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King Of The One Man Bands (B)

115.5K streams

115,515

Top 60 Classics - The Very Best of Joe...

85.3K streams

85,341

King Of The One Man Bands (A)

50.2K streams

50,169

The Be-Bob Boy (with Walter Horton and...

25.6K streams

25,617

Boogie in the Park

18.6K streams

18,612

Boogie in the Park

2.5K streams

2,496

When I´m Gone

1.8K streams

1,796

We All Gotta Go Sometime / She May Be ...

We All Gotta Go Sometime (Remastered)

Sun Records Originals: We All Gotta Go...

Biography

Joe Hill Louis created quite a racket as a popular one-man blues band around Memphis during the 1950s. If not for his tragic premature demise, his name would surely be more widely revered. Lester (or Leslie) Hill ran away from home at age 14, living instead with a well-heeled Memphis family. A fight with another youth that was won by young Hill earned him the "Joe Louis" appellation. Harp came first for the multi-instrumentalist; by the late '40s, his one-man musical attack was a popular attraction in Handy Park and on WDIA, the groundbreaking Memphis radio station where he hosted a 15-minute program billed as The Pepticon Boy. Also known as the Be-Bop Boy, Louis made his recording debut in 1949 for Columbia, but the remainder of his output was issued on R&B indies large and small -- Phillips (Sam Phillips's first extremely short-lived logo), Modern, Sun, Checker, Meteor, Big Town (where he cut the blistering "Hydramatic Woman," a tune he'd cut previously for Sun in 1953 with Walter Horton on harp, but Phillips never released it), and House of Sound. Louis was only 35 when he died of tetanus, contracted when a deep gash on his thumb became infected. ~ Bill Dahl, Rovi