Chatmon was born in
Bolton, Mississippi. In an interview he stated that he started playing the guitar at the age of three, laying it flat on the floor and crawling under it. A year older and he recalled singing a song including the lyrics "Run down to the river thought I'd jump an' drown / I thought about the woman I lovin' and I turn around". He regularly performed for white audiences in the 1900s. The Chatmon band played
rags,
ballads, and popular dance tunes. Two of Sam's brothers, the
fiddler Lonnie Chatmon and the guitarist
Bo Carter, performed with the guitarist
Walter Vinson as the Mississippi Sheiks. He was rediscovered in 1960 and started a new chapter of his career as a
folk-
blues artist. He played many of the largest and best-known folk festivals, including the
Smithsonian Folklife Festival in Washington, D.C., in 1972, the
Mariposa Folk Festival in Toronto in 1974, and the
New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival in 1976. Sam Chatmon died on February 2, 1983, in
Hollandale, Mississippi, aged 86. A headstone memorial to Chatmon with the inscription "Sitting on top of the World" was paid for by
Bonnie Raitt through the
Mount Zion Memorial Fund. It was placed in Sanders Memorial Cemetery,
Hollandale, Mississippi, on March 14, 1998, in a ceremony held at the Hollandale Municipal Building, celebrated by the Mayor and members of the city council of Hollandale, with over 100 attendees. Chatmon was later honored with a marker on the
Mississippi Blues Trail. ==Discography==