Peetie Wheatstraw

Peetie Wheatstraw

Infobox musical artist | Background = solo_singer | Instrument = Piano, Guitar
Name = Peetie Wheatstraw


Img_capt =
Birth_name = William Bunch
Born = birth date|1902|12|21|mf=y
Ripley, Tennessee, U.S.A.
Died = death date|1941|12|21|mf=y
St Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.
Genre = St Louis blues, blues
Instruments =
Years_active = 1930 - 1941
URL =

Peetie Wheatstraw (December 21, 1902 – December 21, 1941) was the name adopted by singer William Bunch, a greatly influential figure among 1930s blues singers. Although the only known picture of Bunch shows him holding a National brand tricone resonator guitar, he played the piano on most of his recordings.

Early life and career

Wheatstraw was born William Bunch in Ripley, Tennessee but was widely believed to have come from Arkansas. His body was shipped to Cotton Plant, Arkansas for burial, and fellow musician Big Joe Williams stated that this was his home town. [ Garon, Paul (1971). "The Devil's Son-in-Law. The Story of Peetie Wheatstraw and his Songs". Studio Vista. p. 7. SBN 289-70211.9]

The earliest biographical facts are those of fellow musicians such as Henry Townsend and Teddy Darby who remember Peetie moving to St Louis in the late 1920s. He was already a proficient guitarist, but a limited pianist. By the time Sunnyland Slim moved to St Louis in the early 1930s, Peetie was one of the most popular singers with an admired idiosyncratic piano style. [ Garon (ibid) pp.14-15.]

Wheatstraw began recording in 1930 and was so popular that he continued to record through the worst years of the Great Depression, when the numbers of blues records issued was drastically reduced. [ Dixon, R.M.W. & J. Godrich (1970). "Recording the Blues". Studio Vista. SBN 289-79829.9] However, he made no records between March 1932 and March 1934, a period in which he pefected his mature style.

For the rest of his life, he was one of the most recorded Blues singers and accompanists. His total output of 161 recorded songs was surpassed by only four pre-war Blues artists: Tampa Red, Big Bill Broonzy, Lonnie Johnson and Bumble Bee Slim (Amos Easton). [ Wald, Elijah. (2004). "Escaping the Delta. Robert Johnson and the Invention of the Blues". Amistad. p.41. ISBN 0-06-05247-8.] Among the clubs of St Louis and East St Louis his popularity was outstanding, rivalled only by Walter Davis. Despite rumours of his touring, there is little evidence that he worked outside these cities, except to make records. [Garon (ibid) p. 15.]

Persona

By the time William Bunch reached St Louis, he had discarded his name and crafted a new identity. The name "Peetie Wheatstraw" has been described by Blues scholar Paul Oliver as one that had well-rooted folk associations. [ Oliver, Paul. (1959). "The Devil's Son-in-Law. Peetie Wheatstraw". Reprinted in Oliver, Paul (1984). "Blues Off the Record. Thirty Years of Blues Commentary". The Baton Press. ISBN 0 85936 153 5.] Later writers have repeated this, while reporting that many uses of the name are copied from Bunch. Elijah Wald suggests that he may be the sole source of all uses of the name. [ Wald, Elijah. (ibid) p. 267.] It would have been in character for Bunch to invent a name with a whimsical folkloric flavour.

All but two of his records were issued as by "Peetie Wheatstraw, The Devil's Son-in-Law" or "Peetie Wheatstraw, The High Sheriff from Hell". [Dixon, Robert M.W., John Godrich, & Howard Rye (1997). "Blues & Gospel Records 1890-1943", Fourth Edition. Oxford. ISBN 0-19-81239-1] He composed several 'stomps' with lyrics projecting a boastful demonic persona to match these sobriquets. The writer Ralph Ellison knew him personally. He used both the name "Peetie Wheatstraw" and aspects of the demonic persona (but no biographical facts) to create a character in his novel Invisible Man. Elijah Wald suggests that Wheatstraw's demonic persona may have been the inspiration for Robert Johnson' s association with the Devil.

Most of Peetie's blues songs were not first-person boasts, but he sings with same confidence, humour and occasional menace. Blues singer Henry Townsend recalled that his real personality was very similar: "He was that kind of person. You know, a jive-type person." [ Garon, (ibid) p. 74] Blues critic Tony Russell updates the description: "Wheatstraw constructed a macho persona that made him the spiritual ancestor of rap artists." [Russell, Tony and Chris Smith (2006). The Penguin Guide to Blues Recordings. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-140-51384-1 ]

tyle

Peetie Wheatstraw operated in a community of musicians in St Louis and East St Louis who knew each other and performed with each other. He was also a recording star subject to the demands of record producers and the challenges of other stars. These forces created a consistency in his instrumental styles, which later critics have found uninteresting. Samuel Charter’s influential "The Country Blues" dismissed Wheatstraw and other recording stars of the period as tending to “a repetitious use of clichés and a monotonous accompaniment that was as unimaginative as their singing. [Charters, Samuel B. (1960). "The Country Blues". English Edition. P. 32. Michael Joseph. ] Tony Russell, while much more appreciative, warns that “anybody listening to long stretches of his recordings is likely to go stir-crazy”. [ Russel (ibid) p 697.]

Against this generic style Peetie projected instantly recognisable "trade marks". Most of the records on which he played piano, including his accompaniments to other singers, begin with the same eight-bar introduction. Much more distinctive was his vocal style, often described as ‘lazy’ because of his loose articulation, but better represented by Tony Russell as “gruff” and “clogged”. Most distinctive of all was his strangled semi-falsetto cry “Ooh, well, well” (with variations) interjected in the break of third line of the blues verse. According to Teddy Darby, one woman listener exclaimed, “Good God, why doesn’t that man yodel and be done with it?” [ Garon (ibid) p. 15.]

What distinguishes Peetie Wheatraw’s recordings most of all is the quality of his lyrics. Like other successful performers, he sang of the concerns of African Americans with rural roots but living in cities. Some of his most memorable songs deal with the Repeal of Prohibition, a New Deal WPA Project, and slum clearance for urban renewal. His “stomps” project a unique personality, boastful and demonic. His songs on more mundane themes are extraordinarily varied. His lyrics, though often carelessly crafted, are at their best direct and vivid. Wheatsraw's significance as a poet is discussed at length by Paul Garon. [ Garon (ibid)]

Wheatstraw's self-promotion swiftly paid off as he became a popular performer in East St. Louis, to the extent that he was asked to Chicago in 1930 to partake in recording sessions. He first entered the Vocalion Studios on August 13, 1930, and recorded a handful of numbers which included "Four O'Clock In The Morning" and "Tennessee Peaches Blues". Over the following decade, he would make several such treks, recording over 160 sides for the Vocalion, Decca and Bluebird labels.

Wheatstraw was known for his laid-back approach and adept singing and songwriting, though his instrumental talents were average at best. His songwriting appealed to working class minorities, due to their nature of the content—he often wrote about social issues such as unemployment and public assistance. There were also pieces about the immoral ways of loose women, and true to his own self-publicity, death and the supernatural. Almost all of his songs included his trademark "Ooh, well well", usually accentuated in the third verse, and this has been carried on by many subsequent bluesmen, most noteworthy today being R. L. Burnside.

On his records Wheatstraw is occasionally heard playing guitar, but he usually took to the piano and required a guitarist to play with him—among his collaborators were Kokomo Arnold, Lonnie Johnson, Charley Jordan, Papa Charlie McCoy and Teddy Bunn, in addition to pianist Champion Jack Dupree. On some of his last dates, Peetie Wheatstraw recorded within a jazz inspired framework, collaborating with Lil Hardin Armstrong and trumpeter Jonah Jones.

Influence

Wheatstraw's influence was enormous during the 1930s. Perhaps the most obvious example of Wheatstraw's impact can be seen in the writings of Robert Johnson, often considered the most important Blues figure of the era. Many of Johnson's own recordings were actually re-workings of other popular artists of the time, and he drew heavily from Wheatstraw's repertoire.

Death

Wheatstraw was still riding the crest of his success when he met his premature demise. On December 21, 1941, his 39th birthday, he and some friends decided to take a drive. They tried to entice Wheatstraw's friend, the blues singer Teddy Darby, but Darby's wife refused to let him join them. Wheatstraw was a passenger in the back seat when the Buick struck a standing freight train, instantly killing his two companions. Wheatstraw died of massive head injuries in the hospital some hours later. There is a legend that his death drew little attention, but the accident was fully reported in St Louis and East St Louis newspapers and obituaries appeared in the national music press. Down Beat led the front page for January 15 1942 with the story of the accident and an appreciation of Peetie's career under the headline Blues Shouter Killed After Waxing 'Hearseman Blues'. [Garon (ibid) pp. 100-103.]

References

External links

* [http://www.cascadeblues.org/History/PeetieWheatstraw.htm Peetie Wheatstraw at the Cascade Blues Association]
* [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/x.dll?p=amg&sql=B8e851v7jzzxa Allmusic entry]


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