Cripple Clarence Lofton

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Strut That Thing 02:55 Tools
I Don't Know 03:06 Tools
Brown Skin Girls 02:51 Tools
Monkey Man Blues 03:03 Tools
Streamline Train 03:56 Tools
Had a Dream 02:46 Tools
Blue Boogie 02:50 Tools
Policy Blues 03:07 Tools
I Dont't Know Cripple 03:01 Tools
Pitchin' Boogie 02:26 Tools
You Done Tore Your Playhouse Down 03:09 Tools
In the Mornin' 00:00 Tools
Sixes and Sevens 03:06 Tools
Traveling Blues 02:14 Tools
Mercy Blues 02:31 Tools
Pine Top's Boogie Woogie 02:51 Tools
Mistaken Blues 03:31 Tools
Crying Mother Blues 02:39 Tools
Policy Blues (You Can't 3-6-9- Me) 00:00 Tools
Sweet Tooth 02:52 Tools
Juicy Mouth Shorty 02:40 Tools
Sweetest Thing Born 02:44 Tools
When The Soldiers Get Their Bonus 02:38 Tools
Deep End Boogie 03:15 Tools
Lofty Blues 02:57 Tools
The Fives 03:05 Tools
More Motion 02:56 Tools
Juice Joint 02:45 Tools
It's Got to Be Done 02:30 Tools
Pinetop's Boogie Woogie 03:05 Tools
Clarence's Blues 03:08 Tools
House Rent Struggle 03:10 Tools
Salty Woman Blues 03:15 Tools
In The Morning 02:45 Tools
Early Blues 03:01 Tools
Streamline Train (R 2772) 02:58 Tools
Strut That Thing - "Big Clearance Sale" 02:58 Tools
Streamline Train (125) 03:48 Tools
I Don't Know (R 3361) 03:00 Tools
I Don't Know (R 3361) 02:45 Tools
Change My Mind Blues 03:24 Tools
Juke Joint Stomp 03:48 Tools
I Don't Know No. 2 (142) 04:05 Tools
South Side Mess Around 03:24 Tools
State Street Blues 02:47 Tools
I Don't Know - Original 02:47 Tools
I Don't Know - II (126) 03:29 Tools
Streamline Train (143) 03:58 Tools
Policy Blues (You Can't 3-6-9 Me) 03:11 Tools
Pinetops Boogie Woogie 02:49 Tools
Strut That Thing! 03:29 Tools
I Dont Know 02:45 Tools
Mistaken Blues (Change My Mind Blues) 00:00 Tools
Streamlined Train 00:00 Tools
I don´t know 03:11 Tools
Traveling Blues (South Side Mess Around) 00:00 Tools
Mercy Blues (State Street Blues) 00:00 Tools
Blue Boogie [#] 03:11 Tools
Deep End Boogie (Southend Boogie) 03:11 Tools
In The Morning Boogie 00:00 Tools
I Don't Know No. 2 00:00 Tools
I Don't Know-II 00:00 Tools
I Don’t Know 02:59 Tools
i don't kknow 02:59 Tools
Vine Street Boogie 02:59 Tools
Pine Tops Boogie 02:51 Tools
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Cripple Clarence Lofton (March 28, 1887 - January 9, 1957), born Albert Clemens in Kingsport, Tennessee, was a noted boogie-woogie pianist and singer. Though Lofton was born with a limp (from which he derived his stage name), he actually started his career as a tap-dancer. This was not his true calling, and he showed his talent in the blues idiom known as boogie-woogie and moved on to perform in Chicago, Illinois. The trademark of Lofton's performances was his energetic stage-presence, where he danced and whistled in addition to singing. Perhaps the most comprehensive description of Lofton is this excerpt from Boogie Woogie by William Russell: "No one can complain of Clarence's lack of variety or versatility. When he really gets going he's a three-ring circus. During one number, he plays, sings, whistles a chorus, and snaps his fingers with the technique of a Spanish dancer to give further percussive accompaniment to his blues. At times he turns sideways, almost with his back to the piano as he keeps pounding away at the keyboard and stomping his feet, meanwhile continuing to sing and shout at his audience or his drummer. Suddenly in the middle of a number he jumps up, his hands clasped in front of him, and walks around the piano stool, and then, unexpectedly, out booms a vocal break in a bass voice from somewhere. One second later, he has turned and is back at the keyboard, both hands flying at lightning- like pace. His actions and facial expressions are as intensely dramatic and exciting as his music." Most of his songs were twelve-bar blues to which Lofton brought a unique excitement by dropping bars and portions of bars to end up with nine-, ten-, or eleven-bar blues songs. With such a unique style, it was not long until Lofton found himself a mainstay in his genre. His first recording was in April with Big Bill Broonzy for Vocalion Records. He later went on to own the Big Apple nightclub in Chicago and continued to record well into the late 1940s, when he retired. Lofton was an integral part of the boogie-woogie genre in Chicago. Some of his most famous songs include: "Strut That Thing", "Monkey Man Blues", "I Don't Know" and "Pitchin' Boogie". His talent was likened to that of Pinetop Smith and others that influenced heavily in his field including: Meade Lux Lewis, Cow Cow Davenport and Jimmy Yancey. Lofton was also said to have influenced Erwin Helfer Lofton lived in Chicago until he died from a blood clot in his brain. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.