Sugar Boy Crawford

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Jock-A-Mo 00:00 Tools
Jock-O-Mo 00:00 Tools
Overboard 00:00 Tools
Jock A Mo 00:00 Tools
Jockomo 00:00 Tools
Have A Little Mercy 00:00 Tools
No More Heartaches 00:00 Tools
Oo Wee Sugar 00:00 Tools
What's Wrong 00:00 Tools
Night Rider 00:00 Tools
Round And Round (Montel 1003) 00:00 Tools
Morning Star 00:00 Tools
She's Got A Wobble (When She Walks) 00:00 Tools
I Cried 00:00 Tools
Hooray For The Child Who Has Its Own 00:00 Tools
Jock O Mo 00:00 Tools
White Christmas 00:00 Tools
I Don't Need You 00:00 Tools
She's Gotta Wobble (When She Walks) 00:00 Tools
Jock-A-Mo (Checker 787) 1953 00:00 Tools
She's The One 00:00 Tools
You Gave Me Love 00:00 Tools
You Call Everyone Sweetheart 00:00 Tools
I Bowed On My Knees 00:00 Tools
Jock-A-Mo - Remastered 1995 00:00 Tools
I Don't Know What I'll Do 00:00 Tools
Honey 00:00 Tools
Jokomo 00:00 Tools
Iko Iko 00:00 Tools
Jock-A-Mo (Iko Iko) 00:00 Tools
Jock-A-Mo (Remix) 00:00 Tools
Love, Love, Love 00:00 Tools
Watch Her, Whip Her 00:00 Tools
Jock-A-Mo - Remix 00:00 Tools
Wandering Baby 00:00 Tools
There Goes My Baby 00:00 Tools
Troubled Mind Blues 00:00 Tools
Stop 00:00 Tools
If I Love You Darling 00:00 Tools
Jock-A-Mo Sugar 00:00 Tools
Please Believe Me 00:00 Tools
You Know I Love You 00:00 Tools
You Call Everybody Sweetheart 00:00 Tools
Get Away 00:00 Tools
38 - Sugar Boy Crawford & His Cane Cutters - Jock-O-Mo 00:00 Tools
Wondering 00:00 Tools
It's Over 00:00 Tools
Sugar Boy Crawford - Jock-A-Mo 00:00 Tools
Whats Wrong 00:00 Tools
Watch Her Whip Her 00:00 Tools
Round And Round 00:00 Tools
Jock O Mo (iko Iko) 00:00 Tools
For Me 00:00 Tools
Long Lost Stranger 00:00 Tools
Overboard - Remastered 1995 00:00 Tools
Jock-A-Mo / Sugar Boy Crawford 00:00 Tools
  • 12,358
    plays
  • 4,110
    listners
  • 12358
    top track count

James "Sugar Boy" Crawford, Jr. (October 12, 1934 – September 15, 2012) was an American rhythm & blues musician from New Orleans, Louisiana. He was the author of "Jock-A-Mo" (1954), a hit that was later recreated as "Iko Iko", by The Dixie Cups and recorded by many artists including Dr. John. Starting out on trombone, he formed a band which local DJ Doctor Daddy-O named "The Chapaka Shawee" (Creole for "We Aren’t Raccoons"), the title of an instrumental they played. Signed on by Chess Records president Leonard Chess, the group was re-named "Sugar Boy & his Cane Cutters". Although "Jock-A-Mo" became a standard at the New Orleans Mardi Gras, Crawford himself disappeared from public view, and in a 2002 interview for Offbeat, told how his career came to an abrupt halt in 1963 after a severe beating which incapacitated him for two years forcing him to leave the music business. In 1969, he decided to limit his singing in church only. In 2012, Crawford makes a guest appearance singing gospel on an episode of the HBO series ''Treme''. He died one month before the episode aired. Crawford appeared on his grandson Davell Crawford’s 1995 CD Let Them Talk. He has since made some stage appearances with Davell as well including the one at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival (1996), and most recently at the 7th annual Ponderosa Stomp in April, 2008. Among the artists Crawford has recorded with are guitarist Snooks Eaglin. He died after a brief illness in a hospice in 2012, aged 77. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.