He was born in 1911 in Shelby County, Tennessee. He took to the guitar early in his childhood, principally taught by his father and Memphis medicine show star Jim Jackson. By his late teens, he was working with Jack Kelly's Jug Busters, working for tips on the street with the occasional house party and country supper rounding out his meager paycheck. Borum joined the Memphis Jug Band, one of two professional outfits in existence at that time. The group frequently worked at what later became W.C. Handy Park in Memphis, with touring stretching all the way down to New Orleans during Mardi Gras. Sometime in the '30s he learned to play harmonica, taught by no less a master than Noah Lewis, the best harp blower in Memphis and mainstay of Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers.
As his style began to move further away from a strict jug band approach, Willie B. began working on and off with various traveling Delta bluesmen, performing at various functions with Rice Miller, Willie Brown, Garfield Akers, and Robert Johnson. He finally got to make some records in New York under his own name in 1934 for Vocalion, but quickly moved back into playing juke joints and gambling houses with Son Joe, Joe Hill Louis, and Will Shade until around 1943, when he became a member of the U.S. Army.
It was a much different world he returned to and after a brief attempt to pick up where he left off, Borum soon cashed in his chips and started looking for a day job. That would have been the end of the story, but in 1961 -- with the folk and blues revival in full hootenanny steam -- Borum was tracked down and recorded an absolutely marvelous session at Sun studios for Prestige's Bluesville label. It turned into a little bit of a career upswing for the next few years; Willie B. started working the festival and coffeehouse circuit with old Memphis buddies Gus Cannon and Furry Lewis. But then just as quickly, he dropped out of the music scene and eventually out of sight altogether. Willie B. died in Memphis in 1993. ~ Cub Koda, Rovi