Good Morning Little Schoolgirl

John Lee “Sonny Boy” Williamson

John Lee’s First Big Hit

This recording was made at John Lee “Sonny Boy” Williamson’s first session in 1937 featuring John Lee Williamson (vocal and harmonica) with Big Joe Williams and Robert Nighthawk (guitars).

Sonny first recorded for Bluebird Records in 1937 and his first recording, “Good Morning, School Girl”, became a standard. He was hugely popular among black audiences throughout the southern United States as well as in the midwestern industrial cities such as Detroit and his home base in Chicago, and his name was synonymous with the blues harmonica for the next decade. Other well-known recordings of his include “Sugar Mama Blues”, “Shake the Boogie”, “You Better Cut That Out”, “Sloppy Drunk”, “Early in the Morning” and “Stop Breaking Down” and “Hoodoo Hoodoo” aka “Hoodoo Man Blues”. In 1947 “Shake the Boogie” made #4 on Billboard’s Race Records chart. Williamson’s style influenced a large number of blues harmonica performers, including Billy Boy Arnold, Junior Wells, Sonny Terry, Little Walter, and Snooky Pryor among many others. He was the most widely heard and influential blues harmonica player of his generation. His music was also influential on many of his non-harmonica playing contemporaries and successors, including Muddy Waters (who had played guitar with Williamson in the mid-1940s) and Jimmy Rogers (whose first recording in 1946 was as a harmonica player, performing an uncanny imitation of Williamson’s style); Rogers later recorded Williamson’s songs “My Little Machine” and “Sloppy Drunk” on Chess Records, and Waters recorded “Good Morning Little Schoolgirl” in September 1963 for his Chess Folk Singer LP and again in the 1970s when he moved to Johnny Winter’s Blue Sky label on CBS.

Really The Blues is sponsored by Jazz on the Tube
Click here to Support US