On March 14, Craft Recordings serves up a double dose of prime 1960s rediscovery blues with Lonnie Johnson’s Blues & Ballads, originally released in 1960, and Mississippi John Hurt’s Today!, which first hit record store racks in 1966. The albums offer a study in contrasts, with Hurt exemplifying the country blues style and Johnson specializing in a citified sound. Both albums are pressed onto 180 gram vinyl and are available as a bundle or separately.
As the title Blues & Ballads makes clear, Lonnie Johnson wasn’t strictly a bluesman, though when it came to the blues, he had considerable range and polish. It’s fair to say that when he played the countrified stuff, he did so like a city slicker. It’s notable that when historical jazz surveys devote space to the blues, Johnson name is often included. Johnson toured with Bessie Smith and recorded with Louis Armstrong and His Hot Five and Duke Ellington. He’s also noted as an innovator of the guitar solo.
Blues & Ballads was cut for the Bluesville label, the name of which Craft Recordings has repurposed for their current blues reissue line, a program that pulls from assorted catalogs, including Vanguard, the enterprise responsible for Hurt’s Today! The original Bluesville was a subsidiary of Bob Weinstock’s Prestige label, an association that surely strengthens the jazz connection, though the Bluesville roster spanned from Victoria Spivey and Memphis Slim to Lightnin’ Hopkins and Robert Pete Williams.
For Blues & Ballads, Johnson’s accompanists are guitarist Elmer Snowden, a major early jazz figure, and double bassist Wendell Marshall, who played on dozens of jazz albums including works by Ellington, Jimmy Guiffre, and Grant Green. Marshall understood the assignment here, giving the 10-song set a solid foundation, and Snowden is in strong form, his interaction with Johnson elevating the record considerably; he also brought two songs to the session, “Blues for Chris” (a co-write with producer Chris Albertson) and “Elmer’s Blues.”