Born in Trinidad, Blake first showed interest in music by taking up the banjo and guitar while visiting relatives in New York. Reaching England as a stowaway in 1916 he served in the merchant navy for several years. From 1921 he played guitar in a British group called the
Southern Syncopated Orchestra. In 1923 he married Olive Douglas in Manchester. Blake worked at various clubs in
Paris and
London throughout the 1920s, changing his instrument to trumpet. In 1928 he toured Europe with Thompson’s Negro Band. In the 1930s he played in the band of his drummer brother George 'Happy' Blake - a regular at the
Shim Shim Club - and with the pianist Jack London. Blake also played in bands led by
Leon Abbey, the clarinetist
Rudolph Dunbar,
Leslie Thompson,
Joe Appleton, and
Lauderic Caton. In 1938 he formed his own band, which was centred on Jig's Club in London's Soho, where live performances were recorded several times, showing a growing involvement in African-Caribbean music. In the 1940s Blake led his band behind
Lord Kitchener for recordings on
Parlophone Records, playing in a
calypso style. He played at a succession of clubs, including the Bag O'Nails (1942), Havana Club (1942), Barbarina (1942-3), Panama (1946) and Blue Lagoon (1948). ==External links==