Baby Tate

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
See What You Done Done 02:31 Tools
If I Could Holler Like a Mountain Jack 00:00 Tools
When I First Started Hoboing 00:00 Tools
Bad Blues 03:31 Tools
Dupree Blues 04:09 Tools
Trucking Them Blues Away 02:12 Tools
What Have I Done To You 02:47 Tools
Baby, You Just Don't Know 03:24 Tools
My Baby Don't Treat Me Kind 02:54 Tools
Lonesome Over There 02:26 Tools
When Your Woman Don't Want You Around 02:45 Tools
Hey Mama, Hey Pretty Girl 02:22 Tools
Thousand Woman Blues 02:47 Tools
I Ain't Got No Loving Baby Now 02:37 Tools
Baby, I'm Going 03:11 Tools
See What You Done 02:31 Tools
Bab, I'm Going 00:00 Tools
What Have I Done To You? 00:00 Tools
Trucking Them Bluse Away 00:00 Tools
My Baby Don4t Treat Me Kind 00:00 Tools
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Baby Tate (January 28, 1916 – August 17, 1972) was an American Piedmont blues guitarist, who in a sporadic career spanning five decades, worked variously with guitarists Blind Boy Fuller and Pink Anderson, as well as harmonica player Peg Leg Sam. His playing style was influenced by Blind Blake, Buddy Moss, Blind Boy Fuller, Josh White, and Willie Walker, and to some extent Lightnin' Hopkins. Born Charles Henry Tate in Elberton, Georgia, he was raised in Greenville, South Carolina. In his adolescence, Tate started performing locally, after seeing Blind Blake in Elberton. Tate later formed a trio with Joe Walker (the brother of Willie Walker) and Roosevelt "Baby" Brooks and, up to 1932, played in the local area. As The Carolina Blackbirds, they appeared on the radio station, WFBC, broadcasting from The Jack Tar Hotel, but for the rest of the 1930s worked for a living, mainly as a mason. Baby Tate served in the United States Army infantry during World War II in the south of England, and did not return to the Spartanburg/Greenville club circuit until 1946. Nevertheless, in 1950 Tate claimed to have recorded several (unreleased) tracks for the Kapp label. Relocating to Spartanburg, South Carolina, he performed solo before forming an occasional duo with Pink Anderson; a working relationship that endured through to the 1970s when Anderson suffered from stroke. Tate released his only album, Blues of Baby Tate: See What You Done Done, in 1962, and twelve months later appeared in Sam Charters' documentary film The Blues. Throughout the 1960s Tate performed irregularly across the US. Utilising harmonica player, Peg Leg Sam, or guitarists Baby Brooks or McKinley Ellis, Tate recorded nearly sixty tracks in 1970 and 1971 for Peter B. Lowry, but the proposed album remained unreleased once Tate unexpectedly died in the summer of 1972. He appeared at a concert at the State University of New York at New Paltz, New York as a result of Lowry's efforts in the Spring of 1972. Tate died from the effects of a heart attack, in the VA Hospital in Columbia, South Carolina, in August 1972, at the age of 56. In January 2011, Baby Tate was nominated for The 10th Annual Independent Music Awards in the Blues Song category for "See What You Done". Smithsonian Folkways released a compilation album on February 16, 2010, titled Classic Appalachian Blues. It featured the Baby Tate number, "See What You Done Done." Discography Albums Blues of Baby Tate: See What You Done Done (1962) - Prestige/Bluesville, CD reissue Origin Blues Classics (OBC) (1995) Singles "See What You Done Done" b/w "Late In The Evening" (1974 - recorded 1970) - Trix Records Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.