Josh
White, like Leadbelly, was a country blues singer from the early part of the 20th
century who found new life and success as a part of the Sixties folk boom.
White was born in Greenville, South Carolina, in 1915, and made his recording
debut in 1932 with “Baby Won’t You Doodle-Doo-Doo.”
White
recorded for number of labels including Perfect and Melotone in the Thirties
during his initial incarnation as a country blues performer. In the early
Forties White’s music became some of the first African-American music to find
acceptance among a white audience when he scored a million-selling single with
his song, “One Meatball,” in 1944.
By the
Forties White had become a civil rights leader, and in fact, became a close
confidant of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. During the decade, White became
the first African-American performer to perform at previously segregated clubs,
and he later became the first folk/blues performer to appear on a U.S. postage
stamp. White also appeared on Broadway as Blind Lemon Jefferson in the musical,
“John Henry.” White’s appearance on Broadway brought him to the attention of the
New York City folk crowd which at that time included Woody Guthrie, Leadbelly
and Burl Ives.
By the
late Fifties, White was a fixture in the Folk revival and was recording more
folk-oriented material. White continued performing in folk music festivals and
toured the world up until his death, in 1969.
The best
collections of White’s music include, “Chain Gang” (1940), “Ballads and Blues”
(1946), and the great collection of civil rights tunes, “Southern Exposure: An
album of Jim Crow Blues Sung by Josh White” (1941).
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