Biography
Heavy-voiced Jimmy Nelson was very briefly a star in 1951, when his downbeat T-99 Blues topped the RB charts for Modern Records' RPM subsidiary. Strangely, he was unable to ever return back to hitdom, despite some very worthy follow-ups.

Though he was based out of Houston, Nelson did most of his early recording in California. After debuting on wax in 1948 with a single for Olliet, he cut his only smash, the aforementioned T-99 Blues, at the Clef Club in Richmond, TX, in 1951, with backup from pianist Peter Rabbit's trio. (The exultant slow blues was covered by bandleader Tiny Bradshaw for King.)

From then on, Nelson did his studio work for RPM in L.A. with a cadre of the city's top session men: saxist Maxwell Davis, pianist Willard McDaniel, guitarist Chuck Norris, bassists Red Callender and Ted Brinson, and drummer Lee Young. For unknown reasons, the ominous Meet Me With Your Black Dress On, Second Hand Fool, Sweetest Little Girl, and the rest failed to repeat for the singer.

Nelson made a single for Chess in Houston in 1955 (the typically laid-back Free and Easy Mind), ventured next to Ray Dobard's Bay Area-based Music City diskery in 1957 to wax The Wheel, and tried his luck with a variety of tiny Texas labels during the mid-'60s with no further success. ~ Bill Dahl, Rovi




 
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