Illinois Entertainer November 2015 | Page 16

HUTTO & ALEXANDER By Kelley Simms By Rosalind-Cummings Yeates J.B. Hutto, circa 1982 Photo courtesy of Boston Blues Society C hicago boasts such a gold mine of blues masters that some of the earlier contributors to the sound get overshadowed by their more notable counterparts. Many players who recorded and played for local fans and didn't get much national attention. In the post war heyday of Chicago blues, hundreds of musicians made a steady living playing South side and West Side bars, earning reputations that rarely traveled north of Roosevelt Road. Although J.B. Hutto performed nationwide and did European tours, his bombastic slide guitar skills were most known during his weekly gigs at Turner's Blue Lounge at 39th and Indiana, during the '60s. The uncle of Little Ed of Little Ed and The Blues Imperials and lesser known than another Augusta, Georgia bred J.B., named James Brown, J.B. managed to capture the attention of any listener that had the chance to catch his raucous live show. Delmark has supplied a great service for those not around during J.B. Hutto's Turner's years, with a reissue and re-mastering of the classic 1968 album, Hawk Squat (Delmark). Bursting with a raw blues sound and layered with enough ambiance for listeners to almost smell the smoke and hear the rowdy crowd response, the 18-track CD includes six previously unreleased songs and ample liner