If for nothing else, the name
Willie Cobbs will always ring immortal for the prominence of his composition "You Don't Love Me," covered by everyone from
Junior Wells to
the Allman Brothers. But
Cobbs' own discography was dotted with other triumphs, including a 1994 album for Rooster Blues, Down to Earth, that reintroduced
Cobbs to blues fans as an active and committed artist.
Cobbs decided the prospect of rice farming didn't appeal to him enough to stick around his native Arkansas, so he migrated to Chicago in 1947. He hung out with
Little Walter and
Eddie Boyd while honing his harp chops on Maxwell Street. But
Cobbs' recording career didn't fully blossom until 1960, when his waxing of "You Don't Love Me" for
Billy Lee Riley's Memphis-based Mojo label made him something of a regional star (one previous 45 for Joe Brown's Ruler imprint back in Chicago had stiffed instantly). "You Don't Love Me" was eventually leased to Vee-Jay -- no doubt warming
Cobbs' heart, since Vee-Jay boss Jimmy Bracken had once turned down
Cobbs' audition, explaining that he sounded too much like Vee-Jay breadwinner
Jimmy Reed.
Throughout the '60s,'70s, and '80s,
Cobbs recorded a slew of obscure singles, often for his own labels (Riceland, Ricebelt, C&F), and operated nightclubs in Arkansas and Mississippi before cutting a long-overdue album for Rooster Blues (backed by labelmates
Johnny Rawls and L.C. Luckett). He also managed to slip a little cinematic action into his schedule, appearing in the films Mississippi Masala and Memphis.
Willie Cobbs died on October 25, 2021 at the age of 89. ~ Bill Dahl