
Early Life
Jefferson was born blind near Coutchman, Texas in Freestone County,
near present-day Wortham, Texas. Jefferson was one of eight
children born to sharecroppers Alex and Clarissa Jefferson.
Disputes regarding his exact birth date derive from contradictory
census records and draft registration records. By 1900, the family
was farming southeast of Streetman, Texas, and Lemon Jefferson's
birth date is indicated as September 1893 in the 1900 census.
However, the 1910 census recorded his birth date as 1894, and
indicated the family was farming northwest of Wortham, near Lemon
Jefferson's birthplace. In his 1917 draft registration, Jefferson
gave his birth date as October 26, 1894, further stating that he
then lived in Dallas, Texas, and that he had been blind from birth.
In the 1920 Census, he is recorded as having returned to the
Freestone County area, and he was living with his half-brother Kit
Banks on a farm between Wortham and Streetman.
Jefferson began playing the guitar in his early teens, and soon
after he began performing at picnics and parties. He also became a
street musician, playing in East Texas towns in front of
barbershops and on corners. According to his cousin, Alec
Jefferson, quoted in the notes for Blind Lemon Jefferson, Classic
Sides: They was rough. Men was hustling women and selling bootleg
and Lemon was singing for them all night... he'd start singing
about eight and go on until four in the morning... mostly it would
be just him sitting there and playing and singing all night. By the
early 1910s, Jefferson began traveling frequently to Dallas, where
he met and played with fellow blues musician Leadbelly. In Dallas,
Jefferson was one of the earliest and most prominent figures in the
blues movement developing in Dallas' Deep Ellum area. Jefferson
likely moved to Deep Ellum in a more permanent fashion by 1917,
where he met Aaron Thibeaux Walker, also known as T-Bone Walker.
Jefferson taught Walker the basics of blues guitar, in exchange for
Walker's occasional services as a guide. Also, by the early 1920s,
Jefferson was earning enough money for his musical performances to
support a wife, and possibly a child. However, firm evidence for
both his marriage and any offspring is unavailable.
The Beginning of the Recording Career
Unlike many artists who were "discovered" and recorded in their
normal venues, in December 1925 or January 1926, he was taken to
Chicago, Illinois, to record his first tracks.
Uncharacteristically, Jefferson's first two recordings from this
session were gospel songs ("I Want to be like Jesus in my Heart"
and "All I Want is that Pure Religion"), released under the name
Deacon L. J. Bates. This led to a second recording session in March
1926. His first releases under his own name, "Booster Blues" and
"Dry Southern Blues," were hits; this led to the release of the
other two songs from that session, "Got the Blues" and "Long
Lonesome Blues," which became a runaway success, with sales in six
figures. He recorded about 100 tracks between 1926 and 1929; 43
records were issued, all but one for Paramount Records.
Unfortunately, Paramount Records' studio techniques and quality
were infamously bad, and the resulting recordings sound no better
than if they had been recorded in a hotel room. In fact, in May
1926, Paramount had Jefferson re-record his hits "Got the Blues"
and "Long Lonesome Blues" in the superior facilities at Marsh
Laboratories, and subsequent releases used that version. Both
versions appear on compilation albums and may be compared.
Success with Paramount Records

It was largely due to the popularity of artists such as Blind
Lemon Jefferson and contemporaries such as Blind Blake and Ma
Rainey that Paramount became the leading recording company for the
blues in the 1920s.[citation needed] Jefferson's earnings reputedly
enabled him to buy a car and employ chauffeurs (although there is
debate over the reliability of this as well); he was given a Ford
car "worth over $700" by Mayo Williams, Paramount's connection with
the black community. This was a frequently seen compensation for
recording rights in that market. Jefferson is known to have done an
unusual amount of traveling for the time in the American South,
which is reflected in the difficulty of pigeonholing his music into
one regional category. He sticks to no musical conventions, varying
his riffs and rhythm and singing complex and expressive lyrics in a
manner exceptional at the time for a "simple country blues singer."
According to North Carolina musician Walter Davis, Jefferson played
on the streets in Johnson City, Tennessee during the early 1920s at
which time Davis and fellow entertainer Clarence Greene learned the
art of blues guitar.[
Jefferson was reputedly unhappy with his royalties (although
Williams said that Jefferson had a bank account containing as much
as $1500). In 1927, when Williams moved to OKeh Records, he took
Jefferson with him, and OKeh quickly recorded and released
Jefferson's "Matchbox Blues" backed with "Black Snake Moan," which
was to be his only OKeh recording, probably because of contractual
obligations with Paramount. Jefferson's two songs released on Okeh
have considerably better sound quality than on his Paramount
records at the time. When he had returned to Paramount a few months
later, "Matchbox Blues" had already become such a hit that
Paramount re-recorded and released two new versions, under producer
Arthur Laibly.
In 1927, Jefferson recorded another of his now classic songs, the
haunting "See That My Grave Is Kept Clean" (once again using the
pseudonym Deacon L. J. Bates) along with two other
uncharacteristically spiritual songs, "He Arose from the Dead" and
"Where Shall I Be." Of the three, "See That My Grave Is Kept Clean"
became such a big hit that it was re-recorded and re-released in
1928.
Stories
As his fame grew, so did the tales regarding his life, often
personally involving the teller. T-Bone Walker states that as a
boy, he was employed by Jefferson to lead him around the streets of
Dallas; he would have been of the appropriate age at the time. A
Paramount employee told biographer Orrin Keepnews that Jefferson
was a womanizing sloppy drunk; on the other hand, Jefferson's
neighbor in Chicago, Romeo Nelson, reports him as being "warm and
cordial," and singer Rube Lacy states that Jefferson always refused
to play on a Sunday, "even if you give me two hundred." He is
claimed to have earned money wrestling before his musical success,
which is further claimed as proof that he was not blind at the time
(something of a non sequitur). Victoria Spivey elliptically credits
Jefferson as someone who "could sure feel his way around."
Death and Grave

Jefferson
died in Chicago in December 1929. The cause of death is unknown,
and though rumors swirled that a jealous lover poisoned his coffee,
a more likely scenario is that he died due to a heart attack after
being disoriented during a snowstorm (another scenario is that he
froze to death). The book "Tolbert's Texas" claims that he was
killed while being robbed of a large royalty cash payment by a
guide taking him to Union Station to catch a train home to Texas.
Paramount Records paid for the return of his body to Texas by
train, accompanied by pianist Will Ezell. Jefferson was buried at
Wortham Negro Cemetery (now Wortham Black Cemetery). Far from his
grave being kept clean, it was unmarked until 1967, when a Texas
Historical Marker was erected in the general area of his plot, the
precise location being unknown. By 1996, the cemetery and marker
were in poor condition, but a new granite headstone was erected in
1997. In 2007 the cemetery's name was changed to Blind Lemon
Memorial Cemetery and keeping his wishes his gravesite is being
kept clean by a cemetery committee in Wortham Texas.
Complete
Discography
See Wikipedia, Blind Lemon Jefferson,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_Lemon_Jefferson
(as of Dec. 23, 2008, 19:01 GMT).