Bosman was the man of the hour, or rather the woman, for a Halloween recording session involving a top-flight backup band with players such as drummer Panama Francis, bassist Milt Hinton, trumpeter Taft Jordan, and Taylor himself on tenor sax. The hour was two in the afternoon; the session notes indicate that originally three hours were set aside for the recording. The producer had signed Bosman on the strength of a demo recording in which she came across as a kind of Billie Holiday-style singer, melodic but with a strong touch of blues. No matter that MGM had advertised her as a "blues shouter" in trade papers; perhaps this was based on someone having to shout at her over the phone to remind her about the session. Not to let the studio time go to waste, the backup band went ahead and recorded the instrumental arrangements that had been devised for the proposed Bosman cuts, Jordan and Taylor blowing improvised solos in the spots where her vocals were supposed to be.
Birmingham Special was the resulting ad hoc track, and it turned out to be a bigger hit than anything Bosman recorded. The success of the song encouraged MGM to release other instrumentals as well. Birmingham Special and its flip side were credited to the Blues Chasers, a name that Taylor made sporadic use of during his career. When Bosman finally showed her face at the studio, the same arrangement was re-cut plus vocal as You Ain't Had No Blues. Bosman also did a cover version of the Irene Higginbotham tune entitled Dream Street, and it is this side that she is best known for. Her other recordings include the song Is It a Sin?, which can possibly be interpreted as a comment about punctuality. Focusing on the session activities of the Blues Chasers' hornman Jordan, the collection Blues Women With Taft Jordan collects all of the tracks mentioned above, both vocal and instrumental. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, Rovi