Decades after his music first appeared on 78 rpm platters, the
Classics chronological series reissued several volumes devoted to the rhythm & blues recordings of pianist and bandleader
Todd Rhodes, whose formative years were spent as a member of
McKinney's Cotton Pickers during the 1920s. In 2005,
Classics presented
Rhodes' output from the years 1952-1954. Given the fact that all of the selections are less than three minutes in duration (with fully half of them lasting less than two-and-a-half minutes), it seems unfortunate that
Classics only provides 16 titles. Vocalists heard on this collection are
LaVern Baker,
Saddie Madison, and
Cornelius "Pinnochio" James.
Rhodes' band, fortified with trumpet and saxophones, did its best to ride the rapidly changing currents of popular music. Despite heroic efforts like "Chicken Strut," "Thunderbolt Boogie," "Snuff Dipper," "Hog Maw and Cabbage Chow," and "Your Mouth Got a Hole in It,"
Rhodes' contract with
King Records expired in 1955 and was not renewed. After gigs became scarce and the band dissolved,
Rhodes moved to Flint, Michigan in 1958 and then to Detroit in 1960. His last regular gig was as house pianist at the bar in the Morden House Hotel in Sarnia, Ontario, where patrons were encouraged to sing along with him karaoke-style. It was during this rather degraded engagement that he suffered a stroke, and he passed away months later in Detroit on June 4 1965, a victim of diabetes. In addition to several volumes on
Classics devoted to
Rhodes' works as a leader,
Ace Records crammed 28 of his early
Sensation recordings onto one disc in 2002, including numerous previously unissued rarities. ~ arwulf arwulf