Doctor Clayton
50 top tracks
Doctor Clayton
50 top tracks
Albums

Voodoo Blues
Doctor Clayton

Doctor (Peter) Clayton 1935-1942
Doctor Clayton

Gotta Find My Baby
Doctor Clayton

Voodoo Blues: The Devil Within
Doctor Clayton

The History of Rhythm and Blues 1925 - 1942
Doctor Clayton
![Voodoo Blues: The Devil Within [[Disc 1]] — cover art by Doctor Clayton](/frogtoon_logo.png)
Voodoo Blues: The Devil Within [[Disc 1]]
Doctor Clayton

When the Sun Goes Down, Vol. 4: That's All Right
Doctor Clayton

Voodoo Blues - The Devil Within CD1
Doctor Clayton

The Definitive R&B Series – 1942-1943
Doctor Clayton

That's All Right (When the Sun Goes Down series)
Doctor Clayton

Mean Old World: The Blues from 1940 to 1994
Doctor Clayton

When The Sun Goes Down (Cd 4) -That's All Right
Doctor Clayton
Biography
Doctor Clayton (April 19, 1898 - January 7, 1947) was an American blues singer and songwriter....Read more on Last.fm
Read more
Doctor Clayton (April 19, 1898 - January 7, 1947) was an American blues singer and songwriter.
Peter Joe Clayton was born in Georgia, though he later claimed he had been born in Africa, and moved to St. Louis as a child with his family. He had four children and worked in a factory in St. Louis.
Peter Clayton started his career as a singer (he could also play piano and ukelele, though he never did so on record). Clayton recorded six sides for Bluebird Records in 1935, but only two were ever issued. Clayton's entire family died in a house fire in 1937; following this Clayton became an alcoholic and began wearing outsized hats and glasses. Moving to Chicago with Robert Lockwood, he received attention from Decca Records but ultimately returned to Bluebird, recording with them again in 1941-42. He also recorded for Okeh Records at this time.
Among the songs he wrote were "Cheating and Lying Blues", frequently covered by other blues artists; "Pearl Harbor Blues", written after the Pearl Harbor bombing of 1941; and "Moonshine Woman Blues", which became a chart hit for B. B. King under the name "The Woman I Love" in 1968. He recorded again in 1946, recording the tunes "Hold That Train, Conductor" and "I Need My Baby" which were also both covered by King. Most of his later recordings featured Blind John Davis on piano. He was a regional sales success and played regularly in Chicago nightclubs with Lockwood and Sunnyland Slim.
Clayton died of tuberculosis in January 1947, in Chicago, shortly after his second recording session. Big Bill Broonzy and Tampa Red attended his funeral.
Document Records has released all of Clayton's output recorded between 1935 and 1942 on one CD; Old Tramp Records released the remaining 1946 recordings.
<a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Doctor+Clayton">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
