Eddie King & Mae Bee Mae

About Eddie King & Mae Bee Mae

The appearance of this first album by the brother and sister headed band of Eddie King / Mae Bee Mae is compelling evidence of the musical riches that can still be found in dozens of small bars in the heart of working class black areas on Chicago´s South and west sides. There, innumerable acts toil year after year in obscurity and rarely if ever get recorded, but many possess the talent that merit having their music being saved for posterity. King and Mae have that talent. Eddie King with his engaging vocals and B.B. King-style guitar and sister Mae with her powerful gospelized-blues vocals are veteran West Siders who perform a kind of music that blends striking blues licks, soul emoting, and gospel testifying and make all these varying approaches seem like one marvelous blues tradition. That they will jump from the urban blues of Albert King, to the hard southern soul of Ann Peebles, to the nitty gritty blues of their original "He´ll drain you up" reflects the interests of their audiences who in their listening do not make (and never have made) genre-separating distinctions. On this album, produced by Chicago blues authority Steve wisner, Eddie King and Mae Bee Mae take the listener to a dimly-lit smoke-filled tavern on the West Side with a vigorous exuberant style of blues and blues-based music that captures the very essence of Chicago bar-band blues today. Eddie King was born Edward Lewis Davis Milton, on April 21, 1938, in Talledga, Alabama. Mae Bee Mae, younger than Eddie, was born Mary Lou Milton near Linevile, Alabama where she and Eddie were raised in an environment steeped in musical experiences. Their father, Oscar Louis Milton, a minister, played guitar and harmonica, and their mother, Lilly Mae Milton, an evangelist, played guitar and organ. The father was known to play blues now and then. No doubt inspired by the example of his parents, Eddie, while still in his adolescence learned guitar from an older brother, Cecil Calvin, and a sister, Geneva (there were eight sisters and five brothers in the family). From several of the brothers and sisters, the parents formed a gospel ensemble called the Pilgrim Travelers Junior, and in the group were Eddie and Mary Lou (who was only five when she started). She says, “I’ve been singing ever since I could remember calling my mama’s name. Basically the older ones in our family was in the Pilgrim Travelers Junior, but I was so lit up with the spirit my mother couldn’t hold me back from coming in. ‘Cause I would light the whole group up.” The Pilgrim Travelers Junior broadcasted live on radio in Anniston, Alabama, and also performed in Birmingham (long a gospel hotbed), Tuscaloosa, and other ciyies and towns in the state. The family was shattered in 1950 when the mother died. An aunt in Louisville, Kentucky, took in some of the children, including Eddie and Mary Lou. Then around 1954 an uncle took Eddie and Mary Lou and some of the other children to Chicago, but Eddie and the kids soon found themselves in foster homes. Eventually Eddie stayed with Mary Lou and her husband Percell Smith No move could have been more conducive to young Eddie´s musical development than his settling on the west side, where he was exposed to a vibrant and flourishing blues scene. Eddie King needed blues materiel to work with and J.O.B. did not help him in that regard. The J.O.B. records were issued under the name Eddie King. He had adopted the name during the 1950´s after a popular Chicago orchestra leader of the same name, whom the guitarist says "adopted me as his son and influenced me". In 1961 personal tragedy hit Eddie and Bessie Milton, when their five children died in a fire on the south side. King quit Little Mac around this time and began working with harp player Willie C. Cobbs in a band with Willie Black on bass and Left Hand Frank on 2nd guitar. One spot they worked until the middle of 1963 was the Blue Flame (809 E. Oakland) on the South side. King often went by the name of Little Eddie King. Earlier, in 1961, King and Cobbs went on a southern tour, but got stranded in Arkansas. King "wound up pickin´ cotton" for a while until he could get enough money to return to Chicago." King rejoined Little Mac briefly and then formed his own band, Eddie King and the Kingsmen, playing at such places as the Blue Flame and Ralph´s Show lounge. Using only three pieces - Willie Black on bass, Robert Whitehead on drums, and King on guitar - the band played a mixture of pop rock´n´roll and blues (Sam Cooke, Chuck Berry, Ray Charles, Temptations, etc.) Around this time, the mid 1960’s, King’s younger sister Mary Lou Smith, began sitting in with his band, but she was a neophyte professionally. She had gotten married when she was quite young and was quickly burdened with a family (ultimately to include ten children). Although eager, she was at first a bit shy about performing which is how she acquired her stage name, Mae Bee Mae or Mae Bee May. Related King, “she’d come in and I’d say, ‘you coming up?’- ‘Maybe I will, maybe I won’t’ was her reply, so I started calling her ‘Mae Bee Mae’.” King in the mid-1960´s was doing some recording for Willie Dixon. One song was eventually issued on a Spivey LP (1009), "Korea Blues", a remake of "Love you baby". but it was miscredited to J.B Lenoir. According to Mae (Eddie´s sister), Dixon wanted her to record "Wang dang doodle" before Koko Taylor. Eddie and Mae cut their first record together in 1967 for Chicago record man Leo Austell:" Are you pushed to love" b/w "Please Mr. D.J.", released on the Conduc label. The single, considerably better than his J.O.B. efforts, was more expertly produced. King had progressed to become a solid vocalist and he wails to good effect, while Mae provides solid answering leads. "Are you pushed to love" got Eddie and Mae on a prestigious Regal Theater Show along with Gatemouth Brown and Junior Parker, among others on an extensive blues bill. There King first met Koko Taylor, who would play a big role in his career in subsequent years. In 1968, Eddie and Mae were discovered playing in a club on 63rd Street by a lady looking for bands to tour military bases and other outposts in Alaska. Says King, "She went all around town to try to find a band and we were the best she heard. She picked my group out of all of them. We went to Alaska twice. The first time was to Fairnbanks. We stayed up there Christmas through New Years, about two weeks. The second time, we went to Anchorage. Made good money!" Mae Bee Mae accompanied the band on the second tour, and gleefully relates, "I made so much money I had to sew it up in the lining of my coat!" By the end of the 1960´s, Eddie King and Mae Bee Mae went their separate ways. King in 1971 teamed up with his old partner Willie Cobbs, and for a while broadcasted live from the Salt " Pepper ballroom (4740 W.Madison) on the West Side. The radio show was that of the club owner, deejay Big Bill Hill, on WOPA. During the mid-1970´s, King worked as Koko Taylor´s guitarist and traveled all over the country with her working alongside his old partner, bassist Bob Anderson, and his brother-in-law, drummer Vince Chappelle. King was on two tours of duty with Taylor, the second one ending in late 1975, just after she recorded her first album for Alligator. In 1976 King was playing at the Show & Tell (1390 W.Lake) on the West Side with an all-star band led by drummer Willie Williams that included Willie Black on bass, Eddie C. Campbell on second lead guitar, and Eddie´s brother, vocalist Checker King, sitting in from time to time. Meanwhile Mae Bee Mae was playing the club circuit during the early 1970’s. Her most valuable experience was working with Lonnie Brooks at the Avenue Lounge (2841 W. Madison) on the West Side. “When I worked with him,” says Mae, “I had to go more or less on my own. I learned how to sing through Lonnie Brooks. I used to lean on Eddie, but Lonnie would try to bug me because he wanted to be a star. I leaned on Abb Locke, the saxophone player. He taught me about going off and really doing my thing. According to Brooks, however, Mae came to him fully developed as an artist. Says he, “she was a little shy, but she was already a good singer; she didn’t need any help from me or my band.” Mae sang at two other West Side clubs around the same time, the 1815 Club (1815 W. Roosevelt) and the White Stallion (4000 W. Taylor). Mae Bee Mae around 1976 went into the studio again for Leo Austell recording such titles as “Avalanche Of Love” and “Can Plain Jane Find Happiness.” But nothing came of the session because Mae quit in the middle of it after she heard the calling of god. She followed her brother to Peoria and became a minister in a Pentecostal congregation. Eddie played guitar in the choir. By the early 1980´s, both King and Mae had again (after playing gospel music for a while) become involved in secular music, working with their cousin Wilbert "Sir Lucky King" Peterson´s band around Peoria. Mae then returned to Chicago and King joined the Appeal Show Band (later to become Sting II and currently the Riverside Blues Band). In 1985 King´s fortunes turn. He lost his job and house, and decided to return to Chicago, where old friends Louise Wilson and Johnny Drummer helped him land back on his feet. He lands a job as second guitar with the Little Smokey Smothers band at the Del Morocco on Lake and Halstead on the West Side. Sister Mae also begins "guesting" in the group. At this little matchbox-size bar Wisner sees King and Mae and offers them the opportunity to make an album (The Blues Has Got Me). At the same time their old West Side friend, harpist Big Wheeler, was booking them at another West Side bar called Pauline´s. The recording session cast came from King’s and Mae’s recent associates. From Sting 2, King recruited guitarist lucky King, drummer James mason, bassist Joe Roland, and lead and rhythm guitarist Slim Moore. From the gigs at Pauline’s, Big Wheeler was added. This observer first sees King and Mae recording this album one cold blizzardly night in December at the Soto Recording Studio in suburban Evanston. They knocked my socks off. King bring his classic B.B. King-style licks to three well-selected covers, Little Milton’s “Love At First Sight”, Albert King’s “Laundromat Blues”, and “B.B. King’s “The Woman I Love”. The latter, an old chestnut for sure, is given fresh life in a new arrangement that has the band scatting the lyrics to great effect. King contributes an original with “The Blues Has got Me”, a slow workout that gives guitarist Slim Moore ample room to shine on this precise and subtle picking. The piece the resistance is a cover of Bill Coday’s hard soul hit from 1971, “When You Find A Fool”, transformed by King and the band into a hard driving and bluesy number. In effect they turn on a soul number into an outstanding bar blues workout. It’s soon Mae Bee Mae’s turn in the studio, and she thinks it’s showtime on the West Side. Decked out in a sultry cocktail dress, and glittering pumps she begins to perform, sashaying around the mike while belting the blues! We in the control booth are her transfixed audience and are indeed transported to club atmospherics. In her gritty robust voice she makes an old Elmore James downhome number her own as “The Twelve Year Old Girl”. Then as the band churns out a pumping rhythm she snarls out the lyrics of the Ann Peebles’ classic hit “99 Pounds” Mae slightly changes the title of Mable John’s “Able Mable” with a new dynamic version called “Able Mae Bee”, which is giving a true blues punch by Slim Moore. In “Hungry Country Girl”, Mae takes an old tradition in blues, food as a sexual metaphor, to magnificently revive Lucille Spann’s 1972 number “Country Girl Returns”. To hear Mae sing about her chitlins, her big yellow yams, her buttermilk and cornbread, you don’t lust for food. The earthy approach continues with “He’ll Drain On You”, a Mae composition destined to become a blues staple. With King’s ominous sounding guitar and Wheeler’s squalling harp, the song is a great slow drag blues. As far as Mae’s singing goes, KoKo Taylor move over. Everything is done with an unmistakable blues feeling. King confesses that no matter what he has tried to play. “It still sounds bluesy”, and his voice is still “a bluesy voice”. Nonetheless this album probably could not have been done a decade ago. A blues producer then would have failed to see that King’s and Mae’s music is a seamless whole blending gospel, soul, even rock ‘n’ roll, and traditional blues into their music as they know as the blues. He would have filtered out everything that didn’t appear to be “blues”. Today the international audience is more sophisticated in their understanding of Chicago bar band blues traditional, so that Wisner wisely chose to preserve King’s and Mae’s music as he heard it on the West Side. After the completion of the album in December 1985, events again separated Eddie and Mae. King rejoined Koko Taylor´s band in the spring of 1986, and Mae joined her husband near Atlanta, Georgia.

Taken from Last.fm

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