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Pee Wee Crayton

Born
December 18, 1914
in Rockdale, TX 
Active Decades
19001020304050607080902000 
 
by Bill Dahl
Although he was certainly inexorably influenced by the pioneering electric guitar conception of T-bone Walker (what axe-handler wasn't during the immediate postwar eraNULL), Pee Wee Crayton brought enough daring innovation to his playing to avoid being labeled as a mere T-bone imitator. Crayton's recorded output for Modern, Imperial, and Vee-Jay contains plenty of dazzling, marvelously imaginative guitar work, especially on stunning instrumentals such as "Texas Hop," "Pee Wee's Boogie," and "Poppa Stoppa," all far more aggressive performances than Walker usually indulged in.



Like Walker, Connie Crayton was a transplanted Texan. He relocated to Los Angeles in 1935, later moving north to the Bay Area. He signed with the Bihari brothers' L.A.-based Modern logo in 1948, quickly hitting pay dirt with the lowdown instrumental "Blues After Hours" (a kissin' cousin to Erskine Hawkins' anthem "After Hours"), which topped the R&B charts in late 1948. The steaming "Texas Hop" trailed it up the lists shortly thereafter, followed the next year by "I Love You So." But Crayton's brief hitmaking reign was over, through no fault of his own.

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