Black Angel Blues

"Black Angel Blues"
Single by Lucille Bogan
B-side "Tricks Ain't Walking No More"
Released December 1930 (1930-12) – 1931 (1931)
Format 10" 78 rpm record
Recorded December 17, 1930
Genre Blues
Length 3:11
Label Brunswick (Cat. no. 7186)
Lucille Bogan singles chronology
"They Ain't Walking No More"/ "Dirty Treatin' Blues"
(1930)
"Black Angel Blues"
(1930)
"Crawlin' Lizard Blues"/ "Struttin' My Stuff"
(1930)

"Black Angel Blues", also known as "Sweet Black Angel" or "Sweet Little Angel", is a blues standard that has been recorded by numerous blues and other artists.[1] The song was first recorded in 1930 by Lucille Bogan, one of the classic female blues singers.[2] Bogan recorded it as a mid-tempo, twelve-bar blues, featuring her vocal with piano accompaniment.

In 1934, Tampa Red recorded "Black Angel Blues" (Vocalion 2753). The song was performed at a slower tempo and featured prominent slide-guitar lines by Tampa Red. These early songs were released before Billboard or a similar reliable service began tracking such releases, so it is difficult to gauge which version was more popular, although subsequent versions showed Tampa Red's influence. Robert Nighthawk recorded "Black Angel Blues" in 1949, with Nighthawk (electric slide guitar), Willie Dixon (double bass), and Ernest Lane (piano) (Aristocrat 2301). (The single, with its flip side "Annie Lee Blues", listed the performers as "The Nighthawks".) The following year Tampa Red recorded an updated version of the song, substituting a lyric and calling it "Sweet Little Angel" (Victor 22-0107). In 1953, Earl Hooker recorded it as "Sweet Angel" (Rockin' 513).

In 1956, B.B. King recorded "Sweet Little Angel" (RPM Records 468). According to King, "I got the idea for 'Sweet Little Angel' from Robert Nighthawk's 'Sweet Black Angel', though I later discovered that the song had been recorded by someone before Nighthawk. At the time 'black' was not a popular word, as it is now. Instead of using the old title, I changed it to 'Sweet Little Angel'β€”and that was a pretty big record for me".[3] King's version, with a horn section, was a stylistic shift for the song and it became a hit, reaching #8 on the Billboard R&B chart.[4] In 1957, he re-recorded "Sweet Little Angel" for his first album Singin' the Blues. Both versions prominently feature B.B. King's guitar work, with his note-bends "sounding almost like a lap steel in places."[5]

After B.B. King's success, many blues and other artists recorded their versions of "Sweet Little Angel". Robert Nighthawk's "Black Angel Blues" was inducted in 2007 into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame "Classics of Blues Recordings" category[6] and B.B. King's "Sweet Little Angel" is included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's list of "500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll".[7]

Notes

  1. ^ Herzhaft 1992, p. 473.
  2. ^ Koda 1996, p. 26.
  3. ^ Danchin 1998, p. 38.
  4. ^ Whitburn 1988, p. 239.
  5. ^ Escott 2002, p. 42.
  6. ^ "Blues Hall of Fame – 2007 Inductees". Classics of Blues Recordings – Single or Album Track. The Blues Foundation. 2007. http://www.blues.org/halloffame/inductees.php4?ArtistId=467. Retrieved December 5, 2009. 
  7. ^ "500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll". Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. 1995. Archived from the original on September 11, 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20070911013642/http://www.rockhall.com/exhibithighlights/500-songs-by-name-qs/. Retrieved March 4, 2011. 

References