The
scant discography of Walter "Buddy Boy" Hawkins reveals
one of the most distinctive country-blues performers of the pre-war era,
a gifted vocalist whose taste for slow, dirge-like songs was ideally
suited to his intricate guitar work. Almost nothing is known about the
singer; various attempts to determine his date and place of birth have
resulted in countless chronological and geographical inconsistencies,
although the consensus places him as a product of either Alabama or the
northern Delta region. Between 1927 and 1929, Hawkins recorded a dozen
tracks for Paramount, many of them portraits of trains and life on the
railroad (another possible piece of the puzzle); in any case, these
sessions are the only surviving document of his music, and his
subsequent activities remain a mystery. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi