“You won't amount to much, the people all said
'Cause I didn't play guitar behind my head
Never pandered, never acted proud
Never took off my shoes, throw 'em in the crowd
Goodbye Jimmy Reed, goodbye, goodnight
Put a jewel in your crown and I put out the lights
'Cause I didn't play guitar behind my head
Never pandered, never acted proud
Never took off my shoes, throw 'em in the crowd
Goodbye Jimmy Reed, goodbye, goodnight
Put a jewel in your crown and I put out the lights
“Goodbye, Jimmy Reed,” Bob Dylan
James Mathis “Jimmy” Reed (1925-1976) grew up in the
small, unincorporated community of Dunleith, Mississippi, picked up the guitar
at a young age, learned to play the harmonica (harp) from Eddie Tayler, and
earned money busking (street performing) as a teenager. Soon after moving to
Chicago he joined the navy during World War II.
After being discharged, he married his hometown sweetheart Mary (whom he
called Mama Reed) and got work in an Armour meatpacking plant while getting
occasional work as a session player at Chicago’s Chess records and sideman in Jim
Brim’s Gary Kings along with future Blues legend Albert King. Brim’s band
played clubs in Gary and Chicago, many owned or financed by policy bosses. During this time Reed met Jimmy Bracken, who
along with Gary partner Vivian Carter, founded Vee-Jay Records with a loan from
a Gary pawnbroker involved in the numbers racket. When Chess Records expressed no interest in
him as a solo artist, Reed signed the Vee-Jay, along with a Gary doo wop group
called the Spaniels, and recorded the label’s very first single. From the beginning Reed’s songs, such as
“High and Lonesome” and “You Don’t Have to Go,” charted on Billboard’s Rhythm
and Blues top ten. “Goodnite, Sweetheart”
by the Spaniels did even better and enabled Vee-Jay to become an industry
powerhouse that paved the way for Motown a decade later.
Known to be a heavy drinker and somewhat uncomfortable in
a recording studio, Reed initially had to be kept under lock and key before
sessions to ensure he’d be sober. He’d
have Mama Reed, who co-wrote many of his songs, by his side. She sang background and sometimes could be
heard whispering lyrics to him. In 1957
Reed had a crossover hit with “Honest I Do” and followed that up with “Big Boss
Man,” “Bright Lights, City Lights,” and others. His soulful voice and unique guitar and harp
stylings were a pronounced influence on many 60s British bands, including the Rolling
Stones and the animals; both bands covered his songs, as did Elvis Presley, the
Grateful Dead, and Hank Williams, Jr., among others. Suddenly in demand, Reed toured
with various headliners and blues revival shows until the ravages of alcoholism
and untreated epilepsy led to his death at age 51.
In 1991 Jimmy Reed was inducted into the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame along with LaVern Baker, the Byrds, Tina Turner, John Lee Hooker,
and The Impressions (with Jerry Butler and Curtis Mayfield, who recorded “For
Your Precious Love on Vee-Jay Records). Christgau’s Record Guide states: “At his best—on Vee-Jay in the '50s—Reed
sang with the languid self-assurance of a man who never ran for the bus because
he wanted to spend the fare on a glass of wine, and the unindustrious shuffle
rhythms of the Vee-Jay band ambled right along behind.”
“Goodbye Jimmy Reed” appears on ageless icon Bob Dylan’s
2020 album “Rough and Ready Ways.”
Considering himself like Reed a vagabond troubadour armed with a guitar,
harp, and songs to sing, Dylan paid his mentor the ultimate compliment,
comparing their lives, according to Douglas Brinkley of the New York Times,” in a high-octane
showstopper that honors the Mississippi bluesman with dragon-fierce harmonica
riffs and bawdy lyrics.” Here’s the
concluding verse:
God be with you,
brother, dear
If you don't mind me asking, what brings you here?
Oh, nothing much, I'm just looking for the man
Need to see where he's lying in this lost land
Goodbye Jimmy Reed, and everything within ya
Can't you hear me calling from down in Virginia?
If you don't mind me asking, what brings you here?
Oh, nothing much, I'm just looking for the man
Need to see where he's lying in this lost land
Goodbye Jimmy Reed, and everything within ya
Can't you hear me calling from down in Virginia?
I want to thank Dr Emu a very powerful spell caster who help me to bring my husband back to me, few month ago i have a serious problem with my husband, to the extend that he left the house, and he started dating another woman and he stayed with the woman, i tried all i can to bring him back, but all my effort was useless until the day my friend came to my house and i told her every thing that had happened between me and my husband, then she told me of a powerful spell caster who help her when she was in the same problem I then contact Dr Emu and told him every thing and he told me not to worry my self again that my husband will come back to me after he has cast a spell on him, i thought it was a joke, after he had finish casting the spell, he told me that he had just finish casting the spell, to my greatest surprise within 48 hours, my husband really came back begging me to forgive him, if you need his help you can contact him with via email: Emutemple@gmail.com or add him up on his whatsapp +2347012841542 is willing to help any body that need his help.
ReplyDelete