Chick Willis - I Got A Big Fat Woman (1994)
Artist: Chick Willis
Title: I Got A Big Fat Woman
Year Of Release: 1994
Label: Ichiban Records
Genre: Blues, Soul Blues, Modern Electric Blues
Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 49:45
Total Size: 151/321 Mb (covers)
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: I Got A Big Fat Woman
Year Of Release: 1994
Label: Ichiban Records
Genre: Blues, Soul Blues, Modern Electric Blues
Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 49:45
Total Size: 151/321 Mb (covers)
WebSite: Album Preview
01. I Got A Big Fat Woman
02. I Cain't Work and Watch You
03. Cumming Prison Farm
04. Today I Started Loving You Again
05. She Likes To Live High On The Hog
06. I'm Your Hoochie Coochie Man
07. You Lost What You Had
08. Rock Me Baby
09. Look On Yonder Wall
10. Tin Pan Alley
Cousin to the late blues ballad singer Chuck Willis, Robert "Chick" Willis is primarily beloved for his ribald, dozens-based rocker "Stoop Down Baby." The guitarist cut his original version in 1972 for tiny La Val Records of Kalamazoo, MI, selling a ton of 45s for the jukebox market only (the tune's lyrics were way too raunchy for airplay).
Willis left the military in 1954, hiring on as valet and chauffeur to cousin Chuck, then riding high with his many R&B hits for OKeh Records. At that point, Chick's primary role on the show was as a singer (he made his own vinyl debut in 1956 with a single, "You're Mine," for Lee Rupe's Ebb Records after winning a talent contest at Atlanta's Magnolia Ballroom), but he picked up the guitar while on the road with his cousin (Chick cites Guitar Slim as his main man in that department).
When Chuck died of stomach problems in 1958, Willis soldiered on, pausing in Chicago to work as a sideman with slide guitar great Elmore James. A few obscure 45s ("Twistin' in the Hospital Ward," cut for Alto in 1962, sounds promising) preceded the advent of "Stoop Down Baby," which Willis has freshened up for countless sequels ever since (he developed the song by teasing passersby with his ribald rhymes while working in a carnival variety show).
Footprints in My Bed Risqué material remained a staple of Willis's output in recent years. He cut several albums for Ichiban, notably 1988's Now!, Footprints in My Bed in 1990, and Back to the Blues in 1991.
Willis left the military in 1954, hiring on as valet and chauffeur to cousin Chuck, then riding high with his many R&B hits for OKeh Records. At that point, Chick's primary role on the show was as a singer (he made his own vinyl debut in 1956 with a single, "You're Mine," for Lee Rupe's Ebb Records after winning a talent contest at Atlanta's Magnolia Ballroom), but he picked up the guitar while on the road with his cousin (Chick cites Guitar Slim as his main man in that department).
When Chuck died of stomach problems in 1958, Willis soldiered on, pausing in Chicago to work as a sideman with slide guitar great Elmore James. A few obscure 45s ("Twistin' in the Hospital Ward," cut for Alto in 1962, sounds promising) preceded the advent of "Stoop Down Baby," which Willis has freshened up for countless sequels ever since (he developed the song by teasing passersby with his ribald rhymes while working in a carnival variety show).
Footprints in My Bed Risqué material remained a staple of Willis's output in recent years. He cut several albums for Ichiban, notably 1988's Now!, Footprints in My Bed in 1990, and Back to the Blues in 1991.