Charlie Poole

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Charlie Poole
Birth name Charles Poole
Born March 22, 1892
Origin Spray, North Carolina, USA
Died May 21, 1931 (aged 39)
Genre(s) Country
Occupation(s) Country artist
Instrument(s) banjo
Years active 1920s – 1930s
Notable instrument(s)
banjo

Charlie Poole (March 22, 1892 - May 21, 1931) was an American old time banjo player and country musician.

[edit] Biography

Poole was born in Spray (now part of Eden), Rockingham County, in the northern part of North Carolina, near the Virginia border. He spent much of his adult life working in textile mills. He learned banjo as a youth and also played baseball. His three-fingered playing technique was the result of a baseball accident. He had made a bet that he could catch a baseball without a glove but closed his hand too soon. The ball broke his thumb and resulted in a permanent arch in his right hand.

He bought his first good banjo, an Orpheum No. 3 Special, with profits from his moonshine still. Later, he appeared in the 1929 catalog of the Gibson Company, promoting their banjo.

Charlie Poole and his brother-in-law, fiddler Posey Rorer - whom he had met in West Virginia in 1917 and whose sister he ended up marrying - formed a trio with guitarists Norman Woodlieff and Roy Harvey in 1925 called the North Carolina Ramblers. The group auditioned in New York for Columbia Records. After landing a contract, they recorded the hugely successful "Don't Let Your Deal Go Down Blues" on July 27, 1925. This song sold over 102,000 copies at a time when there were estimated to be only 600,000 phonographs in Southern United States, according to Poole’s biographer Kinney Rorrer. The band was paid $75 for the session.

For the next five years, Poole and the Ramblers was a very popular band. The band's distinctive sound remained consistent though several members came and left, including Posey Rorer and Norm Woodlieff. In all, the band recorded over 60 songs for Columbia Records during the 1920s. These hits included: "Sweet Sunny South", "White House Blues", “He Rambled”, and “Take a Drink on Me”.

In addition to being a talented musician, Poole was a fast living and hard drinking man. His life ended after a 13-week drinking bender. He had been invited to Hollywood to play background music for a film, and according to some reports, he was disheartened by the slump in record sales due to the Depression. Poole never made it to Hollywood. He died of a heart attack in May 1931.

Poole’s music enjoyed a revival in the 1960s and had been remade by a number of modern recording artists, such as John Mellencamp (“White House Blues”) and The Chieftains (“Don’t Let the Deal Go Down”). Kinney Rorrer penned a biography of Charlie Poole, entitled Ramblin’ Blues: The Life and Songs of Charlie Poole, and Columbia issued a three-CD box set of his music, called You Ain't Talkin' to Me: Charlie Poole and the Roots of Country Music. A documentary of his life, tentatively titled North Carolina Rambler is in production by George Goehl and is planned for a 2007 release.

[edit] References

  • Stars of Country Music, (University of Illinois Press, 1975)

[edit] External links

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