Vielen Dank an Hardi und die Mails von Bluesfans wie Marc Demuynck,
die sich eingehend mit JESSE MAE ROBINSON befassten.
Das Ergebnis der Recherchen: alles auf Anfang...
Die Tochter der Komponistin und Musikerin JESSE MAE ROBINSON,
June Lynch, gab durch, dass ihre Mutter NIE irgendwelche Songs als Sängerin
veröffentlicht hat:
Listening to "Rock'Em" Parts 1 & 2 by Jesse Mae Roberson
(sic) on Blaze 111 June Lynch shook her head: 'That doesn't sound
anything like my mother'. June Lynch stuck to her guns. 'My mother
never recorded, not even on her dubs'.
(Quelle: JESSIE MAE ROBINSON, Jim Dawson, in 'Juke Blues' (Nr. 22 -
Winter/Spring 1991)
Weiter:
The second and last discovery release was behind singer Jesse Mae Robinson
who Easter recalls played the Playboy circuit in Kansas and is not related in
any way to the singer, pianist and composer of the same name (which bears
out Jim Dawson's likewise assumption in his excellent article on the other
Texas-born Robinson in 'Juke Blues' (Nr. 22) - Winter/Spring 1991.
(Quelle: 'The Monte Easter Story' von Louis Opal Nations in 'Real Blues',
Nr. 17 - Februar/März 1999)
Marc schreibt:
I think at least part of the explanation is that there were at least two Jesse
Mae Robinsons. We all know the famous composer, whose daughter is June
Lynch. But there seems to have been another one who sang other people's
compositions, and appears to have recorded fpr RIH (1951 with Eddie Beale),
Discovery (1952: with Monte Easter), with the Dicky Robinson band in 1961,
perhaps for dra (as just Jessie Mae) in 1962, and for Melic in 1963. She may also
have recorded as Jesse Mae Roberson for Blaze around 1960. All of these seem
to be L.A. sessions. I am by no means certain that all of the above are by the
same person.
(Quelle: Marc Demuynck; Mail an Hardi; 23. Februar 2019)
die sich eingehend mit JESSE MAE ROBINSON befassten.
Das Ergebnis der Recherchen: alles auf Anfang...
Die Tochter der Komponistin und Musikerin JESSE MAE ROBINSON,
June Lynch, gab durch, dass ihre Mutter NIE irgendwelche Songs als Sängerin
veröffentlicht hat:
Listening to "Rock'Em" Parts 1 & 2 by Jesse Mae Roberson
(sic) on Blaze 111 June Lynch shook her head: 'That doesn't sound
anything like my mother'. June Lynch stuck to her guns. 'My mother
never recorded, not even on her dubs'.
(Quelle: JESSIE MAE ROBINSON, Jim Dawson, in 'Juke Blues' (Nr. 22 -
Winter/Spring 1991)
Weiter:
The second and last discovery release was behind singer Jesse Mae Robinson
who Easter recalls played the Playboy circuit in Kansas and is not related in
any way to the singer, pianist and composer of the same name (which bears
out Jim Dawson's likewise assumption in his excellent article on the other
Texas-born Robinson in 'Juke Blues' (Nr. 22) - Winter/Spring 1991.
(Quelle: 'The Monte Easter Story' von Louis Opal Nations in 'Real Blues',
Nr. 17 - Februar/März 1999)
Marc schreibt:
I think at least part of the explanation is that there were at least two Jesse
Mae Robinsons. We all know the famous composer, whose daughter is June
Lynch. But there seems to have been another one who sang other people's
compositions, and appears to have recorded fpr RIH (1951 with Eddie Beale),
Discovery (1952: with Monte Easter), with the Dicky Robinson band in 1961,
perhaps for dra (as just Jessie Mae) in 1962, and for Melic in 1963. She may also
have recorded as Jesse Mae Roberson for Blaze around 1960. All of these seem
to be L.A. sessions. I am by no means certain that all of the above are by the
same person.
(Quelle: Marc Demuynck; Mail an Hardi; 23. Februar 2019)
Anhänge an diesem Beitrag
Dateiname: | Robinson21.jpg |
Dateigröße: | 63.37 KB |
Titel: | Robinson21.jpg |
Heruntergeladen: | 174 |