Allegedly,
Benjamin Jackson resembled a bullmoose. At least, that's what a few wags in
Lucky Millinder's band thought -- and the colorful monicker stuck. Up until then, he was
Benjamin Jackson, but it was as
Bull Moose that he lit up the R&B charts repeatedly during the late '40s and early '50s.
Jackson had a split musical personality -- he sang "I Love You, Yes I Do" and "All My Love Belongs to You" like a pop crooner, then switched gears to belt out the double-entendre naughties "I Want a Bowlegged Woman" and "Big Ten Inch Woman" with total abandon. Record buyers loved both sides of the
Moose.
Jackson was a childhood violinist prior to taking up the sax. He proved accomplished on the latter, blowing jazz in a variety of situations before latching on with
Millinder's outfit in 1944 as both singer and saxist. His first 78 under his own name for
Syd Nathan's fledgling Queen logo was "I Know Who Threw the Whiskey in the Well," an answer to a popular
Millinder tune from the year before that became a smash in its own right.
Jackson dubbed his combo the Buffalo Bearcats due to his frequent gigs at a Buffalo nitery.
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