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Doctor Ross (October 21, 1925 β May 28, 1993[1]), aka Doctor Ross, the harmonica boss, was an American blues singer, guitarist, harmonica player and drummer β a one-man band β who was born Charles Isaiah Ross, in Tunica, Mississippi. Overview and career Ross played various forms of the blues that have seen him compared to John Lee Hooker and Sonny Boy Williamson I, and is perhaps best known for the recordings he made for Sun Records in the 1950s, notably "The Boogie Disease" and "Chicago Breakdown". Ross won a Grammy for his 1981 LP Rare Blues, and subsequently enjoyed a resurgence and much critical acclaim towards the end of his career.[1] In 1951 he began to be heard on Mississippi and Arkansas radio stations, now nicknamed Doctor because of his habit of carrying his harmonicas in a black bag that resembled a doctor's bag, and over the next three years recorded in Memphis, Tennessee for both Chess Records and Sun Records, creating exhilarating harmonica or guitar boogies made disctinctive by his sidemen playing washboard (with a spoon and fork) and broom.[2] In 1954 he took a job with General Motors in Flint, Michigan, and played less. Some singles, among them his first true one-man band effort, "Industrial Boogie", filtered into blues circles, leading to a Testament Records album and a 1965 AFBF booking.[2] While in London he recorded what would be the first LP on Blue Horizon Records. Europe loved Ross and gave him work and recording opportunities; he was never as pop
The Flying Eagle (The Blues Collection Vol.89)

The Flying Eagle
Little Walter And The Kings Of The Blues Harmonica
Dr. Ross The Harmonica Boss
Blues Collection 89 (1997) - The Flying Eagle
Boogie Disease (1951-1954) (Arhoolie)
Dr Ross - Boogie Disease
Vol.89 Dr Ross (The Flying Eagle)
The Memphis Cuts 1953-1956 (Remastered)
Blues Collection 89 - The Flying Eagle
Boogie Disease
Shake Em' On Down Vol 3