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Blake Alphonso Higgs

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Blake Alphonso Higgs
Birth nameBlake Alphonso Higgs
Also known asBlind Blake
OriginMatthew Town, Inagua, Bahamas
GenresGoombay, calypso
Instrument(s)Vocals, banjo

Blake Alphonso Higgs (1915, Matthew Town, Inagua, Bahamas – 1986), better known as "Blind Blake", was the best-known performer of goombay/calypso in the Bahamas from the 1930s to the 1960s. (Not to be confused with the blues singer/guitarist of the same nickname.)

Biography

For much of his career, Blind Blake was based at the Royal Victoria Hotel in Nassau. Included in his wide repertoire was "Love, Love Alone," a song (by Trinidadian calypsonian Caresser) about the abdication of Edward VIII. Blind Blake's version of this calypso is said to have been enjoyed by the former king himself, who, as the Duke of Windsor, served as Governor of the Bahamas during World War II.

Higgs played banjo and sang, releasing 4 albums during his tenure at the Royal Victoria Hotel, one with singer Lou Adams, and several other lesser albums towards the end of his career. His first 4 albums were released on Floridian label Art, including a 10" with Lou Adams. Although never famous in his own right, sadly, his music has been covered by the likes of Dave Van Ronk (Yes, Yes,Yes) Pete Seeger (Foolish frog), Lord Mouse and the Kalypso Katz (Tomatoes), The Percentie Brothers, (Goombay Drums) and perhaps most famously The Beach Boys who covered his 1952 recording of the Caribbean folk song John B Sail (Wreck of the John B) and called it Sloop John B. His style was a mix of dixieland jazz, calypso/goombay, and American folk, probably because of the close proximity the Bahamas has to the USA. For Several decades, he was arguably the most important figure in the Bahamian tourist entertainment industry. One of his most famous songs, the medley "Little Nassau/Peas and Rice," written during the US prohibition era, is about the easy access to alcoholic beverages in Nassau, then complaining of the local's frustration with a diet of peas and rice.

Johnny Cash based his hit "Delia" on an old blues ballad from Georgia that Higgs had adapted into a calypso.[citation needed]

Discography

  • Blind Blake and the Royal Victoria Hotel "Calypso" Orchestra: A Group of Bahamian Songs (1951)
  • Blind Blake and the Royal Victoria Hotel "Calypso" Orchestra: A Second Album of Bahamian Songs (1952)
  • Blind Blake and the Royal Victoria Hotel "Calypso" Orchestra: A Third Album of Bahamian Songs (1952)
  • Lou Adams Plays Bahamiana Calypso featuring vocals by Blind Blake (1952)
  • Blind Blake and the Royal Victoria Hotel "Calypso" Orchestra: A Fifth Album of Bahamian Songs (1952)
  • A Cultural Experience (with Pandora Gibson) (1976)
  • Blind Blake & The Royal Victoria Hotel Calypsos: Bahamian Songs (2009)

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