Blues singer
Walter Brown had a vocal delivery somewhere between
Rubberlegs Williams and
Joe Turner. Although his alcoholism and addiction to both narcotics and amphetamines resulted in a break with
Jay McShann in 1943, by 1947
Brown was back in the recording studio accompanied by
the Jay McShann Quartet -- with
Seeward Evans on tenor sax, bassist
Percy Gabriel, and legendary Kansas City drummer
Jesse Price -- waxing four sides for the Mercury label in Houston, TX. Interestingly,
Brown's comparatively sensitive voicings on "Just Thinkin'" sound a lot like
McShann's own beautiful vocal style that was destined to flourish decades later.
Brown's next four sessions took place in Kansas City, where
Dave Dexter of Capitol Records sought to cash in on the developing demand for blues-based dance music. Eight sides recorded in April of 1949 feature tasty solos by tenor saxophonist Freddy Culliver and smooth lines from
Jimmy Walker's electric guitar. Incredibly, both the humorous "Work Don't Bother Me" and the
Wynonie Harris-styled "Play the Blues" were rejected by Capitol. "Supressin' the Blues" is a sequel to
Brown's original hit of 1941, "Confessin' the Blues," on the heels of a second version recorded for Queen Records in 1946. The plot thickens as
Brown's next recording date -- Halloween 1949 -- found him backed by
Jay McShann's Kaycee Stompers, with
John Jackson blowing alto sax,
Harold Ashby on tenor, and Bob Williams holding down the baritone. This is great R&B-inflected jazz, full of
Walter Brown's own brand of musical mustard and vinegar.
McShann stuck with
Brown right through to the end of this singer's rocky recording career. The pianist anchored a quintet on
Brown's last date for Capitol -- November 1, 1949 -- with the formidable tenor saxophonist
Ben Webster strutting his stuff.
Walter Brown's last two recordings were made in Houston sometime during the year 1951 and issued on the Peacock label. There are plenty of anecdotes about this singer's turbulent life after he stopped making records, including getting busted in New Orleans with a sizeable load of reefer in his station wagon, and later running his own nightclub in Lawton, OK.
Walter Brown passed away in June of 1956, just weeks short of his 40th birthday, a victim of alcohol, heroin, and Benzedrine.