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"Cadillac" John Nolden
Blues Harmonica Player & Vocalist, Renova
“Cadillac” John Nolden is a blues harmonica player, songwriter, and vocalist
from Renova, Mississippi. He was born in Sunflower on April 12, 1927, one of ten
children. The family worked on various plantations in the area, including one
owned by the mayor of Sunflower, W.L. Patterson. Nolden, who emphasizes the
value of hard work, picked and chopped cotton and plowed with mules, and recalls
that his family often went to work before sunrise. As a young man he began
driving a tractor on the L.E. Moore plantation near Minter City, and over the
years worked in various jobs, including a brickyard in Indianola. His nickname
derives from an old Cadillac he drove that continually backfired.
His father, Walter Nolden, sang gospel, and three of his uncles—“Red,” Bruce,
and Mel—played guitar. Nolden didn’t take up any instruments as a young man, but
was a strong vocalist, and formed a gospel group with his siblings called the
Four Nolden Brothers. He sang baritone and first and second lead. He recalls as
influences the Golden Gate Quartet, the Fairfield Four, and the Soproco
Spiritual Singers, who performed over WWL out of New Orleans.
Nolden and his siblings performed throughout the region and had a radio show on
a station on Greenwood during the mid-1940s. Riley (later B.B.) King’s quartet,
The Famous St. John's Gospel Singers, performed over the same station. Other
local groups included the Big Four from Belzoni and the Happy Band Quartet from
Sunflower.
The group eventually broke up when one brother died and two others left the
area. Nolden later sang for 8-9 years with the gospel group the Four Stars out
of Sunflower [not to be confused with a group of the same name from Clarksdale,
which featured Early Wright].
Nolden also played blues together with his brother Jesse James Nolden, a
guitarist, on the streets of Sunflower and occasionally at house parties and
jukes. He was reluctant to play the latter because of the threat of violence.
Jesse James later moved to Jackson, where he lives today. Other blues musicians
who played on the streets of Sunflower included Riley King, then a resident of
nearby Indianola, and Charlie Booker, a Sunflower native and Leland-based
bluesman who recorded for Modern Records and Sun Records.
Nolden listened religiously to Sonny Boy Williamson II’s daily lunchtime radio
show King Biscuit Time, over KFFA in Helena, Arkansas, as well as on Saturdays
[Sonny Boy recorded a show in Belzoni that was broadcast later out of Greenville
and Yazoo City; Charlie Booker also had a local radio show sponsored by a tire
company.] Nolden saw many local performances by Sonny Boy’s band, and also has
strong memories of Robert Nighthawk.
After his brother left the area and the Four Stars disbanded, Nolden stopped
performing except for occasional solos at church. Around 1970 he was inspired to
take up the blues again to help alleviate the pain he felt after his wife
abruptly left him. “She even took the curtains from the windows,” he recalls. He
bought a harmonica from the Simmons drug store in Cleveland and “went to hummin’
a little then... I just couldn’t hardly hold it back.”
During the ‘70s and ’80s Nolden performed some on the streets of Sunflower, but
otherwise played mostly around the home. In the ‘90s he performed locally with a
band that included guitarist Monroe Jones, and appeared under his own name at
the Delta Blues Festival and the Sunflower River Blues & Gospel Festival. In
2000 Jones introduced Nolden to his current partner, guitarist Bill Abel from
Belzoni. They have played regularly at venues in the area, as well as at the
King Biscuit Blues Festival, the Sunflower River Blues & Gospel Festival, the
Highway 61 Blues Festival, and the Yazoo Blues Festival. In 2000 they released
the CD Crazy About You, which contains five originals from Nolden in a vintage
style, and in 2005 they traveled to perform for a blues society in Pennsylvania.
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