© 2025
NPR News, Colorado Stories
KUNC
All Things Considered
KUNC
All Things Considered
Next Up: 6:30 PM Marketplace
0:00
0:00
All Things Considered
KUNC
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Nine O'clock Blues: Professor Longhair

Reading Time: 1 minute, 52 seconds

Maison de Blues

This week on The Nine O’clock Blues we’ll be hearing from distinctive pianist and vocalist Professor Longhair. What gave him his unique style?

I’ll get to that.

Blues singer and pianist Henry Roeland Byrd was born in 1918 and passed away in 1980. In between he had major influence on the music of New Orleans under the name Professor Longhair. He was also variously known as Roy Byrd and as Fess.

Unlike many Blues artists who often start at a very young age, Professor Longhair was basically a street hustler in his youth and didn’t really come to music as a profession until he was in his 30s. Once he did he stood out among New Orleans pianists with a very distinctive style that he developed out of necessity. He didn’t have a decent piano to practice on and he had to learn to work around missing keys.

http://youtu.be/XNM_jCM4CGk

Longhair had a 2 phase career, being active both in the early days of Rhythm and Blues and later during the re-emergence of Traditional Jazz popularity sparked by the founding of the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival in 1970.

Professor Longhair had a rather odd sound with a rollicking rhumba influenced piano style and singing voice that sounded somewhat choked. That meant he lacked widespread appeal and never sold large numbers of recordings. Hence his real influence comes from his impact on the sound of people like Fats Domino, Huey "Piano" Smith, Allen Toussaint and Dr. John.

While most of Longhair’s career was spent in the clubs of New Orleans, he also made well received appearances at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, Newport Jazz Festival and the Montreux Jazz Festival.

After his death in 1980 Professor Longhair was inducted into both the Blues and Rock & Roll Halls of Fame. He also won a posthumous Grammy for a re-release of his early recordings on an album called House Party New Orleans Style.

Here's a bit of Blues trivia for you: Professor Longhair’s song “Tipitina” is used as the theme song for the radio show American Routes. Check it out for yourself, it's heard Saturday evenings at 7 right here on KUNC.

http://youtu.be/apWm5lRkejM

Also on this week’s Nine O’clock Blues we’ll hear from Johnny Shines, who played with Robert Johnson. Shines and Johnson traveled together on and off from 1935 to 1937. Shines also played regularly with Robert Johnson’s step-son, Robert Lockwood, Jr. more than 30 years later. We’ll hear a recording of throw-back tracks that excellently recapture the Country Blues sound of the late 1930s, appropriately called Back to the Country that Snooky Pryor joined  Shines to record just a year before Johnny’s 1992 death.

Related Content
  • Rusty Zinn is a singer/songwriter, guitarist and producer who was born in California in 1970. When Zinn performs people generally dance…a lot.His shows…
  • Bob Wills was known as the King of Western Swing and, as such, certainly must be considered an important figure in the history of the Blues and its myriad…
  • From his porch in the Treme, the drummer can see where slaves congregated for Sunday drum circles, where Professor Longhair lived and where gospel choirs sing. No wonder he proudly steeps himself in his city's musical tradition.
  • Mac Rebennack knows funky: He's from one of the most vibrant music scenes in the country, New Orleans. When he started performing under the stage name Dr. John in the late '60s, the unlikely frontman took his blend of rhythm and blues, jazz and voodoo on the road to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
  • Our Live @ Swallow Hill Sessions return with pianist George Winston, recorded live at Daniels Hall, August 24th, 2012.Pianist George Winston's latest is…