Little Milton
1934 – 2005 (71)

Little Milton bridged blues and Southern soul for 50 years without ever sounding like he was straddling a line. James Milton Campbell Jr. from Inverness, Mississippi was discovered by Ike Turner, signed to Sun Records, and then spent decades on the chitlin circuit making records that sat comfortably between B.B.

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King and Bobby Bland -- soulful enough for r&b radio, bluesy enough for the juke joint.

His biggest hit was The Blues Is Alright -- an anthem of resilience that became a standard on the Southern soul-blues circuit. Grits Ain't Groceries. If Walls Could Talk. He recorded for Chess, Stax, Malaco, and his own labels. His guitar playing was understated and perfectly complementary to his warm baritone voice.

He was still touring and recording in the 2000s when a stroke and subsequent heart attack took him at 70. The Blues Is Alright outlasted him. It's become the closing number at blues festivals across the South -- the song you play when you want to remind everyone why they came.

Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

Little Milton

1934 – 2005 (71)

Little Milton bridged blues and Southern soul for 50 years without ever sounding like he was straddling a line. James Milton Campbell Jr. from Inverness, Mississippi was discovered by Ike Turner, signed to Sun Records, and then spent decades on the chitlin circuit making records that sat comfortably between B.B.

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King and Bobby Bland -- soulful enough for r&b radio, bluesy enough for the juke joint.

His biggest hit was The Blues Is Alright -- an anthem of resilience that became a standard on the Southern soul-blues circuit. Grits Ain't Groceries. If Walls Could Talk. He recorded for Chess, Stax, Malaco, and his own labels. His guitar playing was understated and perfectly complementary to his warm baritone voice.

He was still touring and recording in the 2000s when a stroke and subsequent heart attack took him at 70. The Blues Is Alright outlasted him. It's become the closing number at blues festivals across the South -- the song you play when you want to remind everyone why they came.

If Walls Could Talk (1970) If Walls Could Talk (1970)
We’re Gonna Make It (1965)
Sings Big Blues (1966)
Grits Ain’t Groceries (1969)
If Walls Could Talk (1970)
Waiting for Little Milton (1973)
Blues'N Soul (1974)
Walkin’ the Back Streets (1981)
Age Ain't Nothin' But A Number (1983)
Playing for Keeps (1984)
I Will Survive (1985)
Annie Mae's Cafe (1986)
Movin' to the Country (1987)
Back to Back (1988)
What It Is - Live At Montreux (1989)
Too Much Pain (1990)
Reality (1991)
Strugglin' Lady (1992)
Me For You
You For Me (1993)
Friend of Mine (1993)
The Blues Is Alright! (1993)
Tending His Roots (1994)
I'm a Gambler (1994)
Rockin' the Blues (1996)
Cheatin' Habit (1996)
For Real (1998)
soulblues
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Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

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