* En anglais uniquement
There are at least three different blues musicians who utilized the moniker "Guitar Slim." In this case, the "Slim" in question was the first. Born
Alec Seward on March 16, 1902, in Charles City, VA, as a child (he had 14 siblings), he picked up the guitar and began playing regularly at local dances. When he turned 18, he packed up and moved to New York with the intention of professionally playing music. Along the way,
Seward struck up a friendship with two bluesmen who played in the same acoustic Piedmont style as he did,
Brownie McGhee and
Sonny Terry. While the Piedmont style was rapidly becoming outdated and even considered corny in comparison to the newly polished urban blues,
Seward stayed true to his roots. Luckily, he also came in contact with another transplanted Carolina country blues stylist who was also striving to make it New York named
Louis Hayes, aka both
Fat Boy Hayes and
Jelly Belly. Sharing similar backgrounds and musical styles, the two began performing as the Blues Servant Boys, Guitar Slim & Jelly Belly, and the Backporch Boys. While the moniker Guitar Slim was the one that stuck with
Seward over the course of his career, he had also taken on several other short-lived aliases, including "Blues Servant Boy," "King Blues," and "Georgia Slim." Over the next two decades,
Seward played and recorded with
Leadbelly,
Woody Guthrie, and
Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee. He also released an album on Blueville, Creepin' Blues, under his real name.
Seward's accompaniment on that date was provided by a young guitarist and harmonica player named
Larry Johnson. The remainder of the '60s found
Seward playing live whenever possible and working the folk/blues festivals that had become popular in that decade. On May 11, 1972,
Alec Seward was admitted to a hospital in New York where he died of natural causes. ~ Al Campbell