Jimmy Tig Explained

Jimmy Tig
Birth Name:James Tigner Jr.
Birth Date:July 20, 1938
Birth Place:Atlanta, Georgia, US
Death Place:Atlanta, Georgia
Instrument:Vocals, drums
Genre:R&B, soul
Occupation:Musician, bandleader, songwriter
Years Active:Mid-1950s–1970s
Associated Acts:The Rounders
Eric Tig

James Tigner, Jr. (July 20, 1938 – September 21, 2007),[1] known as Jimmy Tig, was an American R&B singer, drummer, bandleader and songwriter who recorded and performed between the 1950s and 1970s.

Biography

He was born in Atlanta, Georgia, and began playing drums as a child. He worked as a professional musician from his early teens, and over the years performed with such musicians as James Brown, Wilson Pickett, Otis Redding, the Tams, the Drifters and Gladys Knight and the Pips.[2] He also led his own band, Jimmy Tig & The Rounders, and recorded his song "Small Town Girl" for the small Jora label; it was later reissued by the larger Spar label in Nashville, Tennessee in about 1965. The record is thought to feature the band Johnny Jones and the King Casuals, including Jones (guitar), Billy Cox (bass), Ted Jarrett (piano) and Freeman Brown (drums).[3]

Although the record was unsuccessful, Tig and his band continued to perform and tour in the southern states.[2] Other members of the Rounders included Mighty Sam McClain and Ben Moore (who later sang as "Bobby Purify").

In 1968, Tig and his wife recorded a version of Oscar Toney, Jr.'s song "A Love That Never Grows Cold" in Muscle Shoals for Bell Records with producer Papa Don Schroeder, the same label and producer as had recorded Toney's original. The record, credited to Jimmy and Louise Tig and Company, was again not a commercial success, despite Louise Tig's "emotionally compelling" lead vocal, but was later included on the compilation album Bell's Cellar of Soul – Two, and was released in the UK by Dave Godin as a single on his Deep Soul label and again, in the 1990s, on his Deep Soul Treasures: Vol.2.

Tig's final record release was "Everybody's Laffing", credited to Jimmy Tig & The Tig Family and issued on the Tuska label in Atlanta in about 1970.

In 1971, his song "Peace Brother Peace" was recorded by his 7-year-old son Eric, and released on Hi Records as the B-side of Eric's version of Roy Head's song "Treat Her Right";[4] Eric appeared on the syndicated TV program The Mike Douglas Show.[5] Jimmy Tigner also wrote both sides of Eric Tig's 1978 single, "Mr. D.J."/"Heaven".[6]

Tigner lived in California during the 1970s, and performed in clubs where he met Redd Foxx, gaining work with the Sanford and Son production company as a result.[2] He returned to live in Atlanta in the 1980s, and in 1982, was seriously injured when, riding a motorcycle, he was hit by an automobile on his first day at work for a company at Hartsfield International Airport outside Atlanta. As a result, he was left with some brain damage and physical disabilities which reduced his ability to work. He took legal action against the company which had failed to place adequate road signs on the highway, winning financial compensation of $2 million as a result; however, he later lost most of the settlement as a result of actions by his broker and had to take further legal action to recoup it.[2] [7] [8]

He became a minister at a Baptist church in Atlanta. During the 1980s, he returned to work in entertainment, founding Dynasty Records and hosting a weekly cable television show where he campaigned against substance abuse after one of his sons was killed in a drug-related shooting. In 1987 he promoted a "Rapper's Rap Off" in Atlanta, to reward the rapper with the best anti-drugs message.[2] [9] He later worked as a driver and anger management trainer under Robert McMichael, sheriff of Fulton County, and managed an electronic monitoring program.[2] He also performed in later years as a member of his son Eric's band, Lil' Eric Tig and the Tig Family.[2]

He died in Atlanta in 2007 at the age of 69.[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://search.ancestry.co.uk/cgi-bin/sse.dll?rank=1&new=1&MSAV=0&msT=1&gss=angs-g&gsfn=james&gsln=tigner&msbdy=1939&msddy=2007&sbo=1&uidh=jq5&pcat=ROOT_CATEGORY&h=80722872&recoff=9+10&db=ssdi&indiv=1&ml_rpos=1 U.S., Social Security Death Index, James Tigner
  2. http://mbfh.com/memsol.cgi?user_id=1183931 Kay Powell, "Obituary, Rev. James Tigner, Jr.", Atlanta Journal-Constitution, September 23, 2007, reprinted at Memorial Networks
  3. http://www.sirshambling.com/artists_2012/T/jimmy_tig/index.php Jimmy Tig, SirShambling.com
  4. http://www.discogs.com/Eric-Tig-Treat-Her-Right-Peace-Brother-Peace/release/2330477 Eric Tig, "Treat Her Right" at Discogs.com
  5. http://www.tv.com/shows/the-mike-douglas-show/july-8-1971-1297144/ The Mike Douglas Show, July 7, 1971
  6. http://www.discogs.com/viewimages?release=5736959 Eric Tig, "Mr. D.J." at Discogs.com
  7. http://leagle.com/decision/19861016180GaApp836_1655.xml/ROBERT%20&%20CO.%20ASSOC.%20v.%20TIGNER Robert & Company Associates v Tigner et al., Court of Appeals of Georgia, Decided October 14, 1986, 180 Ga. App. 836 (1986) 351 S.E.2d 82
  8. http://www.dailyreportonline.com/id=1202552416615/Ex-Musician-No-Longer-Singing-the-Blues?slreturn=20140505073405 R. Robin McDonald, "Ex-Musician No Longer Singing the Blues: Judge awards $1.5M to man who lost his estate to mortgage fraud", Daily Report, April 26, 2005
  9. http://dlg.galileo.usg.edu/meta/html/gsu/ajc/meta_gsu_ajc_3889.html?Welcome "James Tigner, Jr., with poster...", Digital Library of Georgia