Jump to content

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 6
  • Views 844
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Most active in this topic

Most active in this topic

Guest remus
Posted

passed on

seventy-one

link

Gutted, just been playing "Let me back in" :thumbsup:

Guest vic-shot
Posted

That's a real shame,One of the greats! :thumbsup:

Posted

From The Chicago Sun-Times:

Little Milton Campbell worked with Sam Phillips in Memphis, Tenn., and the Chess brothers in Chicago early in his career, so he knew many legends of rock 'n' roll and blues. One thing always bothered him, though.

"Elvis [Presley] was called 'The King,' " he said in an interview last fall. "Why couldn't they have called Fats Domino or Little Richard 'The King of Rock 'n' Roll'? And mainly Ike Turner -- he played on the first rock 'n' roll song, 'Rocket 88.' "

Little Milton was never afraid to point out what he perceived as injustices in the music industry, right up until his death Thursday in Memphis at age 70.

Well-known on chitlin' circuit

But unlike other artists who used the inequities as excuses, Mr. Campbell persevered, working to expand his fan base beyond the black nightclubs of the South. His last album, "Think of Me," released in May on Telarc International, marked an attempt to "cross over" into the pop market while returning to his classic soul-blues sound of the 1960s and '70s.

Mr. Campbell died in the Delta Medical Center in Memphis. He'd had a massive stroke on July 27 and his condition worsened last weekend. He slipped into a coma on Wednesday.

He was well-known on the chitlin' circuit of the upper Delta region but also had many followers in Chicago, his home for nearly 30 years, with earlier stopovers in East St. Louis and Clarksdale, Miss. Mr. Campbell moved to Las Vegas when he left Chicago in the late '80s but also maintained a residence in Memphis.

The son of Mississippi sharecropper and bluesman Big Milton, Mr. Campbell left home in his early teens, making his way to Helena, Ark. "I was looking for a better way of life," he said. "I knew there had to be a better way to make a living than picking or chopping cotton."

In Helena, he became a protege of harmonica kingpin Sonny Boy Williamson. He moved on to East St. Louis on the advice of Turner, who had recommended him to Phillips at Sun Records. His first hit, "I'm a Lonely Man," came on the Bobbin label. Then Mr. Campbell switched to Checker, a subsidiary of Chicago's Chess Records, in 1961, where he recorded such hits as "We're Gonna Make It," "Grits Ain't Groceries" and the anthem "Hey, Hey, the Blues Is Alright."

His horn-driven sound rarely stuck to the classic 12-bar blues structure, making it harder to market him to white blues fans. A nearly two-decade stint with Malaco Records that preceded the Telarc signing brought continued popularity with soul lovers but inhibited his crossover dreams.

Music resonated with audiences

Jon Tiven, who co-produced, co-wrote and played on the final Little Milton disc, said, "Milton didn't have a gimmick, he was just about the music. . . . He did extraordinarily well in navigating the music industry by himself without a huge organization to help him out. I rank him right up there with B.B. King and Buddy Guy as the epitome of what the blues is."

Chicago soul singer Otis Clay, who befriended Mr. Campbell 40 years ago, "when we were young men, chasing our dreams," took the news of his passing particularly hard because he is still mourning the loss of another local soul-blues great, Tyrone Davis. Clay said he was looking forward to an Aug. 28 booking with Little Milton in Milwaukee.

"We were going to go crazy together backstage," he said.

Mr. Campbell's music resonated with audiences, Clay said, because it "got you through whatever problems you had at the time, whether it was with money or your woman or whatever."

Mr. Campbell is survived by his wife, Patricia, and several children. Funeral services were pending.

Guest Richard Bergman
Posted

passed on

seventy-one

link

Shame , Was Mona Lisa really a man ???

Rip

Posted (edited)

Shame , Was Mona Lisa really a man ???

Rip

link

Grits aint groceries :thumbsup:

very sad news !

Mona Lisa was neither man or woman :thumbsup:

Edited by Baz
Guest Rowly
Posted

will definately be spinning a few in tribute at Shake tonight... my personal fave is Feel so Bad.. tho to be honnest idon't think I've ever heard a bad Little Milton side... Sad news.

Get involved with Soul Source

Add your comments now

Join Soul Source

A free & easy soul music affair!

Join Soul Source now!

Log in to Soul Source

Jump right back in!

Log in now!

Source Advert





×
×
  • Create New...