Polka Dot Slim

Willie Monroe Vincent (December 9, 1926 June 22, 1981),[1] who used the stage name Polka Dot Slim and was also credited as Vince Monroe, Mr. Calhoun, and Poka-A-Dot Slim, was an American blues singer and harmonica player.[2]

Biography

Born in Woodville, Mississippi, United States, he performed as a singer and harmonica player from his youth, in a style that combined New Orleans rhythm and blues with elements drawn from Sonny Boy Williamson (Rice Miller).[2] His first recordings were made in the late 1950s in Crowley, Louisiana for Jay Miller, who released them under two different pseudonyms on two different labels.[3] In 1964, he recorded "A Thing You Gotta Face" and "Ain't Broke Ain't Hungry", produced by Sax Kari and released as a single on the Instant label.[4]

Polka Dot Slim was a regular performer for many years in clubs and bars in New Orleans.[3] Researcher John Broven described him in the 1970s as one of "the last of the rural country bluesmen still playing in New Orleans", along with Boogie Bill Webb and Babe Stovall.[4] Polka Dot Slim later moved to Oakland, California, where he died in 1981.[1]

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gollark: I suppose, just adding more reaction wheels and RCS to it would have worked.
gollark: The great thing about the Minmus (Minmic? Minmian?) mass driver system is that, being on a surface station, it is completely impossible to aim except by waiting for the planet to spin.
gollark: It launched a very small (probe core + antenna + solar panels) communications satellite out of the system at 32km/s.
gollark: I had a kind of unstable ground station with all of the Simple Construction shipbuilding equipment and a stack of mass drivers.

References

  1. Eagle, Bob; LeBlanc, Eric S. (2013). Blues - A Regional Experience. Santa Barbara: Praeger Publishers. p. 227. ISBN 978-0313344237.
  2. Colin Larkin, ed. (2002). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Fifties Music (Third ed.). Virgin Books. p. 470. ISBN 1-85227-937-0.
  3. Biography, AllMusic. Retrieved 22 February 2019
  4. Broven, John (1974). Rhythm & Blues In New Orleans. Gretna, Louisiana: Pelican. pp. 202. ISBN 0-88289-433-1.


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