Francis Clay
Biography
Francis Clay (November 16, 1923 – January 21, 2008) was an American jazz and blues drummer, best known for his work behind Muddy Waters in the 1950s and 1960s, and as an original member of the James Cotton band. Clay's jazz-influenced style is cited as an influence by many of the British Invasion rock 'n' rollers of the 1960s such as Charlie Watts and Ronnie Wood of the Rolling Stones and Faces, respectively. Born and raised in Rock Island, Illinois, he started playing jazz, professionally at the age of 15, played drums behind many of the biggest names of 20th century popular American music. In his career, Clay claimed to have backed Gypsy Rose Lee, and played with Jay McShann and Charlie Parker early on and with Jimi Hendrix while in New York's Greenwich Village. He can be heard on recordings including John Lee Hooker's Live at Cafe Au Go Go and can be seen and heard on documents from the Waters band's 1960 Newport Jazz Festival appearance, and on albums issued by the Arhoolie label by Big Mama Thornton and Lightning Hopkins, among many others. Clay made his home in San Francisco in the late 1960s and became a part of the music scene in the Bay Area throughout the rest of his life. His birthday parties at the Biscuits and Blues nightclub were an annual gathering of the tribe, and he was known also as "the ambassador" at the annual San Francisco Blues Festival, where he was the subject of a tribute in 2007, and mourned in 2008. Clay claimed to have been deprived of recognition for his compositional contributions to the Waters oeuvre. Songs he claimed to have composed and/or arranged included "Walking in the Park," "She's Nineteen Years Old" and "Tiger in Your Hole."
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Folk Singer
1964

Muddy Waters At Newport 1960
1960

Wizards From The Southside
1982

T-Bone Blues
1959

Twin Cities Funk & Soul: Lost R&B Grooves From Minneapolis/St. Paul 1964-1979
2012

The Chess Box
1988

McKinley Morganfield A.K.A. Muddy Waters
1971

The Blues Is Where It's At
1967

The Blues - Volume 2
1965

The Chess Blues-Rock Songbook: The Classic Originals
1997

Chess Blues
1992

Blues Anthology
1990

Trouble No More (Singles 1955-1959)
1989

Rare And Unissued
1984

Big Mama Thornton And The Chicago Blues Band
1967

Live At Cafe Au-Go-Go
1967

Muddy Waters Sings "Big Bill"
1960

The Blues Legend Vol. 2
Credited work
506 releases · 91 albums · active 1960–2025
- Performance · 961
- Other credits · 6
Studios: Newport Jazz Festival · Cafe Au Go Go · The Village Recorder · Soledad Prison
Frequent collaborators
- Muddy Waters
- Various
- John Lee Hooker
- Jimmy Rogers
- Otis Spann
- James Cotton
- Lightning Hopkins
- Big Mama Thornton
