Noah Lewis (musician)
Noah Lewis (September 3, 1891 – February 7, 1961)[1][2][3] was an American jug band and country blues[4] musician, generally known for playing the harmonica.
Life and career
Lewis was born in Henning, Tennessee, and learned to play the harmonica as a child. He moved to Memphis, Tennessee, in his early teens, where he met Gus Cannon near Ripley in 1910.[5] By that time he was already a respected original stylist on the harmonica, noted for his liquid tone and breath control, which allowed him to generate enormous volume from the instrument.[5] By then he was also noted for his ability to play two harmonicas at once – one with his mouth and one with his nose,[5] a trick he probably taught to Big Walter Horton, who recorded briefly as a teenager with the Memphis Jug Band some 20 years later. Lewis' ability to generate volume led to him playing in string bands and brass marching bands around Henning and on the streets of Memphis.[5]
At their meeting in 1907, Lewis introduced Cannon to the 13-year-old guitarist and singer Ashley Thompson, with whom Lewis had been playing in the streets of Ripley and Memphis for some time, and the three of them worked together over the next 20 years whenever Cannon was in Memphis and not away working medicine and tent shows. When Will Shade's Memphis Jugband recorded and became popular in the late 1920s, Cannon added a coal-oil can on a rack round his neck and renamed the trio (Cannon, Lewis and Thompson)
Lewis recorded four solo tracks and another four sides with the Noah Lewis Jug Band, consisting of Lewis, Sleepy John Estes (guitar) and Yank Rachell (mandolin), in 1930.[3]
His songs "New, New Minglewood Blues", "Viola Lee Blues", and "Big Railroad Blues" were in the repertoire of the Grateful Dead.
Death
Lewis died in poverty, of gangrene brought on by frostbite, in Ripley, Tennessee, in 1961.[2] He is buried in the Moorer (aka Marrows) Cemetery, 5 miles southwest of his birthplace, Henning.[7]
References
- ISBN 978-0313344237. Previously, his birth year was also reported as 1890 or 1895. 1891 is generally considered the correct year.
- ^ a b c "Biography by Jason Ankeny". Allmusic.com. Retrieved September 3, 2011.
- ^ a b "Noah Lewis". Bluesnexus.com. Archived from the original on March 20, 2012. Retrieved September 3, 2011.
- ISBN 1-904041-96-5.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-306-80743-5.
- ISBN 0-87722-583-4.
- ^ A History of Tennessee Arts. University of Tennessee Press.
Further reading
- Norris, Sharon (2000). Haywood County Tennessee. Black America Series. ISBN 0-7385-0605-2.
- West, Carroll Van; Duncan Binnicker, Margaret (2004). A History of Tennessee Arts. Knoxville: ISBN 1-57233-239-5.
External links
- Noah Lewis discography at Discogs