Magic Sam – Mama, Mama, Talk To Your Daughter

1st September 2024 · 1960s, 1967, Blues, Music

I hadn’t heard of Magic Sam, and I hadn’t heard this song, written before I was born, until it appeared in The Bikeriders.

With its driving raw-boned rhythm it’s perfect for a motorcycle movie, capturing the feeling of riding down the highway.

Samuel Maghett – “Maghett Sam” merging into Magic Sam – was a Chicago bluesman who had moved north from his Mississippi Delta birthplace in 1956 when he was 19.

Learning his trade from records by Little Walter and Muddy Waters, his debut single All Your Love was a local sensation and established the template for his career, showcasing a staccato fingerpicking style on the guitar, with generous use of the tremolo arm.

Sam soon became a name on the city’s new West Side sound in the late 1950s alongside Otis Rush and Buddy Guy, recycling the melody on songs like Everything Gonna Be Alright and Easy Baby, before changing direction for the searing rockabilly number 21 Days In Jail.

After his Army service was cut short when he was jailed for desertion, he returned to recording with another change of style on a version of Fats Domino’s Every Night About This Time, followed by a return to his roots with That’s Why I’m Crying and Out Of Bad Luck.

His most successful song was I Feel So Good (I Wanna Boogie) in 1963, earning him a UK tour. Two albums followed in 1967, including numbers like You Belong To Me and What Have I Done Wrong, the tribute to his adopted home, Sweet Home Chicago – and this version of J.P.Lenore’s 1955 tune Mama, Mama, Talk To Your Daughter.

Sadly his career ended in 1969 when he died from a heart attack at the age of only 32.