of Little Joe Blue, Expanded Edition (Fuel 2000 , 2012) - Jewel material
See also
References
^ a b c d e f g "Little Joe Blue - Biography & History - AllMusic" . AllMusic . Retrieved 8 August 2018 .
^ "Billboard" . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 18 June 1966. p. 20. Retrieved 9 August 2018 – via Google Books.
^ "Dirty Work Going On - Little Joe Blue - Song Info - AllMusic" . AllMusic . Retrieved 8 August 2018 .
^ "Little Joe Blue - Dirty Work Going On" . 45cat.com . Retrieved 9 August 2018 .
^ "Little Joe Blue" . Billboard.com . Retrieved 9 August 2018 .
^ a b c Colin Larkin , ed. (1995). The Guinness Who's Who of Blues (Second ed.). Guinness Publishing . p. 43. ISBN 0-85112-673-1 .
^ "Little Joe Blue Songs • Top Songs / Chart Singles Discography • Music VF, US & UK hits charts" . Musicvf.com . Retrieved 9 August 2018 .
^ "Magic Sam - Rockin' Wild In Chicago" . Discogs.com . Retrieved 9 August 2018 .
^ "Live at Sylvio's: 1968 - Magic Sam, Shakey Jake - Songs, Reviews, Credits - AllMusic" . AllMusic . Retrieved 9 August 2018 .
^ "Willie Kent Discography" . Williekentblues.com . Retrieved 9 August 2018 .
^ "Illustrated Big Bear Records discography" . www.wirz.de . Retrieved 2020-11-25 .
^ "Valery, Joseph, Jr. [Little Joe Blue] (1934–1990)" . Handbook of Texas Online . Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 24 January 2015 .
^ "Greatest Hits - Little Joe Blue - Songs, Reviews, Credits - AllMusic" . AllMusic . Retrieved 8 August 2018 .
^ "Little Joe Blue - Album Discography - AllMusic" . AllMusic . Retrieved 8 August 2018 .
External links
International National Artists