Released by Modern Records, it was his first single and the most successful of his three chart entries.
"Blues After Hours" went to the number one spot on the Billboard magazine's Race Records charts.
[2] According to Crayton, "Blues After Hours" was inspired by T-Bone Walker and developed while he was playing at the New Orleans Swing Club in San Francisco.
"[3] Backing Crayton on guitar are: Buddy Floyd on tenor saxophone, David Lee Johnson on piano, Bill Davis on bass, Candy Johnson on drums, plus additional unidentified musicians.
[4] Billy Vera calls "Blues After Hours" "a barely disguised takeoff on 'After Hours'", a 1940 instrumental by Erskine Hawkins and His Orchestra (Bluebird 10879),[4] although Crayton's song features electric guitar, whereas the earlier song does not.