0
Blind Willie McTell
Blind Willie McTell
Piedmont and ragtime blues singer and guitarist
1
Ma Rainey
Ma Rainey
African-American blues singer
2
Viola McCoy
Viola McCoy
American blues singer
3
Ishman Bracey
Ishman Bracey
American singer-guitarist
4
Buddy Moss
Buddy Moss
American East Coast blues guitarist
5
Katherine Henderson
Katherine Henderson
American classic female blues singer
6
William Harris
William Harris
American bluesman
7
Fannie May Goosby
Fannie May Goosby
American singer
8
Barbecue Bob
Barbecue Bob
American blues musician
9
Gid Tanner
Gid Tanner
American musician
10
Ed Bell
Ed Bell
American musician
11
Jaybird Coleman
Jaybird Coleman
American country blues musician
12
Porter Grainger
Porter Grainger
American musician
13
Allen Lowe
Allen Lowe
American jazz musician
14
Robert Johnson
Robert Johnson
American blues singer and musician
15
Frank Stokes
Frank Stokes
American blues musician, songster, and blackface minstrel
16
W. C. Handy
W. C. Handy
American blues composer and musician
17
Henry Thomas
Henry Thomas
American recording artist; country blues singer, songster and musician.
18
Lil Johnson
Lil Johnson
African American blues singer
19
Jimmie Lunceford
Jimmie Lunceford
American musician
20
Willie Baker
Willie Baker
American Piedmont blues guitarist singer and songwriter
21
Trixie Smith
Trixie Smith
African American blues singer, recording artist, vaudeville entertainer, and actress (1895-1943)
22
Son House
Son House
American blues singer and guitarist
23
Dick Burnett
Dick Burnett
American musician
24
Papa Charlie Jackson
Papa Charlie Jackson
American bluesman and songster
25
Blind Willie Johnson
Blind Willie Johnson
American blues and gospel singer and guitarist
26
Maggie Jones
Maggie Jones
American blues singer and pianist
27
Jimmie Rodgers
Jimmie Rodgers
American country singer, songwriter
28
Jim Jackson
Jim Jackson
African American blues and hokum singer, songster and guitarist
29
Big Bill Broonzy
Big Bill Broonzy
American blues singer, songwriter and guitarist
30
Lil Jon
Lil Jon
American rapper
31
Tom Delaney
Tom Delaney
African American blues and jazz songwriter, pianist and singer
32
J. Mayo Williams
J. Mayo Williams
American football player and coach, music producer (1894-1980)
33
Ida Cox
Ida Cox
African American singer and vaudeville performer
34
Bessie Smith
Bessie Smith
American blues singer
35
Don Redman
Don Redman
American musician
36
Ralph Peer
Ralph Peer
Talent scout, recording engineer and record producer
37
Sandra Hall
Sandra Hall
American soul blues singer and songwriter
38
Peg Leg Howell
Peg Leg Howell
African American blues singer and guitarist
39
Carter Family
Carter Family
traditional American folk music group
40
Marty Stuart
Marty Stuart
American musician
41
Jimmy Rushing
Jimmy Rushing
American blues shouter and swing jazz singer
42
Rob Cooper
Rob Cooper
musical artist
43
Eddie Lang
Eddie Lang
American jazz guitarist
44
Julius Hemphill
Julius Hemphill
American saxophonist
45
Pete Johnson
Pete Johnson
American boogie-woogie and jazz pianist, songwriter
46
Fletcher Henderson
Fletcher Henderson
American pianist, bandleader, arranger and composer
47
Harry McClintock
Harry McClintock
American musician
48
Original Dixieland Jass Band
Original Dixieland Jass Band
American jazz band
Intro
Genres
Music
The only known photo of McClintock

Lil McClintock was an American country blues songster who accompanied himself on acoustic guitar. Not much is known about McClintock's personal life, before or after he recorded four sides for Columbia Records. Interest in his recordings has been revived over the years, and they are prized by collectors.

McClintock worked as a street performer in Clinton, South Carolina, before he was tasked by manager of Cooper's Furniture Store, Burm Lessie, with accompanying another local musician, Blind Gussie Nesbitt, to record for Columbia Records. Unbeknownst to Lessie, he first encountered McClintock in 1923 when he wrote a ballad about Delia Holmes, an individual who gained some media attention for being murdered in a casino in Georgia. McClintock was commonly referred to as "Lil"; it has been speculated that this was either an abbreviation of little or a reference to his tall, thin figure.

After traveling by train, McClintock recorded two gospel numbers and two "coon songs" on December 4, 1930. The latter two compositions are in a musical subgenre that is seldom republished, because of its blatantly racist representations of black people. First among the pair was "Don't Think I'm Santa Claus", which has a refrain derived from minstrel shows and a rudimentary banjo-inspired accompaniment. Another song, "Furniture Man", played in a similar style, refers to black people as coons and advertises Cooper's Furniture Store in the process. In keeping with the minstrel-influenced qualities, McClintock addresses himself as "Mr. Brown" throughout the song. Both McClintock's and Nesbitt's recordings were issued in pressings of 750 copies in June 1931; McClintock fared better, as all four of his sides were released.

Following the recording session, McClintock completely disappeared from any documentation. His records have become some of the rarest and sought after items among collectors, with any surviving issues being in pristine condition. In 1986, all of his recordings were issued on the compilation album Atlanta Blues 1927–30: The Complete Recordings in Chronological Order of Julius Daniels and Lil McClintock, which includes McClintock's material with that of the guitarist Julius Daniels.