Jessie Mae Hemphill

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Standing In My Doorway Crying 04:41 Tools
Take Me Home With You, Baby 02:45 Tools
Go Back to Your Used to Be 00:00 Tools
She-Wolf 00:00 Tools
Streamline Train 05:33 Tools
Lord, Help the Poor and Needy 00:00 Tools
Black Cat Bone 00:00 Tools
Loving In The Moonlight 00:00 Tools
Baby, Please Don't Go 00:00 Tools
Honey Bee 04:57 Tools
I'm So Glad 00:00 Tools
Jump, Baby, Jump 00:00 Tools
Hard Times 00:00 Tools
Feelin' Good 00:00 Tools
Shame On You 00:00 Tools
Cowgirl Blues 00:00 Tools
Crawdad Hole 00:00 Tools
Shame on You I Feel It 00:00 Tools
Bullyin' Well 00:00 Tools
Married Man Blues 00:00 Tools
All Night Boogie (Jessie's Boogie) 00:00 Tools
Shake It, Baby 00:00 Tools
Eagle Bird 05:13 Tools
Tell Me You Love Me 00:00 Tools
Shake Your Booty (Shake It, Baby) 00:00 Tools
Boogie 'Side the Road 00:00 Tools
Jessie's Boogie 00:00 Tools
Overseas Blues 00:00 Tools
Little Rooster Reel 00:00 Tools
Get Right, Church 00:00 Tools
My Lord Do Just What He Say 00:00 Tools
Jessie's Love Song (Tell Me You Love Me) 00:00 Tools
He's A Mighty Good Leader 00:00 Tools
Jesus Will Fix It For You 00:00 Tools
Home Going 00:00 Tools
My Daddy's Blues 00:00 Tools
Brokenhearted Blues 00:00 Tools
She Wolf 00:00 Tools
Rolling and Tumbling 00:00 Tools
Merry Christmas, Pretty Baby 00:00 Tools
You Can Talk About Me 00:00 Tools
I'm So Glad You Don't Know What's On My Mind - Take 1 00:00 Tools
Lord, Help the Poor & Needy 00:00 Tools
I'm So Glad You Don't Know What's On My Mind (Take 1) 00:00 Tools
I Want To Be Ready 00:00 Tools
Train, Train 00:00 Tools
I Wanna Be Ready When Jesus Comes 00:00 Tools
Shakira-She wolf 00:00 Tools
I'm So Glad You Don't Know What's On My Mind - Take 2 00:00 Tools
Saint Louis Blues 00:00 Tools
Don't Mess With My Toot Toot 00:00 Tools
Shake Your Booty 00:00 Tools
Roll Me Baby 00:00 Tools
Interview 00:00 Tools
All Night Boogie 00:00 Tools
Lawdy Miss Clawdy 00:00 Tools
She Used To Be Your Woman 00:00 Tools
Jessie's Love Song 00:00 Tools
Run Get My Shotgun 00:00 Tools
I'm So Glad You Don't Know What's On My Mind 00:00 Tools
Little Sally Walker 00:00 Tools
Lay My Burden Down 00:00 Tools
Old Time Religion 00:00 Tools
Jessie Mae Hemphill - Standing in My Doorway Crying 00:00 Tools
DC 9 00:00 Tools
Standing in my Doorway Crying (USA) 00:00 Tools
Saints Go Marching in 00:00 Tools
This Little Light of Mine 00:00 Tools
Shame Shame 00:00 Tools
Nobody's Fault But Mine 00:00 Tools
Motherless Children 00:00 Tools
Merry Christmas Pretty Baby 00:00 Tools
I Shall Not Be Moved 00:00 Tools
Your Love Is Like a Hydrant 00:00 Tools
Shake It, Shake It 00:00 Tools
I'm A Cowgirl 00:00 Tools
God is Good to Me 00:00 Tools
Fife & Drum Intro 00:00 Tools
Train Train 00:00 Tools
Treat Me Right 00:00 Tools
Standing In My Doorway 00:00 Tools
Fife And Drum Intro 00:00 Tools
Jump Baby Jump 00:00 Tools
Swing Low 00:00 Tools
Runaway Soul 00:00 Tools
Holy Ghost 00:00 Tools
Standing in My Doorway Crying - (Black Snake Moan) 00:00 Tools
I'm Going Home 00:00 Tools
Nothing That You Say 00:00 Tools
Nobody Fault But Mine 00:00 Tools
lovin in the moonlight 00:00 Tools
I'm So Glad You Don't Know What's On My Mind (Take 2) 00:00 Tools
Lord Help The Poor And Needy 00:00 Tools
Porch Logic Remix 00:00 Tools
I Wanna Be Ready 00:00 Tools
take me home with you,baby 00:00 Tools
Jesse's Boogie 00:00 Tools
jessie mae hemphill - she wolf - 03 - jump, baby, jump 00:00 Tools
Shame, Shame 00:00 Tools
Shake Your Body (Shake It,Baby ) 00:00 Tools
Rorch Logic Remix 00:00 Tools
Go Back to Your Old Used To Be 00:00 Tools
Steamline Woman 00:00 Tools
The Spaniels 00:00 Tools
Lord,Help the Poor and Needy 00:00 Tools
Standing In My Doorway Crying / Jesse Mae Hemphill 00:00 Tools
Jump- Baby- Jump 00:00 Tools
Take Me Home with You- Baby 00:00 Tools
jessie mae hemphill - she wolf - 02 - standing in my doorway 00:00 Tools
jessie mae hemphill - she wolf - 05 - black cat bone 00:00 Tools
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Jessie Mae Hemphill (18th October 1934 – 22nd July 2006), was a pioneering electric guitarist, songwriter, and singer, specialising in the northern Mississippi country blues traditions of her family and regional heritage. She was born near Como and Senatobia, Mississippi, in northern Mississippi just east of the Mississippi Delta. She began playing the guitar at the age of seven ,and also played drums in various local Mississippi fife and drum bands. The first field recordings of her work were made by blues researcher George Mitchell in 1967 and ethnomusicologist Dr David Evans in 1973 when she was known as Jessie Mae Brooks, using the surname from a brief early marriage, but the recordings were not released. In 1978, Evans went to Memphis to teach at Memphis State University (now University of Memphis). The school founded the High Water recording label in 1979 to promote interest in the indigenous music of the South. Evans made the first high-quality field recordings of Hemphill in that year, and soon afterwaeds produced her first sessions for the High Water label. Hemphill then launched a recording career in the early 1980s, releasing singles produced by Evans on this university label, which later became a production company who licensed their masters to labels like HighTone and Inside Sounds. In 1981 her first full-length album, She-Wolf, was licensed from High Water and released on France's Vogue Records. In the early 1980s, she performed in a Mississippi drum corps put together by Evans composed of herself, Abe Young, and Jim Harper on Tav Falco's Panther Burns' Behind the Magnolia Curtain album; she also appeared in another drum group with Young and fife-and-drum band veteran Othar Turner in a televised appearance in Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood. Other recordings of hers were released on the French label Black and Blue, and she performed concerts across the United States and other countries including France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Belgium, The Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, and Canada. She received the W. C. Handy Award for best traditional female blues artist in 1987 and 1988. In 1990 her first American full length album, Feelin' Good, was released, which also won a Handy Award for best acoustic album. Hemphill suffered a stroke that paralyzed her left side in 1993, preventing her from playing guitar, resulting in her retiring at that time from her blues career. Her musical background began with playing snare drum and bass drum in the fife-and-drum band led by her grandfather, Sid Hemphill. Aside from sitting in at Memphis bars a few times in the 1950s, most of her playing was done in family and informal settings such as picnics with fife and drum music until her 1979 recordings. She was unique in country blues as a female defying tradition by singing her own original material while accompanying herself on electric guitar and playing tambourine with her foot. She employs a folk-blues open tuning style with a hypnotic drone in her guitar playing instead of relying on standard, 12-bar blues styles. She occasionally was accompanied on a second guitar by producer Evans. French videographer Marc Oriol produced a documentary on Hemphill called Me & My Guitar, Jessie Mae Hemphill, which was shown on France's TV Cannes in 2001. In 2003 Olga Wilhelmine founded the Jessie Mae Hemphill Foundation to preserve and archive the indigenous music of northern Mississippi and to provide assistance for musicians in need from the region who could not survive on meager publishing royalties. The same year, HighTone released Heritage of the Blues: Shake It, Baby, a budget CD containing tracks from previous releases, along with three previously unreleased tracks. In 2004 Wilhelmine and Tyler Austin of the fledgling Jessie Mae Hemphill Foundation released Dare You to Do It Again, a double album of gospel standards, newly recorded by the ailing vocalist singing and playing tambourine with accompaniment from Steve Gardner, DJ Logic, and descendants of the late musicians Junior Kimbrough, R. L. Burnside, and Otha Turner. The release, her first recordings since the 1993 stroke, also included a DVD. Also in 2004, Inside Sounds released Get Right Blues, containing material recorded from 1979 through the early 1980s; Black & Blue released Mississippi Blues Festival, which included seven live tracks by her from a Paris concert in 1986. On July 22, 2006, Jessie Mae Hemphill died at The Regional Medical Center in Memphis, after experiencing complications from an ulcer. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.