Barbecue Bob

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Barbecue Blues 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Heavy Water Blues 00:00 Tools
Chocolate to the Bone 00:00 Tools
Atlanta Moan 00:00 Tools
Motherless Chile Blues 03:16 Tools
Yo Yo Blues 02:59 Tools
Spider and the Fly 00:00 Tools
Poor Boy a Long Ways from Home 03:01 Tools
California Blues 00:00 Tools
Black Skunk Blues 00:00 Tools
Ease It to Me Blues 03:01 Tools
She's Coming Back Some Cold Rainy Day 03:03 Tools
We Sure Got Hard Times 00:00 Tools
When the Saints Go Marching In 00:00 Tools
Blind Pig Blues 00:00 Tools
Diddle-Da-Diddle 03:01 Tools
Good Time Rounder 00:00 Tools
New Mojo Blues 00:00 Tools
It's Just Too Bad 00:00 Tools
Untitled 00:00 Tools
Motherless Children 00:00 Tools
She Shook Her Gin 00:00 Tools
Jacksonville Blues 00:00 Tools
Easy Rider Don't You Deny My Name 00:00 Tools
Cloudy Sky Blues 00:00 Tools
Honey You Don't Know My Mind 00:00 Tools
Twistin' Your Stuff 00:00 Tools
Motherless Child Blues 00:00 Tools
My Mistake Blues 00:00 Tools
Waycross Georgia Blues 00:00 Tools
Mamma You Don't Suit Me! 00:00 Tools
How Long Pretty Mama 00:00 Tools
Thinkin' Funny Blues 00:00 Tools
It Won't Be Long Now 00:00 Tools
Beggin' For Love 00:00 Tools
Jesus' Blood Can Make Me Whole 00:00 Tools
Bad Time Blues 00:00 Tools
Goin' Up the Country 00:00 Tools
Crooked Woman Blues 00:00 Tools
Hurry And Bring It Back Home 00:00 Tools
'Fo Day Creep 00:00 Tools
Twistin' Your Stuff (Unissued) 03:11 Tools
It Won't Be Long Now - Part 1 03:30 Tools
She Shook Her Gin (Unissued) 00:00 Tools
Brown-Skin Girl 00:00 Tools
She Moves It Just Right 00:00 Tools
Barbeque Blues 00:00 Tools
Brown-Skin Gal 00:00 Tools
It Just Won't Quit 00:00 Tools
Jambooger Blues 00:00 Tools
It Just Won't Hay 00:00 Tools
Monkey And The Baboon 00:00 Tools
Motherless Chiles Blues 00:00 Tools
She Looks So Good 00:00 Tools
Me And My Whiskey 00:00 Tools
Cold Wave Blues 00:00 Tools
Doin' the Scraunch 02:56 Tools
Honey Your Going Too Fast 00:00 Tools
It Won't Be Long Now - Part 2 00:00 Tools
Jesus Blood Can Make Me Whole 00:00 Tools
She's Gone Blues 00:00 Tools
Twistin' That Stuff 03:11 Tools
Unnamed Blues 00:00 Tools
Trouble Done Bore Me Down 00:00 Tools
Yo Yo Blues No. 2 00:00 Tools
Meat Man Pete 00:00 Tools
Giong Up The Country 03:13 Tools
Tellin' It To You 00:00 Tools
I'm on My Way Down Home 03:15 Tools
Mississippi Low-Levee Blues 00:00 Tools
Dollar Down Blues 00:00 Tools
Twistin' Your Stuff [unissued] 00:00 Tools
She Shook Her Gin [Unissued] 03:11 Tools
Red Hot Mama Papa's Going To Cool You Off 00:00 Tools
It's A Funny Little Thing 00:00 Tools
(Untitled) 00:00 Tools
Freeze To Me Mama 00:00 Tools
Midnight Weeping Blues 00:00 Tools
We Sure Got Hard Times Now 00:00 Tools
Darktown Gamblin' (The Crap Game) - Part 1 00:00 Tools
Yo-Yo Blues 00:00 Tools
Motherless Chile 03:16 Tools
Untitled [#] 00:00 Tools
Darktown Gamblin' (The Crap Game) - Part 2 00:00 Tools
Darktown Gambling, Pt. 1: The Crap Game 00:00 Tools
[Untitled Track] 00:00 Tools
Bad Times Blues 00:00 Tools
Motherless Child Blues (1927) 00:00 Tools
Darktown Gambling, Pt. 2: The Skin Game 00:00 Tools
[untitled] 00:00 Tools
Honey You're Going Too Fast 03:01 Tools
motherless child 00:00 Tools
Ease It to the Blues 00:00 Tools
Honey, Your Going Too Fast 00:00 Tools
Honey, You're Going Too Fast 00:00 Tools
Goin's Up Country 00:00 Tools
Twistin' Your Stuff - Unissued 00:00 Tools
How Long, Pretty Mama 03:21 Tools
It's A Funky Little Thing 00:00 Tools
Twistin' That Stuff [Unissued] 00:00 Tools
It Won't Be Long Now (Part 1) 00:00 Tools
Goin Up The Country 00:00 Tools
She's Gone 00:00 Tools
She Shook Her Gin - Unissued 00:00 Tools
Poor Boy A Long Way From Home 00:00 Tools
She's Comming Back Some Cold Rainy Day 00:00 Tools
Poor Boy A Long Ways From Home (1927) [Barbeque Bob] 00:00 Tools
It Won't Be Long Now, Part 2 03:30 Tools
Chocolate To The Bone/Barbecue Bob 00:00 Tools
Darktown Gambling Part 1 (The Crap Game) 00:00 Tools
She's Coming Back Some Cold Rainy Day - Barbecue Bob 00:00 Tools
Darktown Gambling Part 2 (The Skin Game) 00:00 Tools
Easy Rider, Don't You Deny My Name 02:58 Tools
Red Hot Mama 00:00 Tools
Poor Boy A Long Ways From Home (1927) 00:00 Tools
Red Hot Mama, Papa's Going to Cool You Off 00:00 Tools
Poor Boy, Long Ways From Home 00:00 Tools
Mama, You Don't Suit Me 00:00 Tools
Blind Pig Blues [Album Version] 00:00 Tools
Atlanta Moon 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Heavy Water Blues [Robert Hicks] 00:00 Tools
It Won't Be Long Now (Part 2) 00:00 Tools
Mama You Don't Suit Me! 00:00 Tools
It Won't Be Long Now-Pt.2 00:00 Tools
It Won't Be Long Now Part 2 00:00 Tools
How Long, Pretty Mama? 00:00 Tools
Darktown Gambling, part 1 (The Crap Game) 00:00 Tools
Goin' Up Country 00:00 Tools
Unnamed Title 00:00 Tools
She's Coming Back Some Rainy Day 00:00 Tools
Darktown Gamblin' - The Skin Game 00:00 Tools
It Won't Be Long Now-Pt.1 03:27 Tools
Untitled (Album Version) 03:06 Tools
Monkey Baboon 03:06 Tools
When The Saint Go Marching In 00:00 Tools
Darktown Gambling, part 2 (The Skin Game) 00:00 Tools
Midnight Weeping Blues (Neillie Florence Vocals) 00:00 Tools
Freeze to Me, Mama 00:00 Tools
I Just Won't Quit 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Heavy Water Blues. 00:00 Tools
She's Coming Back Some Cold Ra 00:00 Tools
It Won't Be Long Now Part 1 00:00 Tools
Montherless Chiles Blues 03:16 Tools
Mississippi Low / Levee Blues 00:00 Tools
She's Coming Back Some Cold Rrainy Day 00:00 Tools
We Sure Got Hard Times [Album Version] 00:00 Tools
Barbecue Blues - 00:00 Tools
Poor Boy a Long Ways from Home - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
Darktown Gamblin' - Part 1 00:00 Tools
It Won't Be Long Now, Part 1 00:00 Tools
She's Coming Back Some Cold Rainy 03:03 Tools
Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup - Barbeque Blues 00:00 Tools
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Barbecue Bob (Robert Hicks, Walnut Grove, Georgia, September 11, 1902 – Lithonia, Georgia, October 21, 1931) was an American Piedmont blues musician. He used a bottleneck regularly on his 12-string guitar, playing in an elemental style that relied on an open Spanish tuning reminiscent of Charley Patton. He had a strong voice that he embellished with growling and falsetto, and a percussive singing style. His nickname came from the fact that he was a cook in a barbecue restaurant. One of the two extant photographs of Bob show him playing his guitar while wearing a full length white apron and cook's hat. He and his brother, Charlie Hicks, together with Curley Weaver, were taught how to play the guitar by Curley's mother, Savannah "Dip" Weaver. Bob began playing the 6-string guitar but picked up the 12-string guitar after moving to Atlanta, Georgia in 1923–1924. He became one of the prominent performers of the newly developing early Atlanta blues style. In Atlanta, Hicks worked a variety of jobs, playing music on the side. While working at Tidwells' Barbecue in a north Atlanta suburb, Hicks came to the attention of Columbia Records talent scout Dan Hornsby. Hornsby recorded him and decided to use Hicks's job as a gimmick, having him pose in chef's whites and hat for publicity photos and dubbing him "Barbecue Bob". During his short career he recorded 68 78-rpm sides. He recorded his first side, "Barbecue Blues", in March 1927. The record quickly sold 15,000 copies and made him the best selling artist for Columbia up to that date. Despite this initial success, it was not until his second recording session, in New York during June 1927, that he firmly established himself on the race market. At this session he recorded "Mississippi Heavy Water Blues", a song inspired by the major floods taking place in Mississippi at that time. This song, as well as his other blues releases, gained considerable popularity, and his records sold much better than those of other local blues musicians. The two part duet with crosstalk, "It Won't Be Long Now" was recorded with his brother Charlie (a/k/a Charlie Lincoln, or Laughing Charlie) in Atlanta on November 5, 1927. In April 1928 Bob recorded two sides with the female vocalist Nellie Florence, whom he had known since childhood, and also produced "Mississippi Low Levee Blues", a sequel to "Mississippi Heavy Water Blues". In April 1930, he recorded "We Sure Got Hard Times Now", which contains bleak references to the early effects of The Depression. Although Barbecue Bob remained predominantly a blues musician, he also recorded a few traditional and spiritual songs including "When the Saints Go Marching In", "Poor Boy, Long Ways from Home" and "Jesus' Blood Can Make Me Whole". Barbecue Bob also recorded as a member of The Georgia Cotton Pickers in December 1930, a group that included guitarist Curley Weaver and harmonica player Buddy Moss. As a group they recorded a handful of sides including their own adaptation of Blind Blake's "Diddie Wa Diddie" (recorded as "Diddle-Da-Diddle") and the Mississippi Sheiks' "Sitting on Top of the World" (recorded as "I'm On My Way Down Home"). These were the last recordings that Bob recorded. He died in Lithonia, Georgia, of a combination of tuberculosis and pneumonia brought on by influenza, at the age of 29, on October 21, 1931. His recording of "Mississippi Heavy Water Blues" (about the 1927 flood) was apparently played at his graveside before burial. Bob developed a "flailing" or "frailing" style of playing guitar more often associated with the traditional clawhammer banjo (as did his brother, and, initially, Curley Weaver). He used a bottleneck regularly on his 12-string guitar, playing in an elemental style that relied on an open Spanish tuning reminiscent of Charley Patton. He had a strong voice that he embellished with growling and falsetto, and a percussive singing style. Bob had some influence on Atlanta blues musicians such as the young Buddy Moss (who played harmonica with him on The Georgia Cotton Pickers recordings), but his way of playing was quickly overshadowed by the finger-picked Piedmont blues style that rose in popularity by the late 1920s/early 30s as can be heard in the development of the recordings of Curley Weaver. Bob's elder brother, Charley, also played blues and was recorded by Columbia under the name "Laughing" Charley Lincoln. However, he never received the same acclaim as his brother. Robert Hicks was an extrovert young man of 24 when Columbia's Dan Hornsby arranged his first recording session in March 1927, and had only moved into Atlanta from the countryside a few years before. When he recorded He had learned guitar, along with their friend Curley Weaver, from Curley's mother; all three played in a similar style, favouring the big, booming sound of the 12-string guitar, and relishing the contrast of pulsing bass riffs with the whine of a bottleneck on the treble strings. Barbecue Blues was a good seller, but it was at his second session, in New York in June 1927, that Bob firmly established himself with black record buyers, and thus with Columbia; Mississippi Heavy Water Blues, inspired by the catastrophic floods that had occurred that very month, was a considerable seller, and as a result Robert became Atlanta's most-recorded blues singer of the 20s. It was probably his success that persuaded Columbia to record both his brother Charlie and, in 1928, Curley Weaver. From the first, Barbecue Bob's music was instantly recognisable, both for the characteristic guitar style and for his warm, nasal singing voice. He could sound fiercely involved with his material, as on Barbecue Blues, ironically detached, as he did when performing Mama You Don't Suit Me!, or crushed by rejection, alike on Crooked Woman Blues and the traditionally based How Long Pretty Mama. The two-part It Won't Be Long Now, in crosstalk and duet with Charlie, is probably an example of the kind of material Robert performed on the medicine show with which he is known to have visited the small town of Waycross, in southwest Georgia, about which he made up a blues. Barbecue Bob's lyrics are remarkable for their blending of traditional formulae with a wry originality that is all his own. He was well acquainted with traditional songs; the content of Barbecue Blues and Motherless Chile Blues is almost proverbial, and the session where he cut versions of two well-known gospel songs also produced Easy Rider Don't You Deny My Name and a stunning account of Poor Boy A Long Ways From Home. Barbecue Bob rapidly impressed himself on his fans' minds as sharp, clever and original. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.