Tributes

Big Mama Thornton

Big Mama ThorntonWilla Mae ("Big Mama") Thornton (December 11, 1926 – July 25, 1984) was an American Texas blues, R&B singer, and songwriter. She was the original singer to record the hit song "Hound Dog" in 1952. The song was #1 on the Billboard R&B charts for seven weeks. The B-side was "They Call Me Big Mama," and the single sold almost two million copies. Three years later, Elvis Presley recorded the Rock 'n' roll version of the song. In a similar occurrence, she wrote and recorded "Ball n' Chain," which became a hit for her. Janis Joplin, a rock and roll singer from Texas, later recorded "Ball and Chain," and it became a huge success in the late 1960s.

Biography

Early life
Thornton was born in Montgomery, Alabama. Her introduction to music, as with many fellow blues legends, started in the Baptist church. The daughter of a minister, and her mother was a church singer. She and her six siblings began to sing at a very early age. Thornton's musical aspirations led her to leave Montgomery in 1941, after her mother's death, when she was just fourteen, and joined the Georgia-based Hot Harlem Revue. Her seven-year tenure with the Revue gave her valuable singing and stage experience and enabled her to tour the South. In 1948, settled in Houston, Texas, where she hoped to further her career as a singer. Willa Mae was also a self-taught drummer and harmonica player and frequently played both instruments onstage.

Career
Thornton began her recording career in Houston, signing a contract with Peacock Records in 1951. While working with another Peacock artist Johnny Otis, she recorded "Hound Dog," a song composers Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller had given her in Los Angeles.. Although it made her a star, she saw little of its profits. She continued to record for Peacock until 1957 and performed with R&B package tours with Junior Parker and Esther Phillips. Her career began to fade in the late '50s and early '60s. She left Houston and relocated in the San Francisco Bay Area, where she mostly played local blues clubs. In 1954, Thornton was one of two witnesses to the death of blues singer Johnny Ace.

In 1966 Thornton recorded Big Mama Thornton With The Muddy Waters Blues Band, with Muddy Waters guitar, Sammy Lawhorn (guitar); James Cotton (harmonica); Otis Spann (piano); Luther Johnson (bass guitar); and Francis Clay (drums). Song included, "Everything Gonna Be Alright", "Big Mama's Blues", "I'm Feeling Alright", Everything Gonna Be Alright", "Big Mama's Bumble Bee Blues", "Looking The World Over", 'Big Mama's Shuffle', and "Since I Fell For You", just to name a few.

Her Ball n' Chain album in 1968 was with Lightnin' Hopkins guitar, and Larry Williams vocals, included songs "Hound Dog", "Wade in the Water", "Little Red Rooster", "Ball n' Chain", "Money Taker", "Prison Blues". "Hound Dog" was written in 1952 for Thornton as a country blues tune written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, produced by Johnny Otis, and went to number one on the R&B chart.

Thornton's last album was Jail (1972) for Vanguard Records, vividly captures her charm during a couple of mid-'70s gigs at two northwestern prisons. She becomes the talented leader of a blues ensemble that features sustained jams from George "Harmonica" Smith, and guitarists B. Huston and Steve Wachsman, drummer Todd Nelson, saxophonist Bill Potter, bassist Bruce Sieverson, and pianist J.D. Nicholas.

Thornton played at the legendary Monterey Jazz Festival, '66 and '68, and the San Francisco Blues Festival in 1979. Appeared on stages from New York City's famed Apollo Theater in 1952, to the Kool Newport Jazz Festival in 1980. In 1965 she performed with the American Folk Blues Festival package in Europe.[10] While in England that year she recorded Big Mama Thornton in Europe and followed it up the next year in San Francisco with Big Mama Thornton with the Chicago Blues Band. Both albums came out on the Arhoolie label. Thornton continued to record for Vanguard, Mercury, and other small labels in the '70s and to work the blues festival circuit until death in 1984, the same year she was inducted into the Blues Foundation's Hall of Fame. She was nominated for the Blues Music Awards six times during her career. In addition to "Ball n' Chain" and "They Call Me Big Mama," Thornton wrote twenty other blues songs.

Death
On July 25, 1984, Willie Mae Thornton died in Los Angeles of heart and liver complications, probably brought on by years of alcohol abuse which had reduced the one-time 350-pound "Big Mama" Thornton to a mere ninety-five pounds. Johnny Otis conducted her funeral services, and she was laid to rest in the famous Inglewood Park Cemetery, along with a number of notable people, including entertainment and sports personalities.

Legacy
As an influence over the music and musicians which followed her, her importance cannot be overstated. Her name and legacy will forever remain amongst the very greatest of blues legends. Thornton's mighty voice, take-no-guff attitude, and incendiary stage performances influenced generations of blues and rock singers and carried on the tradition of tough "blues mamas" like Bessie Smith, Memphis Minnie, and Ma Rainey.

In 2007, in the movie "Hounddog", singer Jill Scott played "Big Mama" Thornton