At Home With Screamin’ Jay Hawkins: The Voodoo Madman of Rock and Roll
By Thomas Fraki.
Screamin’ Jay Hawkins is insane and depraved. Not exactly. But, that’s the impression someone might get when first listening to him. He screams and howls. He rips apart blues ballads with a madman’s wail and leaves you stupefied. Jay Hawkins’ act was, at the time, something wildly original. A thing perhaps more at home in vaudeville than a serious music venue. Regardless of how you feel about his music, in both sight and sound, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins demands attention. But that attention does not go unrewarded.
Aside from a handful of singles, At Home With Screamin’ Jay Hawkins was Jay Hawkins’ first foray into music world with a full studio album. It was filled with a mix of his own compositions, renditions of old traditionals, and his previously released single “I Put A Spell On You.” Jay Hawkins’ style, and particularly that song, would go on to be a significant influence on popular music for the remainder of the 20th century. At Home stands as one of the most unique sounds of its time by one of the most unparalleled characters in American music.
That Crazy Screamin’ Jay In a Bright Yellow Coat
Before even touching on any music that Jay Hawkins put to record, it’s worth delving into who he was as a person, as his life was one fit for a tall tale. Jalacy “Screamin’ Jay” Hawkins was born in 1929 in Cleveland, Ohio. At 18 months, he was put up for adoption and shortly after was adopted and raised by the Blackfoot Native American tribe. Starting early in his life, Hawkins received an education in classical piano and didn’t pick up the guitar until he was in his 20s. However, he was a notoriously difficult student, later saying that he told his tutor: “I want to come up with my own ideas. I’ve got all the information I need to get from you to do what I want, now if you stick around, I’m going to make your life miserable.”
When the US entered World War II in 1942, Hawkins forged a birth certificate and entered the Army at the age of 13. He allegedly served in a combat role in the Pacific with his fellow soldiers and officers ignoring the fact that he was noticeably underage. He remained in the Army Air Forces until his discharge in 1952. During his time in the military, he was an avid boxer and went on to become the middleweight champion of Alaska in 1949. In the early ’50s, he returned to music as a vocalist, keeping in line with his childhood ambitions of being an opera singer. Hawkins started out singing for acts like Tiny Grimes, but quickly moved on to produce his own music and sign a contract with OKeh Records. He would continue to put out music in some form or another until his death in 2000.
Later in his life, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins went on to act in and produce a number of films. He even won an Independent Spirit Award for his supporting role in the 1989 Jim Jarmusch film Mystery Train. By the time of his death, Hawkins had had six marriages and, according to his biographer, upwards of 33 children. When he married Virginia Sabellona, Hawkins was stabbed in a fit of jealousy by his singing partner Shoutin’ Pat Newborn. His was a life seemingly without a dull moment.
I Went Into a Spin and I Started to Shout
Between 1953 and 1958, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins put out a run of singles. These would be his first songs as a solo artist with accompaniment. In the beginning, his music and performance followed a typical rhythm-and-blues setup of the times, save for Hawkins’ signature vocals. As he produced more music, his style and performances became more eccentric and macabre. Cleveland disc jockey Alan Freed apparently offered Hawkins $300 to emerge from a coffin on stage. Hawkins initially replied, “No black dude gets in a coffin alive — they don’t expect to get out!” Gradually, the coffin, along with leopard-skin costumes and voodoo props like rubber snakes and a skull on a stick named Henry, became a part of the act. “I used to lose half the audience when I leapt out of my coffin in clouds of smoke and mist. They all rushed up the aisles, screaming in terror.”
Among his first singles was “I Put a Spell On You,” the one single that would be included in At Home with Screamin’ Jay Hawkins. This one song would go on to define his legacy as a musician. It would be covered by more than 100 acclaimed musicians including Creedence Clearwater Revival, Alan Price, Nina Simone, Annie Lennox, Arthur Brown, and Jeff Beck. Rolling Stone even counted it in their 500 Greatest Songs of All Time list. What’s more impressive is the fact that the whole band was reportedly drunk for the studio session, Hawkins so much so that he didn’t recall recording the track.
At less than two and a half minutes, “I Put a Spell On You” is a powerhouse performance. What Hawkins originally envisioned as a “refined ballad,” ended up anything but. It is raw, punchy, and syncopated. The twin duo of Hawkins’ wailing vocals and the forceful lead saxophone cut through the choppy rhythm. His singing is shrieking and howling, guttural and nightmarish. His voice reverberates off the far corners of the mind, shaking loose emotions long since dormant. This song led Hawkins to the realization that “[he] could do more destroying a song and screaming it to death.”
I Was Hummin’ a Tune, Drinkin’ in Sunshine When Out of That Orange-Colored Sky, Wham, Bam, Alakazam!
Two years after the release of “I Put a Spell On You,” Hawkins put out At Home with Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, his first full studio album. It consists of covers and some of Hawkins’ own writing. The standards like “Ol’ Man River” and ” Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” take on a renewed perspective with his over-the-top vocals. The juxtaposition of Hawkins’ gasping, hysterical laughter, and bellowing against very competent and robust vocals combine to form something very special. “Yellow Coat,” Hawkins’ own stop-time blues creation, is another standout of the album with some truly inventive and bizarre lyrics:
A forty gallon hat and some polka-dot shoes
Tomato pickin’ onion juice to drive away my blues
A bright red leather suit, a trip in a motorboat
And the strike I caused on the waterfront when I fell out my yellow coatHey now, stick with it, aw baby, don’t quit it
“YellOw Coat” by Screamin’ Jay Hawkins
You know you’re bound to get it
Yes sir, made outta goat skin, frog skin
And laid out in milk and gin…
It has to be addressed that not all of the songs have held up well over the 65 years since their writing, particularly “Hong Kong” and “I Love Paris.” Each of the tracks contain racial stereotypes and Asian-sounding gibberish. Obviously, this is far from the more reprehensible parts of the 1950s involving race. Nevertheless, these songs still detract from the overall legacy of the album and should be recognized as what they are.
The People Quit the Scene Like the Devil Was Loose
Screamin’ Jay Hawkins’ style and music are permanently etched into the ledger of popular music. Arthur Brown, Alice Cooper, Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, the Cramps, Glenn Danzig, Tom Waits, all these artists and countless others took a page from Screamin’ Jay Hawkins to cultivate an image that before him did not exist in music. Vox.com would go on to declare Hawkins a “goth icon” decades before the genre would even catch on.
The irony of Screamin’ Jay Hawkins was that he never wanted his legacy to be “Screamin'” Jay. In fact, he later resented the gimmicky nature of his performances and comparisons of him to a “black Vincent Price.” In a 1973 interview, Hawkins asked “Why can’t people take me as a regular singer without making a bogeyman out of me?” While artists can indeed become trapped by the characters that they make of themselves, those same characters can also be some of the most lasting and influential pieces of culture. In Hawkins’ case, he was able to take blues singing to its absolute limits. And for that the shape of popular music was forever changed.
- Side One
- Orange-Colored Sky
- Hong Kong
- Temptation
- I Love Paris
- I Put A Spell on You
- Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
- Side Two
- Yellow Coat
- Ol’ Man River
- If You Are But a Dream
- Give Me My Boots and Saddle
- Deep Purple
- You Made Me Love You