HATTIE HART

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Hattie Hart was an American Memphis blues singer and songwriter. She was active as a recording artist from the late 1920s to the mid-1930s. Her best known tracks are "I Let My Daddy Do That" and "Coldest Stuff in Town". She worked as a solo artist and as a singer with the Memphis Jug Band. Little is known of her life outside music.

It was stated that "Hart wrote gritty songs about love, sex, cocaine and voodoo".

Hart was born in Memphis, Tennessee, around 1900. She first recorded with the Memphis Jug Band in 1928. She had a reputation for the parties that she hosted at this time. She also sang in the Beale Street area of Memphis, busking with various musicians, where she became one of the best-known performers Hart's singing style has been compared to that of Sara Martin.She has been described as a "marvellous, tough voiced singer".

Her earliest recording with the Memphis Jug Band was a song she wrote, "Won't You Be Kind?" (1928), with blues dialect in the lyrics: "Now twenty-five cents a saucer, seventy-five cents a cup, But it's an extra dollar papa, if you mean to keep it up." Five recordings of Hart with the Jug Band between 1928 and 1930 are known to exist. She undertook a recording session of her own in September 1934, with Allen Shaw and one other musician, whom some blues historians believe was Memphis Willie B. Hart recorded fourteen tracks for Vocalion Records, only four of which were released at the time.

Hart moved to Chicago, and it is believed she recorded there in 1938 under the name Hattie Bolten.It is not reported whether this was her married name or a pseudonym.After that, she disappeared from public attention, and no further details of her life are known.

Hart's song "I Let My Daddy Do That" was covered by Holly Golightly on her 1997 album Painted On.






I do not own the copyright to this recording. This video is for historical and educational purposes

Hattie Hart was a featured vocalist with the Memphis Jug Band in the late 1920's up until around 1930 and also contributed to some of their songwriting. She was also known for the parties that she threw. Her first recordings were made in Memphis for the Victor label in 1929. Three songs were recorded but only two were issued for her debut single. In 1934 she was recorded again in New York City in September of that year. In a course of four days she recorded some eighteen songs backed by guitarist Alllen Shaw with the possibility of Willie Borum playing guitar on some of the cuts. Out of the eighteen songs, only four were issued giving Hattie two more records to her credit. It was also during these sessions that Shaw recorded his only issued sides. Hattie Hart soon left the music scene, never to record again. 

Hattie Hart:Vocals

Allen Shaw:Guitar

Probably Willie Borum:2nd Guitar

Recorded in New York City, NY. Thursday, September 13, 1934

Originally issued on the 1934 single (Vocalion 02855) (78 RPM)



About :  MEMPHIS JUG BAND 

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