Willie Mae "Big Mama" Thornton Only Notched Up One National Hit in her Lifetime, but it was a True Monster. "Hound Dog" Held Down the Top Slot on Billboard's R&B Charts for Seven Long Weeks in 1953. Thornton's Menacing Growl was Indeed Something Special. The Hefty Belter First Opened her Pipes in Church but Soon Embraced the Blues. Thornton was Ensconced on the Houston Circuit When Peacock Records Boss Don Robey Signed her in 1951. She Debuted on Peacock with "Partnership Blues" that Year, Backed by Trumpeter Joe Scott's Band. But it was her Third Peacock Date with Johnny Otis's Band that Proved the Winner. With Pete Lewis Laying Down Some Truly Nasty Guitar Behind Her, Big Mama Shouted "Hound Dog", a Tune Whose Authorship Remains a Bone of Contention to this Day (Both Otis and the Team of Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller Claim Responsibility), and Soon Hit the Road a Star. This Proper Intro Presents the Best of her Work.
In 1953, way before that skinny kid from Memphis turned it into one of the rock 'n' roll anthems, the somewhat intimidating sound of Big Mama Thornton could be heard singing those classic lines - 'You ain't nothin' but a hound dog' - and you better believe it. Hound Dog opens this collection of 22 sides cut by Willie Mae 'Big Mama' Thornton during the 1950s for Peacock records. The Johnny Otis band can be heard cooking on most of these sides, as Big Mama Thornton's awesome voice works through some of the heaviest female blues committed to wax and now ladled on to one big value CD. Right up to her untimely death in 1984 she was cutting records and performing live at clubs and blues festivals all over the world maintaining her reputation as one of the most colorful blues performers of all time. Classic stuff.