Worried Life Blues

"Worried Life Blues" is a blues standard and one of the most recorded blues songs of all time. Originally recorded by Big Maceo Merriweather in 1941, "Worried Life Blues" was an early blues hit and Maceo's most recognized song. An earlier song inspired it and several artists have had record chart successes with their interpretations of the song.

"Worried Life Blues"
Single by Big Maceo
A-side"Texas Blues"
Released1941 (1941)
RecordedChicago, June 24, 1941
GenreBlues
Length2:51
LabelBluebird (no. B-8827)
Songwriter(s)Maceo Merriweather a.k.a. Big Maceo, adapted from "Someday Baby Blues"
Producer(s)Lester Melrose
Big Maceo singles chronology
"Worried Life Blues"
(1941)
"It's All Up To You"
(1941)

Background

"Worried Life Blues" is based on "Someday Baby Blues" recorded by Sleepy John Estes in 1935.[1] Estes' song is performed as a vocal and guitar country blues, whereas Maceo's is a prototypical Chicago blues. To illustrate the lyrical differences of the originals, the first few verses are as follows:

"Worried Life Blues" Big Maceo (1941):

Oh lordy lord, oh lordy lord
It hurts me so bad, for us to part
But someday baby, I ain't gonna worry my life anymore

"Someday Baby Blues" Sleepy John Estes (1935):[2]

I don't care how long you go, I don't care how long you stay
But that good kind treatment, bring you back home someday
Someday baby, you ain't gonna worry my mind anymore

Over the years the differences have become blurred by various cover versions of the songs, which use elements from both songs, often combined with new lyrics and variations in the music.

Composition and recording

Big Maceo recorded "Worried Life Blues" June 24, 1941, shortly after arriving in Chicago.[3] Lester Melrose produced the song and it became Maceo's first single on Bluebird Records. The song is a moderate-tempo eight-bar blues, with Maceo on vocal and piano, accompanied by frequent collaborator, guitarist and fellow recording artist, Tampa Red and Ransom Knowling on bass. Music writer Keith Shadwick identifies it a major hit[3] and blues historian Jim O'Neal notes that it "eclipsed the song ['Someday Baby'] that inspired it".[1][4] Several other renditions soon followed, including those by Bill Gaither (1941), Sonny Boy Williams (1942), and Honeyboy Edwards (1942). In 1945, Maceo recorded a second version with additional lyrics, also accompanied by Tampa Red. Titled "Things Have Changed", it reached number four in the Billboard's Race Records chart.[5]

Recognition and influence

"Worried Life Blues" became an early blues standard[6] and was among the first songs inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in 1983 as a "Classic of Blues Recordings".[1] In 2006, the song received a Grammy Hall of Fame Award.[7] Over the years numerous artists have covered "Worried Life Blues" or some mixture of it, "Someday Baby Blues", and other elements,[8] making it one of the most recorded blues songs of all time.[3] When Charles Brown reworked it as a West Coast blues number titled "Trouble Blues", it was one of the biggest hits of 1949 and spent 15 weeks at number one on Billboard's Race Records/Rhythm & Blues Records chart.[9] In 1955, Muddy Waters recording of it as "Trouble No More" in a Chicago blues style reached number seven on the R&B chart.[10] Junior Parker recorded the song in 1969 and it appeared at number 34.[11] B.B. King had a number 48 charting single in 1970 with "Worried Life" (originally recorded as "Someday Baby" in 1960).[12][13] In 2007, the band Clutch covered parts of the song in their own original composition, "Electric Worry", which was published on their album From Beale Street to Oblivion.[14]

References

  1. O'Neal, Jim (November 10, 2016). "1983 Hall of Fame Inductees: Worried Life Blues – Big Maceo (Bluebird, 1941)". The Blues Foundation. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  2. The refrain is paraphrased in Estes' epitaph "Ain't goin' to worry Poor John's mind anymore".
  3. Shadwick, Keith (2007). "Big Maceo". The Encyclopedia of Jazz & Blues. London: Quantum Publishing. p. 237. ISBN 978-0-681-08644-9.
  4. Both "Someday Baby" and "Worried Life" were released before Billboard or a similar service began tracking such releases.
  5. Whitburn, Joel (1988). Top R&B Singles 1942–1988. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research. p. 42. ISBN 0-89820-068-7.
  6. Dahl, Bill (1996). "Big Maceo Merriweather". In Erlewine, Michael (ed.). All Music Guide to the Blues. San Francisco: Miller Freeman Books. p. 192. ISBN 0-87930-424-3.
  7. "Grammy Hall of Fame Awards – Past Recipients". Grammy.org. 2006. Retrieved July 19, 2011.
  8. Herzhaft, Gerard (1992). "Someday, Baby". Encyclopedia of the Blues. Fayetteville, Arkansas: University of Arkansas Press. p. 471. ISBN 1-55728-252-8.
  9. Whitburn 1988, p. 57.
  10. Whitburn 1988, p. 435.
  11. Whitburn 1988, p. 319
  12. Whitburn 1988, p. 239.
  13. B.B. King also recorded it in 1970 as "Ain't Gonna Worry My Life Anymore" for Indianola Mississippi Seeds and in 2000 with Eric Clapton for Riding with the King.
  14. "Clutch (3) - From Beale Street To Oblivion". Discogs. Retrieved 2018-03-06.
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