Kansas Joe & Memphis Minnie

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Why Don't You Do Right 00:00 Tools
Hey Hey Loretta 00:00 Tools
Evil Devil Woman Blues 00:00 Tools
When The Levee Breaks 00:00 Tools
Pile Driver Blues 00:00 Tools
Look Who's Coming Down The Road 00:00 Tools
You Know You Done Me Wrong 00:00 Tools
Please Baby 00:00 Tools
Hey Loretta 00:00 Tools
Meat Cutter Blues 00:00 Tools
Too much going on 00:00 Tools
Weed Smoker's Dream 00:00 Tools
pile_driver_blues 00:00 Tools
If You Take Me Back 00:00 Tools
Let's Try It Again 00:00 Tools
Dry Bones in the Valley 00:00 Tools
What's The Matter With You? 00:00 Tools
Going Back Home Blues 00:00 Tools
I'm Going Back Home 00:00 Tools
Meat Cutter Blues (Alternate Take) 00:00 Tools
One in a Hundred 00:00 Tools
Who Framed Roger Rabbit - Why Don't You Do Right (3:06) 00:00 Tools
Don't Need No Doctor When I Come To Die 00:00 Tools
Joliet Bound 00:00 Tools
Well, Well 00:00 Tools
Let's Go to Town 00:00 Tools
One More Greasing 00:00 Tools
I'm Through With You 00:00 Tools
Dizzy Little Girl 00:00 Tools
Hey, Hey Loretta 00:00 Tools
Who Framed Roger Rabbit - Why Don't You Do Right (perf. by Amy Irving) (3:06) 00:00 Tools
The World Is a Hard Place to Live In 00:00 Tools
Strangers Blues 00:00 Tools
It Ain't No Lie 00:00 Tools
Twenty Minutes to Hell 00:00 Tools
If I Be Lifted Up 00:00 Tools
Highway 61 00:00 Tools
Something Gonna Happen to You 00:00 Tools
Your Money Can't Buy Me 00:00 Tools
I'll Get You Off My Mind 00:00 Tools
Too Much Goin' On 00:00 Tools
Why Don't You Do Right (feat. Peggy Lee) 00:00 Tools
We Can't Agree 00:00 Tools
I Love You Baby 00:00 Tools
When I Said Goodbye 00:00 Tools
Well Well 00:00 Tools
I'm Wild About Stuff 00:00 Tools
Well Well (J. McCoy) 00:00 Tools
That Great Love 00:00 Tools
I'm Alright Now 00:00 Tools
The Prodigal's Return 00:00 Tools
Weed Smokers Dream 00:00 Tools
Main Key to Heaven 00:00 Tools
Why Don't You Do Alright 00:00 Tools
  • 7,157
    plays
  • 2,743
    listners
  • 7157
    top track count

McCoy played music under a variety of stage names but is best known as "Kansas Joe McCoy". Born in Raymond, Mississippi, he was the older brother of the blues accompanist Papa Charlie McCoy. As a young man, McCoy was drawn to the music scene in Memphis, Tennessee where he played guitar and sang vocals during the 1920s. He teamed up with future wife Lizzie Douglas, a guitarist better known as Memphis Minnie, and their 1929 recording of the song "Bumble Bee" on the Columbia Records label was a hit.[2] In 1930, the couple moved to Chicago where they were an important part of the burgeoning blues scene. Following their divorce, McCoy teamed up with his brother to form a band known as the Harlem Hamfats that performed and recorded during the second half of the 1930s. In 1936, the Harlem Hamfats released a record with the song "The Weed Smoker's Dream" on it. McCoy later refined the tune, changed the lyrics and titled the new song "Why Don't You Do Right?" for Lil Green, who recorded it in 1941. It was covered a year later by both Benny Goodman and Peggy Lee, becoming Lee's first hit single. "Why Don't You Do Right?" remains a jazz standard and is McCoy's most enduring composition. At the outbreak of World War II Charlie McCoy entered the military, but a heart condition kept Joe McCoy from service. Out on his own, he created a band known as "Big Joe and his Rhythm" that performed together throughout most of the 1940s. The band again included his brother Charlie on mandolin and Robert Nighthawk on harmonica.[3] In 1950, at the age of 44, McCoy died of heart disease in Chicago, only a few months before his brother Charlie. They are both buried in Restvale Cemetery in Alsip, Illinois. Led Zeppelin vocalist Robert Plant took his and Memphis Minnie's recording of "When the Levee Breaks," which was in his personal collection, and presented it to guitarist Jimmy Page, who revamped it and slightly altered it lyrically, and help record it on Led Zeppelin's 1971 album, Led Zeppelin IV. In addition to those mentioned earlier, McCoy's songs have also been covered by Bob Dylan, John Mellencamp, The Ink Spots, Ella Fitzgerald, Jo Ann Kelly, Cleo Laine and A Perfect Circle. Memphis Minnie McCoy-Lawler (born Lizzie Douglas, June 3, 1897 in Algiers, Louisiana; died August 6, 1973 in Memphis, Tennessee) was an American Blues guitarist, vocalist, and composer. Born Lizzie Douglas in Algiers, Louisiana, Minnie was one of the most influential and pioneering female blues musicians and guitarists of all time. She recorded for forty years, almost unheard of for any woman in show business at the time and possibly unique among female blues artists. A flamboyant character who wore bracelets made of silver dollars, she was the biggest female blues singer from the early Depression years through World War II. One of the first blues artists to take up the electric guitar, in 1942, she combined her Louisiana-country roots with Memphis blues to produce her own unique country-blues sound; along with Big Bill Broonzy and Tampa Red, she took country blues into electric urban blues, paving the way for giants like Muddy Waters, Bo Diddley, Little Walter, and Jimmy Rogers to travel from the small towns of the south to the big cities of the north. She was married three times, and each husband was an accomplished blues guitarist: Kansas Joe McCoy (a.k.a. "Kansas Joe") later of the Harlem Hamfats, Casey Bill Weldon of the Memphis Jug Band, and Ernest "Little Son Joe" Lawlers.[1] Paul and Beth Garon's 1992 biography on Memphis Minnie, Woman With Guitar: Memphis Minnie's Blues, makes no mention of a marriage to Weldon, but only says that she recorded two sides with him, in November 1935, for Bluebird Records. It does describe the relationships and marriages to McCoy and Lawlers.[2] After learning to play guitar and banjo as a child, she ran away from home at the age of thirteen. She travelled to Memphis, Tennessee, playing guitar in nightclubs and on the street as Lizzie "Kid" Douglas. The next year, she joined the Ringling Brothers circus. Her marriage and recording debut came in 1929, to and with Kansas Joe McCoy, when a Columbia Records talent scout heard them playing in a Beale Street barbershop in their distinctive "Memphis style," and their song "Bumble Bee" became a hit.[3] In the 1930s she moved to Chicago, Illinois with Joe. She and McCoy broke up in 1935, and by 1939 she was with Little Son Joe Lawlers, with whom she recorded nearly 200 records. In the 1940s she formed a touring Vaudeville company. From the 1950s on, however, public interest in her music declined, and in 1957 she and Lawlers returned to Memphis. Lawlers died in 1961. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.