(1930-1968)
(Written by Pete Welding, liner notes, Boss Blues Harmonica LP)
Little Walter could make his harp sound like a tenor sax, he was instrumental in
defining the sound that is now known as Chicago blues harp. Singer, composer,
bandleader and peerless harmonica virtuoso, Little Walter was unquestionably the
single finest blues artist to have been produced by the post war Chicago blues
movement. This is not to imply that his musical co-workers in that blues rich
city - Muddy Waters, Howling Wolf and Elmore James among others were of any
lesser importance or artistry, it's just that the great and powerful music of
Muddy, Wolf and Elmore was at the core Mississippi country blues that had been
brought to the city, where it gradually was modified and extended into the music
that has since become known as modern Chicago blues. On the other hand, Little
Walters music in virtually all its significant details was forged in the
crucible of the emerging and maturing postwar Chicago Blues. He was the first
great wholly modern bluesman, heir to no traditions other than those to which
he, with Muddy, so greatly contributed in the early 1950's. From the very start
Walter was a modernist, and a musical innovator who had little overt respect for
any tradition save that of his own making. In vain does one search his
recordings for any evidence of traditional influences or for traces, however
fugitive, of his sources or borrowings. They are simply not there. What is
there, on the other hand is pure Walter. If there had been any appreciable
influences on the development of his music, his own burning genius had long
since blurred, absorbed and transformed them bye the time he had begun to
record. Even his earliest known recordings, made about 1947, for a small Maxwell
Street record label, demonstrate his phenomenal instumental fluency and more
than a hint at the powerful, distinctive vocal style he was to perfect a few
years later. It was as a member of, and a vital contributor to the Muddy Waters
band that Walter was given full rein to stretch his wings, and it is a tribute
to Muddy's foresight and generosity of spirit that he early recognized Walter's
great talent and allowed him every opportunity and encouragement to develop it.
Muddy's band was always a great incubator of blues talent and Walter's is easily
the brightest jewel in the crown. Muddy had begun recording for CHESS in 1947
and had enjoyed some success the following year through a brilliant series of
records made with only his electric guitar and Ernest "BIG" Crawford's
percussive bass. Muddy then added second guitarist-drummer Leroy Foster, then
Walter on harmonica and finally, Jimmy Rogers on guitar, Foster then switching
to drums. By the time this group of musicians appeared on record in 1950, the
basic approach to modern ensemble blues had been fully shapped and refined,
thanks primarily to their extensive club experience. Certainly the music they
record was strong and breathtakingly vital. There is nothing tentative about the
music at all. Think of the records -Louisinna Blues, Long Distance Call, Honey
Bee, Howling Wolf, They Call Me Muddy Waters, Too Young To Know, She Moves Me,
Still A Fool, among others, and all of them deserved classics of the postwar
blues. None is less than remarkable and many are magnificent. Foremost among
their many virtues is the stunning level of the interplay among the musicians,
and the great feeling of spontaneity, the wonderful "aliveness" of these
records, that makes them so gripping. And one of he chief contributors to this
is Walter, whose darting, probing, swooping, fluent, ever appropriate harmonica
lines provide the perfect foil to Muddy's impassioned vocal and guitar efforts,
the harp underscoring, answering, extending, countering, echoing but always
enhancing them and in so doing imparting a wonderful sense of motion and energy
to the music. It was the fluent, responsive character of Walter's playing, no
less than the distinctive sound color of his amplified harp, which helped to
make Muddy's records of the early 1950's the magnificent achievements they were
and still are for that matter.It was inevitable of course that Walter would
leave Waters fold and strike out on his own and he took the step in 1952. Walter
was backed by guitarists David and Louis Myers and drummer Fred Below (known as
the Aces, this group had been working with Junior Wells), he made his first
records for the CHESS subsiduary CHECKER records. CHECKER 758, coupling the
magnificent instrumental Juke and the compelling voca blues Can't Hold Out Much
Longer, was an immediate hit in the rhythm and blues market and establised
Walter as an important recording and performing artist in his own right. This
record not only signalled the arrival of a major, widely popular blues artist
and illustrated the twin facets of Walter's talent, vocal and instrumental, but
it offered further evidence of a thoroughly original blues conception. There was
nothing casual or left to chance about either of the performances. Even Juke,
which bears strong evidence of a planned spontaneity in execution, which is
arranged in the sense that it provides for contrast through the use of "breaks"
in the fifth chorus. Then, Walter's constant approach to the songs first two
choruses is much to deliberate and controlled to be the result of mere chance.
The fact he follows this format in the final chorus well confirms this
impression.Even more remarkable is the vocal blues Can't Hold Out Much Longer.
This is a masterfully constructed piece of music in that it makes highly
interesting and original use of the standard 12 bar blues form. It follows an
ABB scheme, the second and third lines of each verse being used as a refrain,
and the first line consisting of four short phrases of text in which the song's
"story line" is advanced. This makes for fairly dense text constuction and
necessitates a quicker vocal delivery than is usual in the more common AAB 12
bar blues form. Actually this song is a slow blues, but thanks to Walters
ingenious construction, appears to be rather brisk tempoed. Walter apparently
found this an interesting way of structuring songs for he employed it,
occasionally with slight variations, on a number of his recordings, including
Your So Fine, You Better Watch Yourself, Tell Me Mama and Boom Boom (Out Go The
Lights). He also used it as the normal stop time "break" chorus on songs such as
Blues With A Feeling.To a man ever musician who worked with Walter feels the
experience to have added significantly to his musical knowledge, "Walter was
simply a person you could always learn something from, just by being around
him," recalled drummer Fred Below, a charter member of the Jukes who was
associated with Walter for a number of years. "He was always calling rehearsals
for us to go over new tunes or to tighten up on are old ones. And the funny
thing was, nobody ever complained about the time spent rehearsing. We were
learning, see? It was like Walter was running a school where you could really
learn something you were interested in. The beautiful thing was you check out
what you learned each day by playing in the club that night. And another funny
thing it seemed like Walter was always right." Fred Below is not alone in
considering his time spent with Walter to have been among the high points of his
professional experience. Virtually every man who worked as a member of Walters
band speaks with awe filled affecion of his relationship with him. In the period
1952 through 1968, when he died as the result of head injuries sustained in a
fight, Walter recorded in all about 100 titles for CHESS, of which slightly more
than half were isssued on record, invariably as singles. Walter is widely
regarded as the blues' greatest harmonica soloist, and there is no dening his
prodigious virtuosity on this humble instrument. In his hands it became a
strongly expressive blues voice of astonishing breadth and fluency, capable of
ranging from the subtlest of nuances to the most powerful full-throated shouts
and everything in between. Amplifying the instrument by means of a small
microphone held in his cuppped hands, Walter's harmonica took on a swooping
saxophone-like sound that was perfectly wedded to the distinctive, imaginative,
highly exiting character of his improvisations, derived as they were from
listening to jazz saxophonists and probably bop musicians. From his very first
to his very last record, Little Walter was unique amog post war blues artists.
From the outset he was a true original, a visionary musician whose natural mode
of expression was the modern electrically amplified emsemble blues, to the
development of which he had contributed so significantly. In the legacy of his
recordings he has enriched even further those traditions with some of the
finest, most perfectly achieved distillations of the art of modern blues ever
recorded. Through his transcendent innovative genius Little Walter , singer,
composer, bandleader and peerless harmonica virtuoso, helped to redefine and
reanimate the blues and in doing so earned a secure place among the very
greatest contributors to popular art America has given the world.