
Once
again, the magic of the Internet has worked ! Following the piece I had written
and posted on my site in December 2002, I managed to get in touch with Lee Bell's
daughter, Mary, who kindly submitted a long list of questions to her father.
Mary recorded Lee's answers on cassette-tape - thus providing me with all the
essential data for a vastly expanded biography of that veteran Western Swing
performer. His rather short discography belies the richness and longevity of
his career. Mary also gave me access to Lee's picture album, so get ready for
a fabulous slideshow at the end of the story ! © Paul Vidal * Privas, France * June 2004 / July 2007
Lee Bell hailed from Fred (Texas), a small
community of about 200 people some 38 miles north of Beaumont. He got his first
guitar when he was 7 years old ; his father played the fiddle, so the two of them
used to play Country dances until Lee graduated from high school and headed for
Beaumont : he was 16 then and all he owned was 3 silver dollars and a $2 bill
!|
LEE BELL'S
DISCOGRAPHY
As by Link Davis (with Lee Bell on guitar) IMPERIAL 8004
IF-9
My Pretty Blonde
8021IF-11 Born To Love You 8008
IF-10
Tired Of Being Lonesome
IF-12 Why Did You Go Away ? 8009
IF-17
I'm Tired
IF-18 I'm Waiting For you As
by Link Davis
& The Bluebonnet Playboys (with Lee Bell on guitar/vocal*) BAYOU 3001
IF-36
Broken Heart
IMPERIALIF-37 You Played Around 8018 IF-35
Rice & Gravy Blues
IF-38 Rice & Gravy Boogie 8025
IF-57
You Loved Me Too Late *
8030IF-58 I'm Grieving Over You * Unissued from that session : IF-59 I Don't Need You Now IF-60 The Day Is Sure To Come IF-39
Steel Guitar Jump
IF-41 You Low Down Conceited Dog Unissued from that session : IF-40 Leave My Blues Behind IF-42 Texas Swing As
by Lee Bell
& The Texas Pioneers IMPERIAL IF-55
Sad & Weary
IF-56 I'm The Guy Behind The Prison Doors 8031
IF-53
Bring A Little Sunshine
IF-54 Please Forgive Me, Please Don't Cry As
by Cliff Bruner
& His Texas Wanderers (with Lee Bell on guitar/vocal*) AYO 102
Santa Fe Waltz
As by Lee BellRio Grande Polka Was reissued on Modern 20-697 103
Unfaithful One (vocal,
Cliff Bruner)
San Antonio Blues (vocal, Link Davis) Was reissued on Modern 20-698 105
Ouch (vocal,
Rusty McDonald)
You Took Advantage Of A Lonely Heart (vocal, Rusty McDonald) 107
Out Of Business (vocal,
Cliff Bruner)
Unissued
from those sessions : Mr. Postman (vocal, Cliff Bruner) You Took Advantage Of A Lonely Heart * Baby Whatcha Doing To Me * RCA VICTOR 20/47-5024
Let Me Love You
I Get The Biggest Thrill 20/47-5148
E2VW-7379
Beatin' Out The Boogie (On The Mississippi Mud) E2VW-7378 Get Ready With Those Tears |
The
first two '78s were released in 1947 under Link Davis's name, most
probably to give him credit as a songwriter and vocalist. Four more were released
(three on Imperial and one on the subsidiary label, Bayou - see discography
at right) and billed as 'Link Davis & The Bluebonnet Playboys'. Apparently,
Lee Bell played guitar on all those sides and sang two of them. It is interesting
to note that four songs remain unissued to this day (according to Michel Ruppli's
book, 'The Aladdin/Imperial Labels - A Discography' * Greenwood Press, 1991).
Two other '78s (# 8021 & # 8031) were credited to 'Lee Bell & The Texas
Pioneers'. The tracks were cut at the radio station studio (KRIC) but Lee is
not certain about Link Davis's involvement with these sessions. Those records
are just about impossible to find today so I had to rely on a tape that Lee
Bell himself had sent me to hear some of the stuff : I can assure you that the
singing and musicianship is first class.
In early 1948, Moon Mullican came back from Nashville
(where he had played the Grand Ole Opry) with a deal to play Carnegie
Hall in New-York. Lee Bell picks up the story : 'He asked
us to go with him. It was to be a two-year tour. Most of the boys went but a
few did not : Link Davis did not go, nor did Merle Powell. The tour folded in
a few weeks before we got to Carnegie Hall due to a booking agent who got drunk
and spent all the money Moon had given him. We had no jobs booked or advertisement
out, so we returned to Beaumont. Mullican and most
of the band started a sit-down job playing every night at the Forest Club. Cliff
Bruner had started up again and asked me to come with him. I couldn't refuse.
We made some records for the AYO label in 1949. I played on all the AYO recordings
'til 1950. I sang some, don't remember how many'. Most of those records
on the AYO label were put out under the name 'Cliff Bruner & The Texas Wanderers'
but Lee was not featured as vocalist ; apparently, two songs sung by Lee Bell
('You Took Advantage Of A Lonely Heart' and 'Baby Whatcha Doing To Me') weren't
even released at all. Cliff Bruner or Link Davis sang and on one session, Richard
Prine - a former drummer with Cliff's band - brought in a singer by the name
of Rusty McDonald who indeed sang several tunes (including the released version
of 'You Took Advantage Of A Lonely Heart'). Rusty Mc Donald would later cut
some excellent sides for the Intro label (#6035 'Baby Sittin' Boogie', for example).
[More information can be found on 'Cliff Bruner & His Texas Wanderers',
a 5-CD box set put out in 1997 by Bear Family * BCD 15932].
In 1950, Cliff Bruner's wife, Ruth, became very
ill : she had tuberculosis. Cliff wanted to take her to a sanatorium
in New Mexico so he asked Lee to go with him. Unfortunately, she would die shortly
after. Lee and Cliff went back to Amarillo, Texas, and started playing with
some of their old friends (Rip Ramsey, among others) but the band they organized
was comprised of 10 or 12 men, which soon proved to be too big to make any money.
Lee then took the nucleus of the band with him and headed out for New Mexico.
He had heard that there was a job at a club in Artesia. While playing in this
club, a fellow named M. C. Scott came in and said that he would soon build a
big night club in Roswell and that he would like to have the band play there
every night. So, sometime in early 1951, Lee and his band moved to Roswell,
New Mexico. The band included Jimmy Blakley (steel guitar), Dorothy Blakley
(piano & upright bass), George Clayburn and James 'Red' Pope (fiddles).
[The Blakleys went on to record a number of fine sides
for Starday ; as for George Clayburn, who also played with Bob Wills, Jesse
A. Morris - of Western
Swing Journal - informed me that he passed away on December 7, 2003, in Las
Vegas.]
Roswell was the home of KSWS (radio and TV)
where Lee Bell and his band soon wound up with a half hour radio show at noon
every day and two TV shows a week, on Tuesday nights and Thursday nights. Lee
and his band were also residents at Scotty's, the aforementioned night club.
All that (plus a little help from Jim Beck) finally led to a contract with RCA
Victor for whom one session was cut on September 22, 1952. According to Philip
J. Tricker, whose article in 'Roll Street Journal' issue # 17 (UK, 1986) provides
some of the info used here, Lee's first RCA single (# 5024) was good albeit
somewhat unspectacular. However, the second and last one (# 5148), is one of
the great Hillbilly Bop double siders.
Released in '53, its topside, the pounding 'Beatin'
Out The Boogie', does just what it says, with piano, steel guitar, fiddle
and guitar all taking a blazing solo. The backside, 'Get Ready With Those Tears',
is equally impressive : powerful Texas Hillbilly set to a shuffling beat. I
particularly like the steel guitar motif at the beginning of the verses. Cut
at Jim Beck's Studio in Dallas, the musicians involved were Jimmy Rollins (lead
guitar), Billy Knight (guitar), Larry Helm (steel), Bob Rutland (fiddle), Harold
Carmack (piano) and Zeke Clements (double bass). Lee Bell didn't know them personally
but he admits that they were good musicians. He didn't know Bob Baker either,
who wrote 'Beatin' Out The Boogie'. Bob Baker may be the guy who later recorded
for the Amarillo-based Veeda label (#1002, 'Kitty Kat Korner' and #4006, 'Turned
On The Ice').
Lee again : 'I had a very good stay with RCA and enjoyed
it very much. But, in the middle fifties, I quit playing altogether. I left
the band and came back to Beaumont. I met up with Cliff Bruner again. He was
quitting the insurance business, so he and I started another band ! But we didn't
have a whole lot of luck with that band. The crowds that had been there in the
'40s didn't show up in the '50s. So it didn't last too long.' It
was now 1956 and the music scene was changing considerably. After that brief
attempt, Cliff Bruner and Lee Bell took day jobs. Lee went to work for an auto
supply company and stayed with them until his retirement in 1986 ; he was 59
and a half years old then. He never got back into the music business.
But does he still listen to Country Music ? 'Yes, I listen
to it occasionally but actually, I really don't understand it. I don't understand
the beat. In my day, the standard beat was 4/4 rhythm ; that's what we all played,
that's what the Jazz bands played, that's what the big bands played. Now they
play all kinds of rhythm. They sound OK to me ; I guess they know what they're
doing, I certainly don't !'

Both
'Beatin' Out The Boogie' and 'Get Ready With Those Tears' were legally
re-issued on the stupendous UK compilation album, 'Hillbilly Houn' Dawgs &
Honky-Tonk Angels' (Detour 33-008, 1989) ; that's how I got acquainted with
those essential songs before finding the original single pictured on the right.
In June 2007, Bear Family Records released a RCA Hillbilly Bop compilation CD
entitled 'Gonna Shake This Shack Tonight' (BCD 16864 AH) which, along with great
tracks by the likes of Hank Penny, Charline Arthur, Jack Turner, Johnnie &
Jack & more, includes Lee's 'Beatin' Out The Boogie' as well as a partial
reprint of this very web page.
However, his remaining Imperial and RCA sides are still awaiting re-release
; Lee Bell, who now lives in Nederland, Texas, deserves collecting royalties
for such good music.