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Artist
Williams was born blind in southern Florida circa 1915 to parents who were migrant farm workers. During his youth, he attended the St. Petersburg School for the Blind (also Ray Charles' alma mater) and became sufficiently proficient on guitar to begin a career as a street musician in the 1930s. He eventually settled in Philadelphia in 1935 and often traveled to New York City, where he plied his trade in Harlem during his visits. It was there that he met Rev. Gary Davis, whose influence can be heard in Williams' guitar and singing style. His repertory was an extremely eclectic one. As a street musician, he primarily performed sacred material, although he knew a number of proto-blues folk songs and topical material from the 1930s and 1940s as well. He was also familiar with a few blues compositions, but as the booklet notes point out, he preferred "8- or 16-bar blues to the more widespread 12-bar form." Welding discovered Williams performing sanctified numbers to accordion accompaniment in a historically black neighborhood of Philadelphia sometime in 1961. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Bottleneck Blues

Philadelphia Street Singer
Take My Hand Precious Lord
Trouble in Mind
Testament Records Sampler
Down Home Slide
Testament 5024 - Blind Connie Williams - Philadelphia Street Singer
Philadelphia Street Singer (1961)
Acoustic Slide Blues
Traditional Blues, Spirituals and Folksongs
Testament 5021 - Bottleneck Blues
Philadelphia Street Singer (Blind Connie Williams- Traditional Blues, Spirituals And Folksongs)