Discography
105
Most popular
Flip, Flop & Fly
1972

Nobody in Mind
2024

Big Joe Rides Again
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With Pete Johnson's Orchestra - Tell Me Pretty Baby
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Blues Train
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Joe Turner / Rockin' the Blues
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Turns on the Blues
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Old but Gold
2024

Kansas City Style
2024

Big Joe Turner - Legends Of Blues
2024

I'm Still in the Dark
2024

Golden Star Collection
2024

Christmas Boogie
2024

Let Me Tell You (Live Paris '71)
2023

Live from The Palms Cafe - San Francisco 1977
2023

Midnight Reverie
2023

Three of a Kind: Louis Jordan, Big Joe Turner, Fats Waller
2023

The Christmas Dance!
2023

10 Hits of Big Joe Turner
2023

Flip Flop and Fly
2022

Spotlight on Big Joe Turner
2022

Remastered Classics, Vol. 48, Joe Turner
2022

Devotion
2022

Two of a Kind: Big Joe Turner & Jerry Lee Lewis
2022

Milestones of Legends Kings & Queens of R & B, Vol. 3
2021

The Atlantic Albums
2021

Milestones of Legends Kings & Queens of R & B, Vol. 4
2021

Shake, Rattle and Roll
2020

Rollin' with Big Joe, Vol. 1
2020

Rollin' with Big Joe, Vol. 2
2020

Big Joe Turner: Big Joes Rockin' Blues - Featuring Shake, Rattle and Roll
2020

Instinctively the Blues - Big Joe Turner
2020

Let's Spend an Evening with Big Joe Turner
2020

Best of the Best (Remastered)
2020

Orchestra and Trio
2020

Chicago in the Forties
2020

Big Joe Selection
2020

Honey Hush (Remastered)
2020

Midnight Special Train (Remastered)
2020

Jump for Joy (Remastered)
2020

Midnight Rockin
2019

Pennies from Heaven - The Swing Sound of Big Joe Turner
2019

Red Sails in the Sunset
2018

The Singles Collection 1950-60
2018

Essential Blues
2017

Chains of Love
2017

San Francisco 1977
2017

Best Of
2017

Big Joe Turner - Everyday I Have The Blues
2016

Boss of the Blues
2016

Big Joe Rocks the House
2015

Big Joe Blues
2015

Best of the Best - 30 Hits
2014

Joe Turner & Pete Johnson (Remastered)
2014

With Roomful Of Blues
2014

Your Birthday Present - Big Joe Turner
2014

Golden Hits
2014

Hollywood Bed
2014

Teenage Letter
2014

Shake, Rattle & Roll - 100 Classic Tracks
2014

Essential Hits
2014
![Two Classic Albums Plus Other 1945-47 Singles (The Boss of the Blues / Joe Turner & Pete Johnson) [Remastered] cover](https://cdn-images.dzcdn.net/images/cover/5e1c7300706ef0ed7e5619c455764265/1000x1000-000000-80-0-0.jpg)
Two Classic Albums Plus Other 1945-47 Singles (The Boss of the Blues / Joe Turner & Pete Johnson) [Remastered]
2014

Careless Love
2014

All the Hits, Vol. 6
2013

Rocks
2013

Big Joe Rocks
2013

Howlin' Winds, Vol. 5
2013

All the Hits, Vol. 4
2013

Howlin' Winds, Vol. 1
2013

Howlin' Winds, Vol. 7
2013

Top 100 Classics - The Very Best of Big Joe Turner
2013

Howlin' Winds, Vol. 2
2013

Howlin' Winds, Vol. 6
2013

All the Hits, Vol. 7
2013

Cherry Red
2012

Rock the Joint Boogie
2012

Die größten Hits von '55
2012

Ice Man
2012

Essential 10
2012

Best of - 37 Masterpieces
2012

Big Joe Turner (The Big Blues Collection)
2012

S.K. Blues
2012

Blues Legends
2011

Jazz Figures / Big Joe Turner (1941-1946)
2011

Early Big Joe (1940-1944)
2011

Big Joe Turner Selected Favorites, Vol. 2
2011

Big Joe Turner Selected Favorites, Vol. 1
2011

Big Joe Turner Selected Favorites, Vol. 3
2011

The Essential '40s Collection
2010

Roomful With Vinson and Turner (Disc 1)
2010

Honey Hush (Live)
2010

Abc of the Blues Vol. 45
2010

Shake, Rattle and Roll: 25 Rock 'N' Roll Favourites
2010

Best Of Big Joe Turner
2009

With Knocky Parker & His Houserockers
2009

The Very Best Of
2008

Low Down Dog
2008

Corinne, Corinna
2008

Shake, Rattle & Roll
2008

The Blues Volume 1
2008

The Midnight Special
2002

Rocks in My Bed
2000

The Blues Boss
1990

Let's Boogie Woogie All Night Long
1978

Everyday I Have the Blues
1975
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More about Big Joe Turner
About
Big Joe Turner (Joseph Vernon Turner Jr., Kansas City, Missouri, May 18, 1911 - Inglewood, California, November 24, 1985) was an American blues shouter. Although he came to his greatest fame in the 1950s with his pioneering rock and roll recordings, particularly "Shake, Rattle And Roll", Turner's career as a performer stretched from the 1920s into the 1980s. (for stride pianist Joseph H. Turner (3.11.07-21.7.90) > Joe Turner) Known variously as The Boss of the Blues, and Big Joe Turner (due to his 6'2", 300+ lbs stature), Turner was born in Kansas City and first discovered his love of music through involvement in the church. Turner's father was killed in a train accident when Joe was only four years old. He began singing on street corners for money, leaving school at age fourteen to begin working in Kansas City's club scene, first as a cook, and later as a singing bartender. He eventually became known as The Singing Barman, and worked in such venues as The Kingfish Club and The Sunset, where he and his piano playing partner Pete Johnson became resident performers. The Sunset was managed by Piney Brown. It featured "separate but equal" facilities for white patrons.
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Turner wrote "Piney Brown Blues" in his honor and sang it throughout his entire career. At that time Kansas City was a wide-open town run by "Boss" Tom Pendergast. Despite this, the clubs were subject to frequent raids by the police, but as Turner recounts, "The Boss man would have his bondsmen down at the police station before we got there. We'd walk in, sign our names and walk right out. Then we would cabaret until morning". His partnership with boogie-woogie pianist Pete Johnson proved fruitful. Together they headed to New York in 1936, where they appeared on a bill with Benny Goodman, but as Turner recounts, "After our show with Goodman, we auditioned at several places, but New York wasn't ready for us yet, so we headed back to K.C.". Eventually they were spotted by the talent scout, John H. Hammond in 1938, who invited them back to New York to appear in one of his "From Spirituals to Swing" concerts at Carnegie Hall, which was instrumental in introducing jazz and blues to a wider American audience. Due in part to their appearance at Carnegie Hall, Turner and Johnson scored a major hit with "Roll 'Em Pete". The track contained one of the earliest recorded examples of a back beat. It was a song which Turner recorded many times, with various combinations of musicians, over the ensuing years. In 1939, along with boogie players Albert Ammons and Meade Lux Lewis, they began a residency at Café Society, a club in New York City, where they appeared on the same bill as Billie Holiday and Frank Newton's band. Besides "Roll 'em, Pete", Turner's best-known recordings from this period are probably "Cherry Red", "I Want a Little Girl" and "Wee Baby Blues". In 1941, he headed to Los Angeles where he performed in Duke Ellington's revue Jump for Joy in Hollywood. He appeared as a singing policeman in a sketch called "He's on the Beat." Los Angeles became his home base for a time, and in 1944 he worked in Meade Lux Lewis's Soundies musical films. Although he sang on the soundtrack recordings, he was not present for the filming, and his vocals were mouthed by comedian Dudley Dickerson for the camera. In 1945 Turner and Pete Johnson opened their own bar in Los Angeles, The Blue Moon Club. Turner made lots of records, not only with Johnson but with the pianists Art Tatum and Sammy Price and with various small jazz ensembles. He recorded on several record labels, particularly National Records, and also appeared with the Count Basie Orchestra. In his career, Turner successively led the transition from big bands to jump blues to rhythm and blues, and finally to rock and roll. Turner was a master of traditional blues verses and at the legendary Kansas City jam sessions he could swap choruses with instrumental soloists for hours. In 1951, while performing with the Count Basie Orchestra at Harlem's Apollo Theater as a replacement for Jimmy Rushing, he was spotted by Ahmet and Nesuhi Ertegün, who signed him to their new recording company, Atlantic Records. Turner recorded a number of hits for them, including the blues standards, "Chains of Love" and "Sweet Sixteen". Many of his vocals are punctuated with shouts to the band members, as in "Boogie Woogie Country Girl" ("That's a good rockin' band!", "Go ahead, man! Ow! That's just what I need!" ) and "Honey Hush" (he repeatedly sings "Hi-yo, Silver!", probably in reference to The Treniers singing the phrase in their Lone Ranger parody "Ride, Red, Ride"). Turner's records shot to the top of the rhythm-and-blues charts; although they were sometimes so earthy that some radio stations wouldn't play them, the songs received heavy play on jukeboxes and records. Turner hit it big in 1954 with "Shake, Rattle And Roll", which not only enhanced his career, turning him into a teenage favorite, but also helped to transform popular music. The song is fairly raw, as Turner yells at his woman to "get outa that bed, wash yo' face an' hands" and comments that she's "wearin' those dresses, the sun comes shinin' through!" He sang the number on film in the 1955 theatrical feature Rhythm and Blues Revue. Although the cover version of the song by Bill Haley And His Comets, with the risqué lyrics incompletely cleaned up, was a bigger hit, many listeners sought out Turner's version and were introduced thereby to the whole world of rhythm and blues. Elvis Presley showed he needed no such introduction. His version of "Shake, Rattle and Roll" combined Turner's lyrics with Haley's arrangement, but was not successful as a single. In addition to the rock 'n' roll songs, he found time to cut the classic Boss of the Blues album. After a number of hits in this vein, Turner left popular music behind and returned to his roots as a singer with small jazz combos, recording numerous albums in that style in the 1960s and 1970s. In 1966, Bill Haley helped revive Turner's career by lending him the Comets for a series of popular recordings in Mexico (apparently no one thought of getting the two to record a duet of "Shake, Rattle and Roll", as no such recording has yet surfaced). In 1977 he recorded a version of Guitar Slim's song, "The things I used to do". In the 1960s and 1970s he was reclaimed by jazz and blues, appearing at many festivals and recording for the impresario Norman Granz's Pablo label, once with his friendly rival, Jimmy Witherspoon. He also worked with the German boogie-woogie pianist Axel Zwingenberger. It is a mark of his dominance as a singer that he won the Esquire magazine award for male vocalist in 1945, the Melody Maker award for best 'new' vocalist in 1956, and the British Jazz Journal award as top male singer in 1965. His career thus stretched from the bar rooms of Kansas City in the 1920s (at the age of twelve when he performed with a pencilled moustache and his father's hat), on to the European jazz music festivals of the 1980s. In 1983, only two years before his death, Turner was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame. He died in Inglewood, California in November 1985, at the age of 74 of a heart attack, having suffered the earlier effects of arthritis, a stroke and diabetes. Big Joe Turner was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987. Tribute The late, New York Times music critic Robert Palmer, said: "...his voice, pushing like a Count Basie solo, rich and grainy as a section of saxophones, which dominated the room with the sheer sumptuousness of its sound. Most famous recordings "Roll 'em, Pete" - 1938; (available in many versions over the years. Used for the million-dollar first scene in Spike Lee's film, Malcolm X). "Chains of Love" - 1951 † (this was Turner's first million seller. The song was written by 'Nugetre' (words) - Ahmet Ertegün, Van Wallis (music), and the disc reached the million by 1954). "Honey Hush" - 1953 † "Shake, Rattle And Roll" - 1954 "Flip Flop and Fly" - 1955 † (has sold a million through the years. The song was written by Charles Calhoun and Turner, although credited to the latter's wife, Lou Willie Turner). "Cherry Red" - 1956 "Corrine, Corrina" - 1956 † (the fourth million seller...with adaption by J. Mayo Williams, Mitchell Parish and Bo Chatmon in 1932. This disc was #41, and spent 10 weeks in the Billboard chart). "Wee Baby Blues" - 1956; (a song Turner had been singing since his Kingfish Club days) "Love Roller Coaster" 1956 "Midnight Special" - 1957 Tracks marked as † were million selling discs. Select discography Big Joe Rides Again (1956) The Boss of the Blues (1956) Bosses of the Blues, Vol. 1 (1969) Texas Style (1971) Flip, Flop & Fly (1972) Life Ain't Easy (1974) The Trumpet Kings Meet Joe Turner (1974)
Big Joe Turner in brief
- How many Big Joe Turner releases are on Riffiter?
- 105 releases are catalogued, spanning 1972 to 2024.
- When was Big Joe Turner formed?
- Big Joe Turner formed in 1911.
- What is the most recent Big Joe Turner release on Riffiter?
- Nobody in Mind, released in 2024.
