Herman E. Johnson was was born on this day in 1909, and his story is befitting of the deep blues.
Not much information is available of Herman; I searched the internet and all I could find was [this] small biography:
Another of the many performers briefly illuminated by the spotlight of the folk-blues revival of the 1960s, Louisiana-born country bluesman Herman E. Johnson was the product of a highly religious family environment, a background which heavily informed the spiritual imagery which was a hallmark of his later work as a performer. His early adult years were spent in a fruitless search for steady work which led him from the country to the city and back again; he picked up the guitar around 1927 as a respite from jobs ranging from picking cotton to pouring concrete to working at a scrap metal yard. Eventually,Johnson landed work at the Esso refinery in Baton Rouge, where he worked for 15 years before being unexpectedly fired; scrambling to find work -- an experience memorably recalled in his song "Depression Blues" -- he finally was hired as a janitor at Southern University in nearby Scotlandville. He held the same job at the time of his lone recording session, cut in Baton Rouge by Dr. Harry Oster in 1961; after suffering a stroke in 1970, Johnson went into retirement, and died on February 2, 1975.
Scrounging around for work, settling to be a janitor and recording one session during that time, Herman really lived the blues.
Here's one of his songs called "Po' Boy", a real deep Louisiana Country Blues:
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.