Side A description: Silence [00:00]
Moving as a child, jukebox [00:15]
Dancehall in house, bootlegging, Police chief Jim Broyles raid [02:11]
Bootlegging case dismissed by judge [06:00]
Judge convinces him to leave town [07:50]
Moves to North Carolina, New York [08:35]
Police confiscate his car because of bootlegging [10:38]
Travels to West Virginia to play music in the coal fields [15:15]
Moves to Winston-Salem, North Carolina, meets Jordan Webb and J.B. Long [17:09]
Outbreak of World War II, Blind Boy Fuller No. 2 [23:33]
Recorded with Big Bill Broonzy as Brother George and His Sanctified Singers [25:08]
Takes portrait with big black hat for album cover [26:53]
J.B. Long gives him Blind Boy Fuller’s guitar [29:40]
Breaks with J.B. Long and Columbia Records, signs with Decca Records [30:20]
Never played in nightclubs in New York City [32:15]
Moves out of Lead Belly’s apartment to Harlem, manager Nick Ray [33:28]
He was too rough to play in nightclubs [34:08]
Manager goes to war, moves in with cousin in Connecticut [35:40]
Woody Guthrie, Sonny and Brownie in play written by Guthrie [36:40]
Moves to Harlem, plays on the street and in liquor joints [39:47]
Sonny Terry joins him in Harlem, two play together on the street as a duet [41:00] Side B description: Silence [00:00]
Sonny Terry starts singing, learning to play together [00:07]
Identity as folk-blues musicians [06:10]
Sonny cast in Broadway play Finian’s Rainbow, joins musicians union [07:04]
Sonny records hit song, “Tuesday hoppin’ n’ hollerin’” [09:37]
Union musician as member of Local 802 [11:36]
Performing with Jack Dupree, Brownie McGhee and His Jook Blockbusters [13:10]
Playing on Lennox Ave. night Franklin Delano Roosevelt died [15:08]
Jukeboxes and records hurting business for live musicians [16:38]
Herman Lubinski, Savoy Records, drinking in recording studio [22:15]
Brownie McGhee and His Mighty Rockers [32:20]
Sticks McGhee’s song, “Drinkin’ wine spo-dee-dee”, Atlantic Records [35:40]
Contract with Okeh Records, J.B. Long [45:00]
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