David "Honeyboy" Edwards 1915
Winner of Mississippi Governor's Award for Lifetime Achievement
in 2010
Major Works
Songs
- Just Like Jesse James
- Sweet Home Chicago
- Sad and Lonesome
- Blues Like Showers of Rain
- Long Tall Woman Blues
- Don't Say I Don't Love You
- Don't You Lie to Me
Photo right: Honeyboy Edwards by Jeff Dunas. Used
courtesy of Jeff Dunas.
Albums
- Who May Your Regular Be
- I've Been Around
- Crawling Kingsnake
- White Windows
- Back To The Roots
- Delta Bluesman
- The World Don't Owe Me Nothin'
Books
- The World Don't Owe Me Nothin'
---------------------------------------------------------- David "Honeyboy"
Edwards: A Biography
By Timothy Davis (SHS)

David "Honeyboy" Edwards is one of the few remaining original
practitioners of the acoustic Delta blues style (Santelli
135). As a guitarist and country blues singer, David "Honeyboy"
Edwards has been playing" traditional and unadulterated Mississippi
Delta blues" since he left his home in Shaw, Mississippi,
at the age of fourteen. "Though Edwards took up electric
blues in the 1960's and has since worked on occasion with a
band, he still performs authentic solo acoustic country blues
and is living testament of the music's vitality" (Santelli
135). The New York Times calls Edwards one
of "the last authentic performers in blues idiom that developed
in central Mississippi during the second and third decades of
the century," and Rolling Stone is saying " ...he
shows that you don't always need a band to move people's feet
(www.mudcat.com)."
Photo above right courtesy of Bungi Rogers of
Britain --Rogers and Honeyboy Edwards
David "Honeyboy" Edwards was born June 28, 1915, in Shaw, Mississippi.
There he taught himself how to play the guitar by listening to
area blues men like Tommy McClennan and Robert Petway. By the age
of fourteen, he was playing Delta juke joints and picnics with Big Joe
Williams (Santelli 135). After learning the ropes during
the years with Williams, he went out on his own and made associations
with some of his contemporaries, the bluesmen of the South during the
1930's and 1940's. He played with people like McClennan, Robert
Johnson, Big Walter Horton, and Yank Rachell, and he traveled all over
the South with them (Santelli 135).
Folklorist
Alan Lomax caught Honeyboy on tape while doing field recording for the
Library of Congress in 1942 (www.blue heaven.com). The session
had to be halted at one point because of a powerful storm that
blackened the delta sky and soaked the parched land (www.blue
heaven.com). In all, fifteen sides of Honeyboy's singing were
recorded by Lomax. Edwards didn't record commercially until
he got to Houston in 1951 and cut Who May Your Regular Be for Arc Records (www.blue heaven.com). Then Honeyboy recorded his hit song, Drop Down Mama, in 1953.
Although he made few recordings during his traveling years,
David "Honeyboy" Edwards eventually settled in Chicago in the
mid-50's and has made a number of fine traditional recordings
with various labels (www.Blues University: David "Honeyboy"
Edwards.com). He also played small clubs and streetcorners
with artists such as Johnny Temple, Floyd Jones, and Kansas
City Red. In the mid-'60s he resumed his recording career
with the Adelphi/Blue Horizon label and began to play some festivals.
He toured Europe and Japan mainly during the 70s and 80s and
performed at the Smithsonian's Festival of American Folklife,
the Chicago Blues Festival, and the San Francisco Blues Festival
(Santelli 135). He currently records for the
Chicago-based Earwig label. In 1992, they released his
album, Delta Bluesman (Santelli 136).
This work includes Honeyboy's original Library of Congress recordings
and his songs of the 1940's (Santelli 136). Honeyboy
still performs widely despite his age of 84. In 1998 he
published his autobiography, The World Don't Owe Me Nothin'
and has an album with the same name.
He was awarded the Mississippi Governor's Award for Lifetime
Achievement in February 2010 at the age of 94 1/2.
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Timeline
1932 - Traveled a year with Big Joe Williams when he was just seventeen.
1942 - Folklorist Alan Lomax caught Honeyboy on tape while doing field recording for the Library of Congress.
1951 - Honeyboy started recording commercially in Houston, Texas for Arc Records.
1953 - Performed a fine slide guitar performance on Drop Down Mama.
1954 - Honeyboy settled in Chicago.
1960's
- 1970's - Honeyboy played small streetcorners and clubs
with some famous bluesmen. He had a new release with Big Walter
Horton and guitarist Eddie Ell in the early 70's.
1988 White Windows released
1992--Delta Bluesman produced.
1995--I've Been Around
1997--World Don't Owe Me Nothing album released
1997-Crawling Kingsnake
1998 - Honeyboy's autobiography, The World Don't Owe Me Nothin' was published.
1999--Don't Mistreat A Fool
2000--Shake 'Em on Down originally released.
2001--Mississippi Delta Bluesman
2003--I've Been Around
(enhanced)
2010--Receives Mississippi Governor's Award for Lifetime Achievement
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Related Websites
Listen to audio samples and read reviews here of Honeyboy's work.
Honeyboy's official site gives lots of info about him.
Find information about the documentary on the blues legend.
Chicago's City Guide has biography of Honeyboy.
Photo
of Honeyboy and Mark Hoffman, 1996.
RETURN TO TOP OF PAGE
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Bibliography
"Blue Heaven: David Honeyboy Edwards." [online] Available http://www.musicblvd.com, April 4, 1999.
"Blues
University: David Honeyboy Edwards." [online] Available
http"//www.bluesu.com/BluesU_Honeyboy_Edwards.html, April 4, 1999.
Cox, James L. David "Honeyboy" Edwards. Mississippi Almanac 97-98 : The Ultimate Reference on the State. Yazoo City, MS : Computer Search and Research, 1997. 124.
Santelli, Robert. David "Honeyboy" Edwards. The Big Book of Blues. New York, New York; Penguin Books, 1993.135-136.
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