Philip McCutchen, b. February 14, 1910 in Suttons, Williamsburg County, SC, d. October 7, 1964 in Andrews, SC, credited on his records as The Cedar Creek Sheik, was a hokum and blues singer and guitarist who recorded in the 1930s.
McCutchen was born in Suttons, Williamsburg County, South Carolina, near to Cedar Creek. Little is known of his life. His only recordings, of which ten tracks were issued, were made in Charlotte, North Carolina for Bluebird Records, on June 15, 1936. Several of his recordings, including "Buy It From the Poultry Man (Cock For Sale)" and "I Believe Somebody's Ridin' My Mule", were bawdy examples of hokum music, while others mention local situations and personalities. He sang in a "high, almost expressionless" voice, sometimes employing a yodel. Though some critics have thought him to be a white rather than black performer, he is recorded as of "negro" race in census records.
McCutchen died at 7:55am on October 7, 1964 at the family home, a farm on Route 2 outside Andrews, SC (buried in the cemetery attached to the Nazareth AME church in Suttons, SC).