Houston Boines
50 top tracks
Houston Boines
50 top tracks
Albums

Memphis Blues - Important Postwar Blues
Houston Boines

Roots of the Black Keys
Houston Boines

Swamp Blues: Down and Dirty
Houston Boines

Sun Records - The Blues Years, 1950 - 1958 CD6
Houston Boines

Best of Delta Blues
Houston Boines

Sun Records-25 Rare Blues Classics
Houston Boines

Memphis Blues - 100 Vintage Tracks
Houston Boines

Sun Records - Memphis Blues
Houston Boines

Memphis Blues (Important Postwar Recordings) - Disc 2
Houston Boines

The Darkest Blues
Houston Boines

Mississippi Blues
Houston Boines

Memphis Blues: Important Postwar Blues, CD B
Houston Boines
Biography
Houston Boines (Hazlehurst, Mississippi, December 30, 1918 - November 8, 1970?) was an American harmonica player and singer. He recorded with Charley Booker and Ike Turner....Read more on Last.fm
Read more
Houston Boines (Hazlehurst, Mississippi, December 30, 1918 - November 8, 1970?) was an American harmonica player and singer. He recorded with Charley Booker and Ike Turner.
Houston (or it may have been Huston) remains an obscure, shadowy figure despite having broadcast on KFFS' King Biscuit Time during one of Sonny Boy's regular prolonged absence.
He was still living there when he was enlisted in the army in January 1941, almost one year before the United States entered World War II. It's unclear how long he was in the service. Charley Booker and Houston Stackhouse played with him after the War when he was still in Hazlehurst, but had only fleeting memories of him.
Boines played harmonica in Eddie Cusic's combo; The Rhythm Aces. In 1952 he cut a couple of sessions in Greenville, Mississippi, which let to the releases ''Monkey Motion'' / ''Superintendant'' and ''Going Home'' / ''Relation Blues'', both recorded for RPM in January 1952, (plus a belated mid-1960s release on Blues & Rhythm/Blue Horizon) - but his December 1953 session at Sun would appear to have been his (rather glorious) swansong.
Little Milton roomed with him around this time, recalling a stockily built man in his late forties, whom he took to Sun. He was vaguely remembered by Charlie Booker and Houston Stackhouse, both of whom played with him, but Little Milton, who'd actually brought him along to 706 Union remembered him best, recalling an "old man".
Stackhouse recalled that Boines was still playing harmonica in clubs until late in life. ''He used to be a terrible good harp player'', said Stackhouse, ''but he just faded on out. He'd drink so much''. Mississippi death records reveal that someone named Huston Boines died on November 8, 1970 in Jackson, and that could well be our man. Certainly, Houston Stackhouse confirmed that Boines died around that time. Those few memories underpinned by even fewer certain dates and a total of eight recordings are all that we know of him.
<a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Houston+Boines">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
