Loading detailsβ¦
Loading detailsβ¦
Artist
Crown Prince Waterford (Charles Waterford, October 21, 1919 in Jonesboro, AR - February 1, 2007, Jacksonville, FL) was a rhythm and blues singer. Charles Waterford was from Jonesboro, Arkansas, born there on 21st October 1919 to musical parents who encouraged young Charlie in his singing career. According to his King publicity file, his first professional job was with Andy Kirk's 12 Clouds Of Joy at the Savoy Ballroom in Chicago, but he was also known to have fronted the KC-based Leslie Sheffield's Rhythmaires at Oklahoma City's Ritz Ballroom as far back as 1936, where he shared the bandstand with a rhythm section comprising Charlie Christian, Abe Bolar and Monk McFay. Sometime around early 1945, Waterford, by now billing himself as "The Crown Prince Of The Blues", scored a top job with Jay McShann's Orchestra as a replacement for the unreliable Walter Brown. Waterford was a blues-shouter in the modern post-war mould; emotional and expressive. He stayed less than a year, recording just three songs with McShann's new sextet during the summer of 1945 (cf: Classics 966) before striking out alone. For the rest of the 1940s he was subjected to a series of one-shot recording sessions (for Freddie William's Hy-Tone label; for Aladdin, backed by Gerald Wilson's powerful orchestra; and for Capitol, with an all star quintet led by Pete Johnson). By the end of the decade he had joined King Records, which seems to have been the label of choice for all the best blues shouters, recording j
Eat To The Beat: The Dirtiest Of Them Dirty Blues
Sex, Rhythm & Blues
The Very Best Of
Vintage Sex Songs
Ultimate Rock N' Roll Drinkers & Sinners
TTRH Season 3 - 07 - Fruit

1946-1950
Whorehouse Blues
Jazz Noire: Darktown Sleaze From The Mean Streets Of 1940s L.A.
Ride Daddy Ride: Vintage Songs About Sex 1927-1953
From The Vaults Vol. 3: Capitol Jumps
Nasty Vol.1