County Seat of Coahoma County, was founded in 1868 by John Clark, for whom the town was named. Situated in one of the most fertile regions of the world, it has grown into one of the leading cities of the Yazoo Mississippi Delta. It has a pride in its library, its school & its churches, & its an important market for long staple cotton.
Tags: mississippi blues trails Mississippi Blues Trail Mississippi Blues Trail U.S. Highway 61 Blues Trail mississippi delta Mississippi Delta blues mississippi blues musicians mississippi gateway to the blues U.S. Highway 61 “America’s Blues Highway” Coahoma County Clarksdake Mississippi Historic marker coahoma county mississippi historic markers coahoma county clarksdake historic markers coahoma county clarksdale mississippi Yazoo Mississippi Delta
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Abraham Davis founded his first business in 1924 named Bungalow-Inn, located on Fourth Street; now called Martin Luther King Boulevard, where his excellent Bar-B-Q reputation spread across North Mississippi & Mid South. The business moved to the crossroads of U.S. 49 & 61 where legend has it that the Delta blues king, Robert Johnson sold his soul to the devil & the blues was born. You will quickly realize that everybody that's anybody in the music business worldwide has made their pilgrimage to Clarksdale & once there, will amble in to Abe's Bar-B-Q to contemplate their fate over a meal of signature Delta cuisine.
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One of the major factors behind the "great migration" of African Americans from the South to northern cities was the mechanization of agriculture, which diminished the need for manual laborers.
In 1944 the Hopson Planting Company produced the first crop of cotton to be entirely planted, harvested, & baled by machine. Blues pianist Joe Willie "Pinetop" Perkins was a tractor driver here at the time. He later played in the band of Muddy Waters & enjoyed a successful solo career.
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Pinetop Perkins - Belzoni
Blues piano master Joe Willie “Pinetop” Perkins was born on July 7, 1913, on the Honey Island Plantation, seven miles southeast of Belzoni. Perkins spent much of his career accompanying blues icons such as Sonny Boy Williamson No. 2 and Muddy Waters. After he began to tour and record as a featured singer and soloist in the 1980s, Perkins earned a devoted following among enthusiasts who hailed him as the venerated elder statesman of blues piano.
Perkins did not have an album under his own name in the United States until he was seventy-five years old (in 1988), but during the next two decades he recorded more than fifteen LPs and CDs as the reigning patriarch of blues piano. Perkins started out on guitar, but he also learned piano as a youngster, influenced by local pianists and by the records of Clarence “Pine Top” Smith and others. Smith’s “Pine Top’s Boogie Woogie” of 1929 was so popular that many pianists, including Perkins, took up boogie woogie and sometimes even adopted the name “Pine Top,” or “Pinetop.”
Perkins spent much of his childhood moving around the Delta, living with his mother or other relatives, or with his friend, guitarist Boyd Gilmore, on a plantation with Gilmore’s grandparents. Perkins picked cotton, worked as handyman, mechanic, and truck driver, and began playing at juke joints, house parties, and cockfights. His first professional job in music was as a guitarist with blues legend Robert Nighthawk. In the 1940s Perkins played piano on radio broadcasts with Nighthawk and with Sonny Boy Williamson No. 2 (Rice Miller) on KFFA in Helena, Arkansas. When a woman stabbed him in Helena, the injury forced him to give up the guitar, although he was already becoming better known as a pianist. Perkins also drove a tractor on the Hopson plantation near Clarksdale. In Clarksdale he later mentored a young Ike Turner on piano and began working with another prodigy, guitarist Earl Hooker.
Perkins first recorded as pianist on a Nighthawk session in Chicago in 1950. In 1953 Perkins recorded two versions of “Pinetop’s Boogie Woogie” when he, Boyd Gilmore, and Earl Hooker did a session together for Sam Phillips’s Sun label in Memphis. Pinetop continued to play with Nighthawk, Hooker, and others at different times and also worked at a laundry and a garage. In 1969, when Otis Spann–another noted pianist with Belzoni roots–left the Muddy Waters band, Waters called on Perkins to take his place. International touring and recording with Muddy brought him widespread recognition, and he made his first album in 1976 for a French label. In 1980 Perkins and other band members left Muddy and formed the Legendary Blues Band. After recording two albums with the unit, Perkins embarked on his belated solo career.
In addition to Perkins and Spann, other blues artists who were born in on near Belzoni or who lived here include Denise LaSalle, Boyd Gilmore, Eddie Burns, Paul “Wine” Jones, Sonny Boy Williamson No. 2, and Elmore James.
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Established 1852
On this site in 1944, the Hopson Planting Co. & International Harvester, revolutionized modern cotton farming by introducing the first commercially produced mechanical cotton picker.
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