Retro Redux: Clyde McCoy - Leaving The Legendary Feud Behind

Part of: Retro Redux

I have written some articles with unusual juxtapositions, but I think this is one of the strangest. It's about an early jazz pioneer, a man who is especially remembered for one distinctive song, who also happened to be a member of a family involved in a legendary hillbilly blood-feud.

I think most of us have heard of the Hatfield-McCoy feud, but probably don't know all the facts, or even where facts end and myths begin. I won't go into too much detail here - after  all, we're about music - but sometime around the close of the Civil War, two powerful and influential clans in the hills near the Eastern Kentucky/West Virginia state line began a bitter quarrel. It was deadly serious and resulted in a lot of turmoil - including fatalities - for over forty years until things finally calmed down a little.

If you're interested in knowing more about the feud, here's the Wikipedia link, but let's move along to the musical career of one of the descendent's. Just about the time hostilities were easing up between the families, young Clyde McCoy and his parents moved from Kentucky to Ohio, and although I'm sure Clyde was very familiar the the particulars of the feud, he soon found his true interest — music.

He began by learning the trumpet, then the trombone, and before too long found himself playing in various amateur groups. By the time he was was 14, he was making some money in riverboat bands, and within a couple of years had even formed his own band. He was on his way.

While still in his teens, he traveled to New York to try to make his fortune in the booming jazz scene of the 1920s, but big-city success eluded him. After a few years he decided to try California, and that seemed to be a better idea as his ever-improving band began to get more attention. By now he'd perfected his own sound, a style known as "wah-wah", with his muted trumpet almost seeming to speak to listeners.

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Article Author: Big Geez

Big Geez is a retiree who takes time off from trimming his ear hair to write about music -- sometimes doing conventional reviews, but often just sharing his opinions about how something resonates with his memories and those of his generation. …

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  • Complete Clyde Mccoy on Columbia Complete Clyde Mccoy on Columbia

    Subtitled - Sugar Blues. Here is everything Clyde and his Orchestra (occasionally the Drake Hotel Orchestra) recorded for Columbia, all 22 sides of it, nicely remastered and annotated. ...

  • Sugar Blues 1951 Sugar Blues 1951

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