Mose Vinson
{{short description|American singer}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2014}}
{{Infobox musical artist
| name = Mose Vinson
| birth_name =
| birth_date = 1917
| death_date = November 16, 2002
| genre = Boogie-woogie, blues, jazz
| occupation = Musician
| instrument = Piano, vocals
| years_active = 1930sā2002
| label = Sun, Bear Family, Wolf
| associated_acts = James Cotton
}}
Mose Vinson (June 2 or August 7, 1917 ā November 16, 2002){{cite book|author1=LeBlanc, Eric S |author2=Eagle, Bob L. |title=Blues: A Regional Experience |pages=224ā457 |publisher=Praeger |date=May 2013 |isbn=978-0313344237 }} LeBlanc and Eagle give a birthdate of June 2, 1917, "near Holly Springs," Mississippi, but also note that the Social Security Death Index records his birthdate as August 7, 1917. They give the date of death recorded in the Tennessee Death Records Index. was an American boogie-woogie, blues and jazz pianist and singer. His recordings included "Blues with a Feeling" and "Sweet Root Man". Vinson worked with Booker T. Laury and James Cotton.
Biography
Vinson was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi. He taught himself to play the piano as a child. In his teenage years, he started playing his own style of barrelhouse boogie-woogie in juke joints in Mississippi and Tennessee, incorporating blues and jazz in his repertoire. In 1932, following a chance meeting with Sunnyland Slim, Vinson moved to Memphis, Tennessee.{{cite news |url=http://www.memphisflyer.com/CityBeat/archives/2002/08/01/local-beat |title=Local Beat |author=Lisle, Andria |newspaper=Memphis Flyer |accessdate=October 14, 2010}}
In the 1930s and 1940s, Vinson continued to play at local juke house and rural community parties. By the early 1950s, he was working as a custodian at the Taylor Boarding Home, where artists often stayed while recording next door at the Sun Records studio. Sun's founder and producer, Sam Phillips, occasionally asked Vinson to accompany musicians in the studio. Vinson played there with James Cotton on "Cotton Crop Blues" (1954) and with Jimmy DeBerry on "Take a Little Chance".{{cite book|first=Steve |last=Cheseborough |year=2009 |title=Blues Traveling: The Holy Sites of Delta Blues | edition= 3rd |publisher=Upress|isbn=978-1-60473-124-8 |pages=34 & 41}} Phillips also allowed Vinson to record some tracks of his own, but they were not released until the 1980s. Vinson recorded two versions of "Forty-Four", one retitled "Worry You Off My Mind" and the other retitled "My Love Has Gone" (also known as "Come See Me"). Session musicians playing on these recordings included Walter Horton, Joe Hill Louis, and Joe Willie Wilkins.
After a period of lessened musical activity, by the early 1980s the Center for Southern Folklore had enlisted Vinson to perform at cultural events and at local schools. He became a regular at the Center, where he played and taught for twenty years. In 1990, his contribution to the album Memphis Piano Blues Today was recorded at his home.
In 1997, his first full-length CD compilation album was released via the Center.{{cite web |url=http://www.bealestreet.com/wordpress/beale-street-walk-of-fame |title=Beale Street Brass Note Walk of Fame |publisher=Bealestreet.com |accessdate=October 14, 2010 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20101113222440/http://www.bealestreet.com/wordpress/beale-street-walk-of-fame |archivedate=November 13, 2010 |df=mdy-all }} Declining health stopped him playing not long before his death. Vinson died of diabetes in November 2002 in Memphis, at the age of 85.
In 2007, the Memphis Music and Heritage Festival was dedicated to his memory.
Dates of birth and death
There are conflicting reports of Vinson's date of birth and date of death. Allmusic gives them as August 7, 1917, and November 30, 2002.{{cite web |url={{AllMusic |class=artist |id=mose-vinson-p34727/biography |pure_url=yes}} |title=Mose Vinson |author=Dahl, Bill |website=AllMusic |accessdate=October 14, 2010}} The Encyclopedia of Popular Music gives them as August 7, 1917, and November 16, 2002.{{cite web |url=http://www.oldies.com/artist-biography/Mose-Vinson-Booker-T-Laury.html|title=Mose Vinson Biography |author=Encyclopedia of Popular Music |author-link=Encyclopedia of Popular Music |publisher=Oldies.com |accessdate=October 14, 2010}} Another on-line source gives them as June 2, 1917, and November 23, 2002. According to the Memphis Commercial Appeal newspaper published on November 19, 2002, he died on November 16, 2002.
Quotation
Discography
class="wikitable sortable" |
Album title
!Record label !Year of release |
---|
Memphis Piano Blues Today
|Wolf Records |1990 |
Mose Vinson: Piano Man
|Center for Southern Folklore |1997 |
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{AllMusic|id=mn0000498604}}
- {{Discogs artist}}
- {{IMDb name|2392793}}
- [http://www.wirz.de/music/vinsonmo.htm Illustrated Mose Vinson discography]
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Vinson, Mose}}
Category:American blues pianists
Category:American male jazz pianists
Category:American jazz pianists
Category:American blues singers
Category:Boogie-woogie pianists
Category:Blues musicians from Mississippi
Category:Country blues musicians
Category:Delta blues musicians
Category:Memphis blues musicians
Category:Diabetes-related deaths
Category:20th-century American singers
Category:20th-century American pianists