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Artist
Mose Vinson (1917 β November 2002) was an American boogie-woogie, blues and jazz pianist and singer. His best known recordings were "Blues With A Feeling" and "Sweet Root Man". Over his lengthy career, Vinson worked with various musicians including Booker T. Laury and James Cotton. Vinson was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi. He taught himself how to play the piano as a child. In his teenage years, Vinson started playing his own style of barrelhouse boogie-woogie in local juke joints in Mississippi and Tennessee, incorporating both blues and jazz in his repertoire. In 1932, following a chance meeting with Sunnyland Slim, Vinson relocated from Mississippi to Memphis, Tennessee. In the 1930s and 1940s, Vinson continued to play at local juke house and rural community parties. By the early 1950s, Vinson found employment as a custodian at the Taylor Boarding Home, where artists often stayed whilst recording next door at Sun Records studios. In the studios, Sam Phillips occasionally requested that Vinson accompany musicians. These included James Cotton on "Cotton Crop Blues" (1954), and Jimmy DeBerry on the latter's "Take a Little Chance". Phillips also allowed Vinson to record some tracks of his own, although these were not released until the 1980s. Vinson recorded two versions of "Forty-Four", one retitled "Worry You Off My Mind", and the other as "My Love Has Gone" (also known as "Come See Me"). Session musicians on these recordings included Walter Horton, Joe Hill Louis and
Blues At Home 1
Africa and the Blues (Connections and Reconnections)
Sun Records-25 Rare Blues Classics
The Devil's Music Vol. 1
Jim Dickinson Field Recordings Delta Experimental Project vol. 3
Swamp Blues: Down and Dirty
Africa And The Blues
Sun Records - The Blues Years, 1950 - 1958 CD6
Piano Man
Mr. Boogie Woogie: The Music of Mose Vinson
Memphis Blues (Important Postwar Recordings) - Disc 3
Sun Records - the Blues Years 1950-1958 (Charly) Disc 6