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"Trouble Blues" is a 1949 single by The Charles Brown Trio. The single was the most successful of the trio's career and peaked at number one on the R&B chart for fifteen weeks. [1] At fifteen weeks on the R&B Best Sellers chart, "Trouble Blues" was the most successful R&B song of the year. [2]
Blues singers such as Louis Jordan, Wynonie Harris and Roy Brown were getting much of the attention, but what writer Charles Keil dubs "the postwar Texas clean-up movement in blues" was also beginning to have an influence, driven by blues artists such as T-Bone Walker, Amos Milburn and Brown. Their singing was lighter and more relaxed, and they ...
Trouble Blues may refer to: Trouble Blues (song), a 1949 single by Charles Brown; Trouble Blues (album), a 1981 album by Curtis Jones This page was last edited on 4 ...
The song that replaced it at number one on both charts, "Trouble Blues" by the Charles Brown Trio, topped the juke box chart for a total of 10 weeks and held the peak position on the best sellers listing for 15 consecutive weeks, the year's longest unbroken run at number one on either chart and the longest run at number one on the best sellers ...
All My Life is an album by the American musician Charles Brown, released in 1990. [1] [2] It was Brown's first album for Bullseye Blues (and the first album released on the imprint), and part of a comeback effort that began with his previous release, One More for the Road. [3] [4] [5] Brown supported the album with a North American tour. [6]
It should only contain pages that are Charles Brown (musician) songs or lists of Charles Brown (musician) songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Charles Brown (musician) songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
When Charles Brown reworked it as a West Coast blues number titled "Trouble Blues", it was one of the biggest hits of 1949 and spent 15 weeks at number one on Billboard's Race Records/Rhythm & Blues Records chart. [9] In 1955, Muddy Waters' recording of it as "Trouble No More" in a Chicago blues style reached number seven on the R&B chart. [10]
Joseph Amos Milburn (April 1, 1927 – January 3, 1980) was an American R&B singer and pianist, [1] popular in the 1940s and 1950s. One commentator noted, "Milburn excelled at good-natured, upbeat romps about booze and partying, imbued with a vibrant sense of humour and double entendre, as well as vivid, down-home imagery in his lyrics."