St Louis Jimmy
50 top tracks
St Louis Jimmy
50 top tracks
Albums

Chess Blues
St Louis Jimmy

Chess Blues 1947-1952 (Disc 1)
St Louis Jimmy

Aristocrat of the Blues, 1946/48
St Louis Jimmy

The Devil Is A Busy Man
St Louis Jimmy
![Chess Blues 1947-1952 [Disc 1] — cover art by St Louis Jimmy](/frogtoon_logo.png)
Chess Blues 1947-1952 [Disc 1]
St Louis Jimmy

Chess Blues Disc 1 (1947-1952)
St Louis Jimmy

Chicago Is Just That Way
St Louis Jimmy

100 Essential Blues Masters
St Louis Jimmy

The Roots Of Led Zeppelin: When The Levee Breaks
St Louis Jimmy

Bluebird 8889-B
St Louis Jimmy

Chess Blues Disc 1
St Louis Jimmy

Chess Blues 1947-1952
St Louis Jimmy
Biography
James Burke "St. Louis Jimmy" Oden (June 26, 1903 - December 30, 1977[1]), was an American blues vocalist and songwriter....Read more on Last.fm
Read more
James Burke "St. Louis Jimmy" Oden (June 26, 1903 - December 30, 1977[1]), was an American blues vocalist and songwriter.
Born in Nashville, Tennessee, Jimmy Oden sang and taught himself to play the piano in childhood. In his teens, he left home to go to St. Louis, Missouri (c. 1917 [2]) where piano-based blues was prominent. He was able to develop his vocal talents and began performing with the gifted pianist, Roosevelt Sykes. After more than ten years playing in and around St. Louis, in 1933 he and Sykes decided to move on to Chicago.[3]
In Chicago he was dubbed St. Louis Jimmy and there he would enjoy a solid performing and recording career for the next four decades. While Chicago became his home base, Oden traveled with a group of blues players to various places throughout the United States. He recorded a large number of records, his best known coming in 1941 on the Bluebird Records label called "Goin' Down Slow." Oden wrote a number of songs, two of which, "Take the Bitter with the Sweet" and "Soon Forgotten," were recorded by his friend, Muddy Waters.
In 1948 on Aristocrat Records Oden cut "Florida Hurricane", accompanied by the pianist Sunnyland Slim and the guitarist Muddy Waters.[4]
In 1949, Oden partnered with Joe Brown to form a small recording company called J.O.B. Records that remained in business for twenty-five years.
After a serious road accident in 1957 he devoted himself to writing and placed material with Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf ("What a Woman!") and John Lee Hooker. In 1960 he made an album with Bluesville Records, and sang on a Candid Records session with Robert Lockwood, Jr. and Otis Spann.[3]
Oden died, at the age of 74, in 1977 and was interred in the Restvale Cemetery in Alsip, Illinois, near Chicago.
<a href="https://www.last.fm/music/+noredirect/St+Louis+Jimmy">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
