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Big Mama Thornton: About

Big Mama Thornton

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Catalog Link: Rock-And-Roll Woman by Meredith Ochs
Link to Stronger Than Dirt (music album) by Big Mama Thornton in Hoopla
Link to Jail (music album) by Big Mama Thornton in Hoopla
Link to The Complete Vanguard Recordings (Music album) by Big Mama Thornton in Hoopla
Link to Big Mama Thornton with the Muddy Waters Blues Band (Music Album) in Freegal Music

Who was Willie Mae "Big Mama" Thornton?

Big Mama Thornton (born December 11, 1926, Ariton, Alabama, U.S.—died July 25, 1984, Los Angeles, California) was an influential American singer and songwriter whose gritty vocals and instrumental style had tremendous influence on blues, R&B, and rock and roll. Overlooked by white audiences during her lifetime, Thornton’s work inspired imitation by Elvis Presley and Janis Joplin, who recorded popular cover versions of Thornton’s “Hound Dog” and “Ball and Chain,” respectively.

The daughter of a minister, Thornton was introduced to church music at an early age. She was inspired by classic early blues singers such as Bessie Smith and Memphis Minnie. A skilled singer and dancer and a self-taught drummer and harmonica player, she toured the American South and the Chitlin Circuit as a member of Sammy Green’s Hot Harlem Revue during the 1940s. Settling in Houston in 1948, she came under the influence of blues greats Lightnin’ Hopkins, Lowell Fulson, Junior Parker, and Clarence (“Gatemouth”) Brown.

In the early 1950s Thornton began performing with bandleader Johnny Otis, with whom she recorded many songs for Peacock Records. These include the Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller composition “Hound Dog,” a number one R&B hit on the Black charts for Thornton in 1953 and an even bigger pop hit in 1956 for Presley, whose rock-and-roll version owed much to Thornton’s original. Reportedly, Thornton was paid only $500 for her recording, whereas Presley’s version reaped him immense fame and much greater financial rewards.

As interest in blues declined, Thornton ceased recording but continued to perform in the San Francisco Bay area, where she came to the attention of Joplin, whose late 1960s version of the Thornton-written “Ball and Chain” revived interest in the blues singer called “Big Mama” because of her girth and larger-than-life voice and stage presence. Though she resented Presley’s success with her song “Hound Dog,” Thornton held much greater respect for Joplin, perhaps because Joplin was more vocal about acknowledging her artistic debt to Thornton. Continue reading at Britannica

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