Musician, Singer, Songwriter December 11, 1926 - July 25, 1984
Big Mama Thornton - Photo:copyright © Charles Sawyer
The story of Willa Mae "Big Mama" Thornton is a painful illustration of the obstacles and ambiguities faced historically by female artists and by artists of color. Born in 1926 in Montgomery, Alabama, Willie Mae Thornton left home in 1941 at age 14 to join the Georgia-based Hot Harlem Revue. One of seven children. Her father was a minister, and her mother sang in the church. The church's early musical influence helped her win first place in an amateur singing show. Sammy Green of Atlanta saw her there, and she went to play with his "Hot Harlem Review." In 1948 she moved to Houston, where she lived for a few years. She sang and wrote songs for performances in the local clubs. Thornton only stayed a while, but she was influenced by Texas, and she contributed heavily to the Texas blues tradition. Willie Mae, Little Esther, and Mel Walker were a package show for Johnny Otis in the early 1950s. They became well known and headed to New York to play the Apollo in 1952. Willie Mae, as the opening act, sang the Dominoe's hit "Have Mercy Baby," among others. She was a huge success and headlined the show the next night at the Apollo. The nickname "Big Mama" came from somebody after the first show, and it stuck. She was a large, tall woman, and the name fit well with her vocal tension and coarseness. In 1951 Don Robey signed Thornton to his Peacock Records label.
Her 1952 recording of Hound Dog went to number one on the rhythm and blues charts, and later became a hit for Elvis Presley. Despite Big Mama's frequent claims to authorship of this song, she was unable to prove it in court. She received $500 for her recording and never collected any subsequent royalties from later cover versions. Big Mama continued touring and recording for thirty years and enjoyed a brief resurgence of popularity in the sixties when Janis Joplin recorded Thornton's blues classic Ball 'n' Chain, but none of her later work ever matched the success of Hound Dog. Willie Mae became an instant star, but she didn't see much money from the songs. She played some drums and harmonica which she learned from Junior Parker. Big Mama flew from Houston in 1953 back to New York for Peacock-Duke records to the "Hound Dog" sessions. The B-side was "They Call Me Big Mama," and the single sold almost two million copies. She received one check for the single in her life for only $500, even though Elvis Presley went on to make "Hound Dog" a rock and roll classic three years later. In a similar occurrence, she wrote and recorded "Ball and Chain," which became a hit for her. Janis Joplin, a rock and roll singer from Texas, later recorded "Ball and Chain," and it became a huge success in the late 1960s. Thornton left Houston in early 1960s and moved to the San Francisco Bay area. Big Mama toured with shows in America and Europe. She played the Monterey Jazz Festival throughout the 1960s and 1970s.
Outspokenly bitter about what she perceived as the injustices done to her by the music business, Big Mama cultivated her image as a tough, outspoken eccentric, often dressing as a man on-stage toward the end of her career. She valiantly tried to recreate her past glory, but was often too drunk or too ill to perform. On July 25, 1984, paramedics responding to an anonymous call found Big Mama dead on the floor of her Los Angeles boarding house room, penniless and alone at age 57. Her style captured the attention of many fans through the years because she was rough and beautiful and crazy yet controlled in her singing. Many companies recorded her work, such as Mr. Strachwitz's record company, Arhoolie Records, who released Big Mama Thornton in Europe (1966) and Big Mama Thornton with the Chicago Blues Band (1967). On the latter, Muddy Waters, Sam (Lightnin') Hopkins, and Otis Spawn appeared. In 1968 Ball and Chain compiled separate blues songs by Willie Mae, Hopkins, and Larry Williams. In the early 1970s she recorded Saved for Pentagram Records and She's Back for Backbeat Label. Vanguard Records caught her twice in the latter half of the decade in two penitentiaries with Jail and again with Sassy Mama! She appeared again in New York in 1983 at the Newport Jazz Festival with Muddy Waters, B. B. King, and Eddie Cleanhead Vinson. The show was captured by Buddha records on The Blues-A Real Summit Meeting.
In her most recent book Blues Legacies and Black Feminism, Angela Davis explains how the tradition of black women blues singers represented by Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Billie Holiday "embodies not only an artistic triumph and aesthetic dominance over a hostile popular music industry but an unacknowledged proto-feminist consciousness within working-class black communities." Davis uncovers "the unmistakable assertion and uncompromising celebration of non-middle class, non-heterosexual social, moral and sexual values." Unfortunately Davis does not include the contributions of Big Mama Thornton in her analysis. Big Mama is among the last, if not the last, in the great tradition of black women blues singers. In her voice we hear echoes of Bessie Smith and Ma Rainey.
Her career began at the very end of the era of great female blues singers, and by the time she hit middle age, public interest had shifted away from her particular style of singing. In 1998, many women artists of color still struggle with some of the same issues that Big Mama faced. The opportunities for large, middle-aged women artists of color are still very limited. At some point, Big Mama gave in to bitterness and alcoholism. Thornton died of a heart attack on July 25, 1984, in Los Angeles, California. Her sensitive, down-to-earth voice was released one last time by Ace Records in the United Kingdom on a posthumous album titled Quit Snoopin' 'round My Door. She was inducted into the Blues Foundation's Hall of Fame in 1984. As a female in a male-dominated profession, Big Mama Thornton made an indelible mark on the music world with her Texas-sized voice and confident lyrics. Thornton was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1984 after her death.
Source: http://www.busyfingers.com/fundwomen/bigmama.html Paris 1972
Big Mama In Concert (Real Video) Music Sweet Little Angel Unlucky Girl Swing It On Home Little Red Rooster Hound Dog
One person has commented on this article.
Quote(1) Untitled 2007-08-17 12:04:02
Nice article and thanx for keeping her memory and contributions to music alive.
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