Cootie Stark (December 27, 1927 – April 14, 2005) was an American Piedmont blues guitarist, singer, and songwriter known as the King of the Piedmont Blues. He learned songs from the originators of Piedmont Blues - Baby Tate, Pink Anderson, Walter Phelps, Peg Leg Sam and Blind Sammy Doolie. Cootie had a repertoire of hundreds of nearly forgotten Old Blues and Gospel songs, making him one of the last direct links to a South long gone.
Cootie was born Johnny Miller in 1927, in Abbeville County, SC. His mother told him that he began singing as a baby and played rhythms on cans to pass the time. Born with poor eyesight, he wasn't able to attend school. When he was 14, he schooled himself on his first guitar and began to play on street corners of Abbeville. He lived in Anderson for a short time and around 16 moved to Greenville. That's where he met Baby Tate. Cootie would follow him and his band around while Tate would teach him songs like 'Little Lean Woman' (aka Skinny Woman). He would sometimes play his guitar on Spring Street to make money.
Cootie began to travel from town to town playing on corners and dances. It wasn't easy. He acquired the nickname, Sugar Man, and continued to work his trade as a songster in the area. His performing name of Cootie Stark was an amalgam of a childhood nickname and his grandfather's surname. He was kicked around, abused and robbed, but he kept on playing. By the time he'd reached his thirties, Cootie had completely lost his eyesight, but he kept playing.
In an interview with Timothy Duffy, Founder of the Music Maker Foundation, Cootie said, "Many times I was hungry. But I made it. Peoples give me somethin' to eat, give me a good meal, then I move on to another place and I might not get no real good meal ... maybe some saltine crackers and sardines, cheese, pig skins. But I made it. I didn't worry Mama and them 'bout nothin'; I wanted Mama and them to know that I could make it."
Although music was his forefront, life as a transient bluesman was hard on the body and pocket. Stark continued to perform across the State and beyond, often using the name Blind Johnny Miller. After years on the road Cootie was left with little money and a dwindling audience for the deep-rooted blues that defined his style. In the 1980's the blind Stark settled into the Woodland Homes Projects in Greenville, SC. "By then, the real Piedmont Blues was pretty much gone," he said. "All them guys were dead and gone and I wasn't making no headway."
For most of his life, Cootie Stark played in obscurity, never making a record. Still, he never let go of his dream of making it big with his music. Then in the spring of 1997, Tim Duffy,the founder of the Music Maker Relief Foundation, heard Cootie playing electric guitar and singing Fats Domino songs. Duffy questioned Stark about his knowledge of the old songs and was blown away to find himself face to face with a Piedmont Blues original. Within months, Cootie had a new acoustic guitar and a promising career.
Here’s “Metal Bottoms” from above album.
Duffy’s record label released Stark's debut album, Sugar Man, in 1999. Stark toured France, Costa Rica, and Switzerland as well as appearing at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in New York, also Portsmouth Blues Festival in New Hampshire, the Charleston Blues Festival in South Carolina, and Taj Mahal Fishin’ Blues in Costa Rica.
He performed at major Blues Festivals across the US. His abrasive, percussive guitar style would meld with a vocal arsenal that ranged from a roughhewn gospel shout to a tight, pretty vibrato. Both European and American audiences have been held captive by Stark's raw and powerful performances. His best remembered recordings were "Metal Bottoms" and "Sandyland."“They say the older you get, the more fun you gonna have, and I believe them now,” Stark told Peter Cooper. “I just wish I’d had some of this a long time ago. I’ve had a lot of wasted time, a lot of time gone. But that was just an old, bumpy road.”
In 2003, Stark released his second and final album, Raw Sugar, when he was accompanied on record by Taj Mahal. Before he died, he was recipient to The Jean Laney Harris Folk Heritage Award from the South Carolina Arts Commission for his contributions and preservation of the Piedmont Blues. His brother accepted the award on his behalf in May 2006 from the State Legislature. In his final years Stark was recognized and praised as an International Blues Figure. He died at the age of 77, in Greenville, in April 2005.
(Edited
from Wikipedia, The Piemont Blues and Hash Bash & The Music Maker
Foundation)