

A recording session in 1954 resulted in the release of two singles by Chance Records.

Hutto named his band the Hawks, after the wind that blows in Chicago. The harmonica player Earring George Mayweather joined after sitting in with the band. They added Joe Custom on second guitar and started playing club gigs. He also played the piano before settling on the guitar and performing on the streets with the percussionist Eddie "Porkchop" Hines. In Chicago, Hutto took up the drums and played with Johnny Ferguson and his Twisters. Hutto served as a draftee in the Korean War in the early 1950s, driving trucks in combat zones. Calvin Hutto died in 1949, and the family relocated to Chicago. Joseph and his three brothers and three sisters formed a gospel group, the Golden Crowns, singing in local churches. His family moved to Augusta, Georgia, when he was three years old. Joseph Benjamin Hutto was born in Blackville, South Carolina, the fifth of seven children.
