"Bob
Geddins was a man with a big heart; a true music lover who persevered
with his recording and distribution business even though he was
repeatedly ripped off by partners and let down by artists who broke
their contracts.
He is responsible for developing
the Bay Area blues sound of the late 1940s and 1950s in his Oakland
studios and some of the best loved vintage recordings from the West
Coast were made for his Big Town, Cava-Tone and Rhythm labels.
For
all the usual reasons, musicians were leaving their home states and
moving to California and
Geddins attracted some of the most popular into
his recording studio. Lowell Fulson, Roy Hawkins, Johnny Fuller and
Jimmy McCracklin are all included in this box set as well as some pretty
obscure names like pianist Fats Gaines and Johnny Ingram whose Rhythm
Czars featured Jimmy Nelson on vocals and John Patterson on some pretty
swingin' sax. Johnny Fuller, whose down-home Mississippi blues with a
beat, laid back vocals and versatile guitar wrangling reminds me of
early Muddy Waters, has sixteen stellar tracks; his ringing guitar
clanging away on ‘How Long?', ‘Too Late To Change' and ‘The Roughest
Place In Town' which is a virile version of ‘Tin Pan Alley'.
Geddins attracted some of the most popular into
his recording studio. Lowell Fulson, Roy Hawkins, Johnny Fuller and
Jimmy McCracklin are all included in this box set as well as some pretty
obscure names like pianist Fats Gaines and Johnny Ingram whose Rhythm
Czars featured Jimmy Nelson on vocals and John Patterson on some pretty
swingin' sax. Johnny Fuller, whose down-home Mississippi blues with a
beat, laid back vocals and versatile guitar wrangling reminds me of
early Muddy Waters, has sixteen stellar tracks; his ringing guitar
clanging away on ‘How Long?', ‘Too Late To Change' and ‘The Roughest
Place In Town' which is a virile version of ‘Tin Pan Alley'.
Fuller
appears again later with some superb down-home blues guitar on Willie B
Huff's four sides. This girl has one deep bluesy voice and it's
perfectly suited to her big song ‘Operator 209' (her version of
Lightnin's ‘Hello Central') but then she's just as good when she hits a
higher register on ‘I've Been Thinkin'And Thinkin' which has Lafayette
Thomas on guitar.
KC Douglas, another
Mississippian transplanted to California, is here roaring out his
greatest song ‘Mercury Boogie'. This version leaves all others, bar
none, doodlin' in the dirt! Juke Boy Bonner's rural style comes direct
from Texas and although usually a one-man-band, he adds guitarist
Lafayette Thomas on ‘Well Baby' and ‘Rock With Me Baby' with pretty good
results. Big Mama Thornton really rocks with the thumping ‘Don't Talk
Back', a fabulous gospel singed screamer she made with The Hi-Tones
(better known as James Brown's second set of Famous Flames). Roy Hawkins
and Jimmy McCracklin
supply the early R&B jump while Little Caesar
forsakes his usual rockin' R&B groove on ‘Big Eyes' a Coasters-type
spoofy tune before sailing into a big blues ballad that Big Joe Turner
would be proud of.
supply the early R&B jump while Little Caesar
forsakes his usual rockin' R&B groove on ‘Big Eyes' a Coasters-type
spoofy tune before sailing into a big blues ballad that Big Joe Turner
would be proud of.
There are 107 tracks on this
wonderful set and not a dud among ‘em, compiler Neil Slaven supplies his
usual informative sleeve notes and the presentation is snazzy with all
those vintage colour photos of the Bay area.
Excellent, highly recommended, top class, five stars."
Robert L. "Bob" Geddins (February 6, 1913 – February 16, 1991) was an American San Francisco Bay Area blues and rhythm and blues musician and record producer.Geddins was born in Highbank, Texas, United States, a town ten miles south of Marlin, who came to Oakland, California during World War II, and worked there until his death in 1991.
From 1948 onwards he founded and owned numerous small independent record labels, such as Art-Tone, Big Town, Cavatone, Down Town, Irma, Plaid, Rhythm, and Veltone. He also leased his recordings to Los Angeles labels such as Swing Time, Aladdin, Modern, Imperial, Fantasy, and also to the Chicago operated Checker label.

"...
Bob Geddins was largely responsible for developing blues in the San Fransisco-Oakland area in the late 1940's into the late 1950's. Largely unknown today except by deep blues record collectors, Geddins struggled to record a number of good local talent. Artists like Lowell Fulson, Jimmy McCracklin, Roy Hawkins, K.C. Douglas, Mercy Dee Walton (a personal favorite), Johnny Fuller, Juke Boy Bonner, Big Mama Thornton, and other singers who were virtually unknown-all recorded for Geddins on his various labels. Geddins himself (along with his brother on vocals) is even heard on the track "Irma Jean Blues", something he would do when the mood struck.
A TV/radio repairman by trade, Geddins would start up a record label when he had the necessary cash, only to see his labels go out of business, usually because he had no real distribution-he was the sole distributor of his artists. Another reason his labels didn't last was someone would cheat him in a shady business deal, but Geddins would persevere and start up another label when he could. Geddins realized that there were few labels catering to the population which had moved there looking for work. He was basically a one man record label-even owning his own pressing plant.
Geddins' artists were a combination of locally or regionally known musicians, and "walk-ins"-people who literally walked in wanting to record a track or two. When Geddins recorded someone, he wanted it to sound as sad as possible. As Geddins said, "I want black folks to feel the troubles of the old times". And all the tracks have a certain sad aura about them, especially the slower tunes. Even the up-tempo jump tunes have a certain amount of sadness- a reminder of hard times. But as with all good blues, there's a small amount of optimism heard in these songs which gives added depth to the music.

The groups range from small two or three man bands, to larger ensembles including a proper rhythm section and a horn or two. But no matter the size of the band, these tracks are a great example of what people in the Bay Area were listening to after WWII, and on into the 50's. In many ways these artists are closer to what large numbers of people in the region preferred to listen to. None of the major record labels would touch this music-especially artists not nationally known. And while a few of the artists heard here went on to larger fame, many remained locally popular/and or faded back into obscurity.
This set is a window into another time and place long since past. But listen to this music and be transported back to a time of local watering holes, with ten cent beer and a jukebox in the corner-probably playing some of this very music. It's exciting, and it's real,and while the people and the era have vanished, this collection takes you right back there again, every time you hear it.
