The Harlem Hamfats

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Weed smokers dream 00:00 Tools
Weed Smoker's Dream 00:00 Tools
When The Sun Goes Down In Harlem 00:00 Tools
Let's Get Drunk and Truck 00:00 Tools
The garbage man 00:00 Tools
Oh red 00:00 Tools
Oh Red! 00:00 Tools
The Weed Smoker's Dream (Why Don't You do Right?) 00:00 Tools
Oh! Red 00:00 Tools
Black Gal, You Better Use Your Head 00:00 Tools
Root hog or die 00:00 Tools
Hamfat swing 00:00 Tools
Gonna Pitch A Boogie Woogie 00:00 Tools
Oh Red (1936) 00:00 Tools
Hallelujah joe ain't preachin' no more 00:00 Tools
We Gonna Pitch a Boogie Woogie 00:00 Tools
Growling dog 00:00 Tools
Southern Blues 00:00 Tools
Little Girl 00:00 Tools
Move your hand 00:00 Tools
What You Gonna Do? 00:00 Tools
Let Me Feel It 00:00 Tools
Tempo Di Bucket 00:00 Tools
Rosetta Blues 00:00 Tools
My Daddy Was A Lovin' Man 00:00 Tools
You Got To Go When The Wagon Comes 00:00 Tools
You Got The Devil To Pay 00:00 Tools
What you gonna do 00:00 Tools
Jam Jamboree 00:00 Tools
She's Gone Again 00:00 Tools
Garbage Man (The Call of the Freaks) 00:00 Tools
The Weed Smoker's Dream (Why Don't You Do Right) 00:00 Tools
Lake providence blues 00:00 Tools
Bad luck man 00:00 Tools
Live and die for you 00:00 Tools
Black Gal You Better Use You Head 00:00 Tools
If You're A Viper 00:00 Tools
Black gal you better use your head 00:00 Tools
My Garbage Man 00:00 Tools
Don't Start No Stuff 00:00 Tools
I Feel Like Going To Town 00:00 Tools
The Weed Smoker's Dream (Why Don't You Do R 00:00 Tools
I'm Cuttin' Out 00:00 Tools
The Weed Smoker's Dream (Why D 00:00 Tools
Mellow little devil 00:00 Tools
Weed Smokers' Dream April 1936 00:00 Tools
New Oh Red! 00:00 Tools
You Done Tore Your Playhouse Down 00:00 Tools
Baby Don't you Tear My Clothes 00:00 Tools
The Weed Smokers Dream 00:00 Tools
My Daddy Was A Lovin Man 00:00 Tools
Sales Tax On It 00:00 Tools
I Feel Like A Millionaire 00:00 Tools
If You Want To Live 00:00 Tools
The Candy Man 00:00 Tools
We Gonna Pitch A Boogie Woogie (Take A) 00:00 Tools
Let’s Get Drunk And Truck 00:00 Tools
Let Your Linen Hang Low 00:00 Tools
Hallelujah Joe 00:00 Tools
Jam Jamborree 00:00 Tools
Sales Tax On It (But It's the Same Thing) 00:00 Tools
Who Done It? 00:00 Tools
You better use your head 00:00 Tools
What's My Baby Doin? 00:00 Tools
Weed Smokers Dream - Digitally Re-Mastered 00:00 Tools
Weed Smokers Dream (Why Don't You Do Now) 00:00 Tools
She's Trickin' Me 00:00 Tools
Save Me Some 00:00 Tools
What's My Baby Doin'? 00:00 Tools
Time's A Wastin' 00:00 Tools
Hoodooin' Woman 00:00 Tools
We're Gonna Pitch a Boogie Woogie 00:00 Tools
Weedsmokers Dream 00:00 Tools
It Was Red 00:00 Tools
Root Hag Or Die 00:00 Tools
I'm So Glad 00:00 Tools
We Gonna Pitch A Boogie Woogie (Take C) 00:00 Tools
She's A Mellow Mother For You 00:00 Tools
Ooh-Wee Babe 00:00 Tools
Weed Smokers' Dream 4/36 00:00 Tools
Hamfats Swing 00:00 Tools
Down In Shady Lane 00:00 Tools
Keep It Swinging Round And Round 00:00 Tools
It Will Never Happen Again 00:00 Tools
My Old Lady Blues 00:00 Tools
I'd Rather Be With You 00:00 Tools
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The Harlem Hamfats was a Chicago jazz band formed in 1936. Initially, they mainly provided backup music for jazz and blues singers, such as Johnny Temple, Rosetta Howard, and Frankie Jaxon for Decca Records, but when their first record "Oh Red" became a hit, it secured them a Decca contract for fifty titles. They launched a successful recording career performing danceable music. The group was not from Harlem nor were they "hamfats". The name 'hamfat' derives from early 20th century slang in which the word was used to designate something as second-rate or a poor substitute. There is some disagreement about the roots of the word. Some believe it refers to a 'hamfat' cut of meat, which was cheaper and of poorer quality than the lean part of the ham. It has also been suggested that hamfat was used by poor country boys to grease the cork on their instruments, as opposed to the city slickers, who could easily find and afford cork grease.[citation needed] Others hold that it refers to a method black face comedians had of adhering burnt cork makeup with hamfat. Regardless, the name was most likely adopted in a spirit of facetiousness, since by all measurable standards the band members were talented musicians. Despite their name, the Hamfats were based in Chicago, and were put together by record producer and entrepreneur J. Mayo Williams simply for the purpose of making records - perhaps the first group to be so created. None of the members of the band were actually from New York. "Kansas" Joe McCoy (guitar, vocals) and his brother "Papa" Charlie McCoy (guitar, mandolin) were from Mississippi; Herb Morand (trumpet, vocals), John Lindsay (bass), and Odell Rand (clarinet) were from New Orleans; Horace Malcolm (piano), Freddie Flynn (drums) and Pearlis Williams (drums) were from Chicago. The diverse geographical backgrounds of the musicians played a strong role in the band's sound, which blended blues, dixieland and swing jazz. Led by Morand and Joe McCoy, the main songwriters, the group initially provided instrumental backing to Williams' stable of artists, including Frankie Jaxon, Rosetta Howard, and Johnny Temple. They were perhaps the first example of a studio recording band becoming an act in their own right[4] and recorded extensively. Their first major hits were "Oh! Red", recorded in April 1936, and "Let's Get Drunk And Truck" (originally recorded by Tampa Red), recorded in August of the same year. "Oh! Red" was popular enough to be covered by Count Basie, The Ink Spots, Blind Willie McTell, various Western swing bands, and, later, Howlin' Wolf. Some of their other recordings, such as "We Gonna Pitch A Boogie Woogie", more clearly presage the later rhythms of rock and roll. Their most recognizable work may be the modern jazz tune "Why Don't You Do Right?", which was written by Joe McCoy and included on their 1936 record under the title "The Weed Smoker's Dream". The song had numerous drug references. The lyrics were later changed and the tune refined. Lil Green recorded it as "Why Don't You Do Right", a tune about a conniving mistress and her broke lover, in 1941, and it was later recorded by Peggy Lee with the Benny Goodman Orchestra. By 1939, singer Morand had returned to New Orleans, and changing fashions had made their sound less commercially attractive. The Harlem Hamfats were not thought to be the most innovative group of the time, and many of the band's original works dealt heavily with sex, drugs and alcohol, which may have hindered their music from being more widely available. However, as a small group playing entertaining music primarily for dancing they are considered an important contributor to 1930s jazz, and their early riff-based style would help pave the way for Louis Jordan's small group sound a few years later, rhythm and blues, and later rock and roll Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.