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Wikipedia

Blues

Blues is a music genre[3] and musical form that originated in the Deep South of the United States around the 1860s.[2] Blues incorporated spirituals, work songs, field hollers, shouts, chants, and rhymed simple narrative ballads from the African-American culture. The blues form is ubiquitous in jazz, rhythm and blues, and rock and roll, and is characterized by the call-and-response pattern, the blues scale, and specific chord progressions, of which the twelve-bar blues is the most common. Blue notes (or "worried notes"), usually thirds, fifths or sevenths flattened in pitch, are also an essential part of the sound. Blues shuffles or walking bass reinforce the trance-like rhythm and form a repetitive effect known as the groove.

Blues
American blues musician Mississippi Fred McDowell in 1960
Stylistic origins
Cultural origins1860s,[2] Deep South, U.S.
Derivative forms
Subgenres
Fusion genres
Regional scenes
Other topics

Blues, as a genre, is also characterized by its lyrics, bass lines, and instrumentation. Early traditional blues verses consisted of a single line repeated four times. It was only in the first decades of the 20th century that the most common current structure became standard: the AAB pattern, consisting of a line sung over the four first bars, its repetition over the next four, and then a longer concluding line over the last bars. Early blues frequently took the form of a loose narrative, often relating the racial discrimination and other challenges experienced by African-Americans.[4]

Many elements, such as the call-and-response format and the use of blue notes, can be traced back to the music of Africa. The origins of the blues are also closely related to the religious music of the Afro-American community, the spirituals. The first appearance of the blues is often dated to after the ending of slavery. Later, the development of juke joints. It is associated with the newly acquired freedom of the former slaves. Chroniclers began to report about blues music at the dawn of the 20th century. The first publication of blues sheet music was in 1908. Blues has since evolved from unaccompanied vocal music and oral traditions of slaves into a wide variety of styles and subgenres. Blues subgenres include country blues, Delta blues and Piedmont blues, as well as urban blues styles such as Chicago blues and West Coast blues. World War II marked the transition from acoustic to electric blues and the progressive opening of blues music to a wider audience, especially white listeners. In the 1960s and 1970s, a hybrid form called blues rock developed, which blended blues styles with rock music.

Etymology edit

The term Blues may have originated from "blue devils", meaning melancholy and sadness. An early use of the term in this sense is in George Colman's one-act farce Blue Devils (1798).[5] The phrase blue devils may also have been derived from a British usage of the 1600s referring to the "intense visual hallucinations that can accompany severe alcohol withdrawal."[6] As time went on, the phrase lost the reference to devils and came to mean a state of agitation or depression. By the 1800s in the United States, the term "blues" was associated with drinking alcohol, a meaning which survives in the phrase blue law, which prohibits the sale of alcohol on Sunday.[6]

In 1827, it was in the sense of a sad state of mind that John James Audubon wrote to his wife that he "had the blues."[7] The phrase "the blues" was written by Charlotte Forten, then aged 25, in her diary on December 14, 1862. She was a free-born black woman from Pennsylvania who was working as a schoolteacher in South Carolina, instructing both slaves and freedmen, and wrote that she "came home with the blues" because she felt lonesome and pitied herself. She overcame her depression and later noted a number of songs, such as "Poor Rosy", that were popular among the slaves. Although she admitted being unable to describe the manner of singing she heard, Forten wrote that the songs "can't be sung without a full heart and a troubled spirit," conditions that have inspired countless blues songs.[8]

Though the use of the phrase in African-American music may be older, it has been attested to in print since 1912, when Hart Wand's "Dallas Blues" became the first copyrighted blues composition.[9][10] In lyrics, the phrase is often used to describe a depressed mood.[11]

Lyrics edit

 
American blues singer Ma Rainey (1886–1939), the "Mother of the Blues"

Early traditional blues verses often consisted of a single line repeated four times. However, the most common structure of blues lyrics today was established in the first few decades of the 20th century, known as the "AAB" pattern. This structure consists of a line sung over the first four bars, its repetition over the next four, and a longer concluding line over the last bars.[12] This pattern can be heard in some of the first published blues songs, such as "Dallas Blues" (1912) and "Saint Louis Blues" (1914). According to W.C. Handy, the "AAB" pattern was adopted to avoid the monotony of lines repeated three times.[13] The lyrics are often sung in a rhythmic talk style rather than a melody, resembling a form of talking blues.

Early blues frequently took the form of a loose narrative. African-American singers voiced their "personal woes in a world of harsh reality: a lost love, the cruelty of police officers, oppression at the hands of white folk, [and] hard times".[14] This melancholy has led to the suggestion of an Igbo origin for blues because of the reputation the Igbo had throughout plantations in the Americas for their melancholic music and outlook on life when they were enslaved.[15][16] Other historians have argued that there is little evidence of Sub-Sahelian influence in the blues as "elaborate polyrhythm, percussion on African drums (as opposed to European drums), [and] collective participation" which are characteristic of West-Central African music below the savannah, are conspicuously absent. According to the historian Paul Oliver, "the roots of the blues were not to be found in the coastal and forest regions of Africa. Rather...the blues was rooted in … the savanna hinterland, from Senegambia through Mali, Burkina Faso, Northern Ghana, Niger, and northern Nigeria." Additionally, ethnomusicologist John Storm Roberts has argued that "The parallels between African savanna-belt string-playing and the techniques of many blues guitarists are remarkable. The big kora of Senegal and Guinea are played in a rhythmic-melodic style that uses constantly changing rhythms, often providing a ground bass overlaid with complex treble patterns, while vocal supplies a third rhythmic layer. Similar techniques can be found in hundreds of blues records."[17]

The lyrics often relate troubles experienced within African American society. For instance Blind Lemon Jefferson's "Rising High Water Blues" (1927) tells of the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927:

Backwater rising, Southern peoples can't make no time
I said, backwater rising, Southern peoples can't make no time
And I can't get no hearing from that Memphis girl of mine

Although the blues gained an association with misery and oppression, the lyrics could also be humorous and raunchy:[18]

Rebecca, Rebecca, get your big legs off of me,
Rebecca, Rebecca, get your big legs off of me,
It may be sending you baby, but it's worrying the hell out of me.[19]

Hokum blues celebrated both comedic lyrical content and a boisterous, farcical performance style.[20] Tampa Red and Georgia Tom's "It's Tight Like That" (1928)[21] is a sly wordplay with the double meaning of being "tight" with someone, coupled with a more salacious physical familiarity. Blues songs with sexually explicit lyrics were known as dirty blues. The lyrical content became slightly simpler in postwar blues, which tended to focus on relationship woes or sexual worries. Lyrical themes that frequently appeared in prewar blues, such as economic depression, farming, devils, gambling, magic, floods and drought, were less common in postwar blues.[22]

The writer Ed Morales claimed that Yoruba mythology played a part in early blues, citing Robert Johnson's "Cross Road Blues" as a "thinly veiled reference to Eleggua, the orisha in charge of the crossroads".[23] However, the Christian influence was far more obvious.[24] The repertoires of many seminal blues artists, such as Charley Patton and Skip James, included religious songs or spirituals.[25] Reverend Gary Davis[26] and Blind Willie Johnson[27] are examples of artists often categorized as blues musicians for their music, although their lyrics clearly belong to spirituals.

Form edit

The blues form is a cyclic musical form in which a repeating progression of chords mirrors the call and response scheme commonly found in African and African-American music. During the first decades of the 20th century blues music was not clearly defined in terms of a particular chord progression.[28] With the popularity of early performers, such as Bessie Smith, use of the twelve-bar blues spread across the music industry during the 1920s and 30s.[29] Other chord progressions, such as 8-bar forms, are still considered blues; examples include "How Long Blues", "Trouble in Mind", and Big Bill Broonzy's "Key to the Highway". There are also 16-bar blues, such as Ray Charles's instrumental "Sweet 16 Bars" and Herbie Hancock's "Watermelon Man". Idiosyncratic numbers of bars are occasionally used, such as the 9-bar progression in "Sitting on Top of the World", by Walter Vinson.

Chords played over a 12-bar scheme: Chords for a blues in C:
I I or IV I I7
IV IV I I7
V V or IV I I or V
C C C C7
F F C C7
G G C C

The basic 12-bar lyric framework of many blues compositions is reflected by a standard harmonic progression of 12 bars in a 4/4 time signature. The blues chords associated to a twelve-bar blues are typically a set of three different chords played over a 12-bar scheme. They are labeled by Roman numbers referring to the degrees of the progression. For instance, for a blues in the key of C, C is the tonic chord (I) and F is the subdominant (IV).

The last chord is the dominant (V) turnaround, marking the transition to the beginning of the next progression. The lyrics generally end on the last beat of the tenth bar or the first beat of the 11th bar, and the final two bars are given to the instrumentalist as a break; the harmony of this two-bar break, the turnaround, can be extremely complex, sometimes consisting of single notes that defy analysis in terms of chords.

Much of the time, some or all of these chords are played in the harmonic seventh (7th) form. The use of the harmonic seventh interval is characteristic of blues and is popularly called the "blues seven".[30] Blues seven chords add to the harmonic chord a note with a frequency in a 7:4 ratio to the fundamental note. At a 7:4 ratio, it is not close to any interval on the conventional Western diatonic scale.[31] For convenience or by necessity it is often approximated by a minor seventh interval or a dominant seventh chord.

 
A minor pentatonic scale; play

In melody, blues is distinguished by the use of the flattened third, fifth and seventh of the associated major scale.[32]

Blues shuffles or walking bass reinforce the trance-like rhythm and call-and-response, and they form a repetitive effect called a groove. Characteristic of the blues since its Afro-American origins, the shuffles played a central role in swing music.[33] The simplest shuffles, which were the clearest signature of the R&B wave that started in the mid-1940s,[34] were a three-note riff on the bass strings of the guitar. When this riff was played over the bass and the drums, the groove "feel" was created. Shuffle rhythm is often vocalized as "dow, da dow, da dow, da" or "dump, da dump, da dump, da":[35] it consists of uneven, or "swung", eighth notes. On a guitar this may be played as a simple steady bass or it may add to that stepwise quarter note motion from the fifth to the sixth of the chord and back.

History edit

Origins edit

Hart Wand's "Dallas Blues" was published in 1912; W.C. Handy's "The Memphis Blues" followed in the same year. The first recording by an African American singer was Mamie Smith's 1920 rendition of Perry Bradford's "Crazy Blues". But the origins of the blues were some decades earlier, probably around 1890.[36] This music is poorly documented, partly because of racial discrimination in U.S. society, including academic circles,[37] and partly because of the low rate of literacy among rural African Americans at the time.[38]

Reports of blues music in southern Texas and the Deep South were written at the dawn of the 20th century. Charles Peabody mentioned the appearance of blues music at Clarksdale, Mississippi, and Gate Thomas reported similar songs in southern Texas around 1901–1902. These observations coincide more or less with the recollections of Jelly Roll Morton, who said he first heard blues music in New Orleans in 1902; Ma Rainey, who remembered first hearing the blues in the same year in Missouri; and W.C. Handy, who first heard the blues in Tutwiler, Mississippi, in 1903. The first extensive research in the field was performed by Howard W. Odum, who published an anthology of folk songs from Lafayette County, Mississippi, and Newton County, Georgia, between 1905 and 1908.[39] The first noncommercial recordings of blues music, termed proto-blues by Paul Oliver, were made by Odum for research purposes at the very beginning of the 20th century. They are now lost.[40]

 
Musicologist John Lomax (left) shaking hands with musician "Uncle" Rich Brown in Sumterville, Alabama

Other recordings that are still available were made in 1924 by Lawrence Gellert. Later, several recordings were made by Robert W. Gordon, who became head of the Archive of American Folk Songs of the Library of Congress. Gordon's successor at the library was John Lomax. In the 1930s, Lomax and his son Alan made a large number of non-commercial blues recordings that testify to the huge variety of proto-blues styles, such as field hollers and ring shouts.[41] A record of blues music as it existed before 1920 can also be found in the recordings of artists such as Lead Belly[42] and Henry Thomas.[43] All these sources show the existence of many different structures distinct from twelve-, eight-, or sixteen-bar.[44][45] The social and economic reasons for the appearance of the blues are not fully known.[46] The first appearance of the blues is usually dated after the Emancipation Act of 1863,[37] between 1860s and 1890s,[2] a period that coincides with post-emancipation and later, the establishment of juke joints as places where African-Americans went to listen to music, dance, or gamble after a hard day's work.[47] This period corresponds to the transition from slavery to sharecropping, small-scale agricultural production, and the expansion of railroads in the southern United States. Several scholars characterize the development of blues music in the early 1900s as a move from group performance to individualized performance. They argue that the development of the blues is associated with the newly acquired freedom of the enslaved people.[48]

According to Lawrence Levine, "there was a direct relationship between the national ideological emphasis upon the individual, the popularity of Booker T. Washington's teachings, and the rise of the blues." Levine stated that "psychologically, socially, and economically, African-Americans were being acculturated in a way that would have been impossible during slavery, and it is hardly surprising that their secular music reflected this as much as their religious music did."[48]

There are few characteristics common to all blues music, because the genre took its shape from the idiosyncrasies of individual performers.[49] However, there are some characteristics that were present long before the creation of the modern blues. Call-and-response shouts were an early form of blues-like music; they were a "functional expression ... style without accompaniment or harmony and unbounded by the formality of any particular musical structure".[50] A form of this pre-blues was heard in slave ring shouts and field hollers, expanded into "simple solo songs laden with emotional content".[51]

Blues has evolved from the unaccompanied vocal music and oral traditions of slaves imported from West Africa and rural blacks into a wide variety of styles and subgenres, with regional variations across the United States. Although blues (as it is now known) can be seen as a musical style based on both European harmonic structure and the African call-and-response tradition that transformed into an interplay of voice and guitar,[52][53] the blues form itself bears no resemblance to the melodic styles of the West African griots.[54][55] Additionally, there are theories that the four-beats-per-measure structure of the blues might have its origins in the Native American tradition of pow wow drumming.[56] Some scholars identify strong influences on the blues from the melodic structures of certain West African musical styles of the savanna and sahel. Lucy Durran finds similarities with the melodies of the Bambara people, and to a lesser degree, the Soninke people and Wolof people, but not as much of the Mandinka people.[57] Gerard Kubik finds similarities to the melodic styles of both the west African savanna and central Africa, both of which were sources of enslaved people.[58]

No specific African musical form can be identified as the single direct ancestor of the blues.[59] However the call-and-response format can be traced back to the music of Africa. That blue notes predate their use in blues and have an African origin is attested to by "A Negro Love Song", by the English composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, from his African Suite for Piano, written in 1898, which contains blue third and seventh notes.[60]

The Diddley bow (a homemade one-stringed instrument found in parts of the American South sometimes referred to as a jitterbug or a one-string in the early twentieth century) and the banjo are African-derived instruments that may have helped in the transfer of African performance techniques into the early blues instrumental vocabulary.[61] The banjo seems to be directly imported from West African music. It is similar to the musical instrument that griots and other Africans such as the Igbo[62] played (called halam or akonting by African peoples such as the Wolof, Fula and Mandinka).[63] However, in the 1920s, when country blues began to be recorded, the use of the banjo in blues music was quite marginal and limited to individuals such as Papa Charlie Jackson and later Gus Cannon.[64]

Blues music also adopted elements from the "Ethiopian airs", minstrel shows and Negro spirituals, including instrumental and harmonic accompaniment.[65] The style also was closely related to ragtime, which developed at about the same time, though the blues better preserved "the original melodic patterns of African music".[66]

The musical forms and styles that are now considered the blues as well as modern country music arose in the same regions of the southern United States during the 19th century. Recorded blues and country music can be found as far back as the 1920s, when the record industry created the marketing categories "race music" and "hillbilly music" to sell music by blacks for blacks and by whites for whites, respectively. At the time, there was no clear musical division between "blues" and "country", except for the ethnicity of the performer, and even that was sometimes documented incorrectly by record companies.[67][68]

Though musicologists can now attempt to define the blues narrowly in terms of certain chord structures and lyric forms thought to have originated in West Africa, audiences originally heard the music in a far more general way: it was simply the music of the rural south, notably the Mississippi Delta. Black and white musicians shared the same repertoire and thought of themselves as "songsters" rather than blues musicians. The notion of blues as a separate genre arose during the black migration from the countryside to urban areas in the 1920s and the simultaneous development of the recording industry. Blues became a code word for a record designed to sell to black listeners.[69]

The origins of the blues are closely related to the religious music of Afro-American community, the spirituals. The origins of spirituals go back much further than the blues, usually dating back to the middle of the 18th century, when the slaves were Christianized and began to sing and play Christian hymns, in particular those of Isaac Watts, which were very popular.[70] Before the blues gained its formal definition in terms of chord progressions, it was defined as the secular counterpart of spirituals. It was the low-down music played by rural blacks.[24]

Depending on the religious community a musician belonged to, it was more or less considered a sin to play this low-down music: blues was the devil's music. Musicians were therefore segregated into two categories: gospel singers and blues singers, guitar preachers and songsters. However, when rural black music began to be recorded in the 1920s, both categories of musicians used similar techniques: call-and-response patterns, blue notes, and slide guitars. Gospel music was nevertheless using musical forms that were compatible with Christian hymns and therefore less marked by the blues form than its secular counterpart.[24]

Pre-war blues edit

The American sheet music publishing industry produced a great deal of ragtime music. By 1912, the sheet music industry had published three popular blues-like compositions, precipitating the Tin Pan Alley adoption of blues elements: "Baby Seals' Blues", by "Baby" Franklin Seals (arranged by Artie Matthews); "Dallas Blues", by Hart Wand; and "The Memphis Blues", by W.C. Handy.[71]

 
Sheet music from "Saint Louis Blues" (1914)

Handy was a formally trained musician, composer and arranger who helped to popularize the blues by transcribing and orchestrating blues in an almost symphonic style, with bands and singers. He became a popular and prolific composer, and billed himself as the "Father of the Blues"; however, his compositions can be described as a fusion of blues with ragtime and jazz, a merger facilitated using the Cuban habanera rhythm that had long been a part of ragtime;[23][72] Handy's signature work was the "Saint Louis Blues".

In the 1920s, the blues became a major element of African American and American popular music, also reaching white audiences via Handy's arrangements and the classic female blues performers. These female performers became perhaps the first African American "superstars", and their recording sales demonstrated "a huge appetite for records made by and for black people."[73] The blues evolved from informal performances in bars to entertainment in theaters. Blues performances were organized by the Theater Owners Booking Association in nightclubs such as the Cotton Club and juke joints such as the bars along Beale Street in Memphis. Several record companies, such as the American Record Corporation, Okeh Records, and Paramount Records, began to record African-American music.

As the recording industry grew, country blues performers like Bo Carter, Jimmie Rodgers, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Lonnie Johnson, Tampa Red and Blind Blake became more popular in the African American community. Kentucky-born Sylvester Weaver was in 1923 the first to record the slide guitar style, in which a guitar is fretted with a knife blade or the sawed-off neck of a bottle.[74] The slide guitar became an important part of the Delta blues.[75] The first blues recordings from the 1920s are categorized as a traditional, rural country blues and a more polished city or urban blues.

Country blues performers often improvised, either without accompaniment or with only a banjo or guitar. Regional styles of country blues varied widely in the early 20th century. The (Mississippi) Delta blues was a rootsy sparse style with passionate vocals accompanied by slide guitar. The little-recorded Robert Johnson[76] combined elements of urban and rural blues. In addition to Robert Johnson, influential performers of this style included his predecessors Charley Patton and Son House. Singers such as Blind Willie McTell and Blind Boy Fuller performed in the southeastern "delicate and lyrical" Piedmont blues tradition, which used an elaborate ragtime-based fingerpicking guitar technique. Georgia also had an early slide tradition,[77] with Curley Weaver, Tampa Red, "Barbecue Bob" Hicks and James "Kokomo" Arnold as representatives of this style.[78]

The lively Memphis blues style, which developed in the 1920s and 1930s near Memphis, Tennessee, was influenced by jug bands such as the Memphis Jug Band or the Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers. Performers such as Frank Stokes, Sleepy John Estes, Robert Wilkins, Joe McCoy, Casey Bill Weldon and Memphis Minnie used a variety of unusual instruments such as washboard, fiddle, kazoo or mandolin. Memphis Minnie was famous for her virtuoso guitar style. Pianist Memphis Slim began his career in Memphis, but his distinct style was smoother and had some swing elements. Many blues musicians based in Memphis moved to Chicago in the late 1930s or early 1940s and became part of the urban blues movement.[79][80]

 
Bessie Smith, an early blues singer, known for her powerful voice

Urban blues edit

City or urban blues styles were more codified and elaborate, as a performer was no longer within their local, immediate community, and had to adapt to a larger, more varied audience's aesthetic.[81] Classic female urban and vaudeville blues singers were popular in the 1920s, among them "the big three"—Gertrude "Ma" Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Lucille Bogan. Mamie Smith, more a vaudeville performer than a blues artist, was the first African American to record a blues song, in 1920; her second record, "Crazy Blues", sold 75,000 copies in its first month.[82] Ma Rainey, the "Mother of Blues", and Bessie Smith each "[sang] around center tones, perhaps in order to project her voice more easily to the back of a room". Smith would "sing a song in an unusual key, and her artistry in bending and stretching notes with her beautiful, powerful contralto to accommodate her own interpretation was unsurpassed".[83]

In 1920, the vaudeville singer Lucille Hegamin became the second black woman to record blues when she recorded "The Jazz Me Blues",[84] and Victoria Spivey, sometimes called Queen Victoria or Za Zu Girl, had a recording career that began in 1926 and spanned forty years. These recordings were typically labeled "race records" to distinguish them from records sold to white audiences. Nonetheless, the recordings of some of the classic female blues singers were purchased by white buyers as well.[85] These blueswomen's contributions to the genre included "increased improvisation on melodic lines, unusual phrasing which altered the emphasis and impact of the lyrics, and vocal dramatics using shouts, groans, moans, and wails. The blues women thus effected changes in other types of popular singing that had spin-offs in jazz, Broadway musicals, torch songs of the 1930s and 1940s, gospel, rhythm and blues, and eventually rock and roll."[86]

Urban male performers included popular black musicians of the era, such as Tampa Red, Big Bill Broonzy and Leroy Carr. An important label of this era was the Chicago-based Bluebird Records. Before World War II, Tampa Red was sometimes referred to as "the Guitar Wizard". Carr accompanied himself on the piano with Scrapper Blackwell on guitar, a format that continued well into the 1950s with artists such as Charles Brown and even Nat "King" Cole.[75]

 
A typical boogie-woogie bass line Play

Boogie-woogie was another important style of 1930s and early 1940s urban blues. While the style is often associated with solo piano, boogie-woogie was also used to accompany singers and, as a solo part, in bands and small combos. Boogie-woogie style was characterized by a regular bass figure, an ostinato or riff and shifts of level in the left hand, elaborating each chord and trills and decorations in the right hand. Boogie-woogie was pioneered by the Chicago-based Jimmy Yancey and the Boogie-Woogie Trio (Albert Ammons, Pete Johnson and Meade Lux Lewis).[87] Chicago boogie-woogie performers included Clarence "Pine Top" Smith and Earl Hines, who "linked the propulsive left-hand rhythms of the ragtime pianists with melodic figures similar to those of Armstrong's trumpet in the right hand".[81] The smooth Louisiana style of Professor Longhair and, more recently, Dr. John blends classic rhythm and blues with blues styles.

Another development in this period was big band blues. The "territory bands" operating out of Kansas City, the Bennie Moten orchestra, Jay McShann, and the Count Basie Orchestra were also concentrating on the blues, with 12-bar blues instrumentals such as Basie's "One O'Clock Jump" and "Jumpin' at the Woodside" and boisterous "blues shouting" by Jimmy Rushing on songs such as "Going to Chicago" and "Sent for You Yesterday". A well-known big band blues tune is Glenn Miller's "In the Mood". In the 1940s, the jump blues style developed. Jump blues grew up from the boogie-woogie wave and was strongly influenced by big band music. It uses saxophone or other brass instruments and the guitar in the rhythm section to create a jazzy, up-tempo sound with declamatory vocals. Jump blues tunes by Louis Jordan and Big Joe Turner, based in Kansas City, Missouri, influenced the development of later styles such as rock and roll and rhythm and blues.[88] Dallas-born T-Bone Walker, who is often associated with the California blues style,[89] performed a successful transition from the early urban blues à la Lonnie Johnson and Leroy Carr to the jump blues style and dominated the blues-jazz scene at Los Angeles during the 1940s.[90]

1950s edit

The transition from country blues to urban blues that began in the 1920s was driven by the successive waves of economic crisis and booms that led many rural blacks to move to urban areas, in a movement known as the Great Migration. The long boom following World War II induced another massive migration of the African-American population, the Second Great Migration, which was accompanied by a significant increase of the real income of the urban blacks. The new migrants constituted a new market for the music industry. The term race record, initially used by the music industry for African-American music, was replaced by the term rhythm and blues. This rapidly evolving market was mirrored by Billboard magazine's Rhythm & Blues chart. This marketing strategy reinforced trends in urban blues music such as the use of electric instruments and amplification and the generalization of the blues beat, the blues shuffle, which became ubiquitous in rhythm and blues (R&B). This commercial stream had important consequences for blues music, which, together with jazz and gospel music, became a component of R&B.[91]

 
John Lee Hooker

After World War II, new styles of electric blues became popular in cities such as Chicago,[92] Memphis,[93] Detroit[94][95] and St. Louis. Electric blues used electric guitars, double bass (gradually replaced by bass guitar), drums, and harmonica (or "blues harp") played through a microphone and a PA system or an overdriven guitar amplifier. Chicago became a center for electric blues from 1948 on, when Muddy Waters recorded his first success, "I Can't Be Satisfied".[96] Chicago blues is influenced to a large extent by Delta blues, because many performers had migrated from the Mississippi region.

Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, Willie Dixon and Jimmy Reed were all born in Mississippi and moved to Chicago during the Great Migration. Their style is characterized by the use of electric guitar, sometimes slide guitar, harmonica, and a rhythm section of bass and drums.[97] The saxophonist J. T. Brown played in bands led by Elmore James and by J. B. Lenoir, but the saxophone was used as a backing instrument for rhythmic support more than as a lead instrument.

Little Walter, Sonny Boy Williamson (Rice Miller) and Sonny Terry are well known harmonica (called "harp" by blues musicians) players of the early Chicago blues scene. Other harp players such as Big Walter Horton were also influential. Muddy Waters and Elmore James were known for their innovative use of slide electric guitar. Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters were known for their deep, "gravelly" voices.

The bassist and prolific songwriter and composer Willie Dixon played a major role on the Chicago blues scene. He composed and wrote many standard blues songs of the period, such as "Hoochie Coochie Man", "I Just Want to Make Love to You" (both penned for Muddy Waters) and, "Wang Dang Doodle" and "Back Door Man" for Howlin' Wolf. Most artists of the Chicago blues style recorded for the Chicago-based Chess Records and Checker Records labels. Smaller blues labels of this era included Vee-Jay Records and J.O.B. Records. During the early 1950s, the dominating Chicago labels were challenged by Sam Phillips' Sun Records company in Memphis, which recorded B. B. King and Howlin' Wolf before he moved to Chicago in 1960.[98] After Phillips discovered Elvis Presley in 1954, the Sun label turned to the rapidly expanding white audience and started recording mostly rock 'n' roll.[99]

In the 1950s, blues had a huge influence on mainstream American popular music. While popular musicians like Bo Diddley[94] and Chuck Berry,[100] both recording for Chess, were influenced by the Chicago blues, their enthusiastic playing styles departed from the melancholy aspects of blues. Chicago blues also influenced Louisiana's zydeco music,[101] with Clifton Chenier[102] using blues accents. Zydeco musicians used electric solo guitar and cajun arrangements of blues standards.

In England, electric blues took root there during a much acclaimed Muddy Waters tour in 1958. Waters, unsuspecting of his audience's tendency towards skiffle, an acoustic, softer brand of blues, turned up his amp and started to play his Chicago brand of electric blues. Although the audience was largely jolted by the performance, the performance influenced local musicians such as Alexis Korner and Cyril Davies to emulate this louder style, inspiring the British Invasion of the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds.[103]

In the late 1950s, a new blues style emerged on Chicago's West Side pioneered by Magic Sam, Buddy Guy and Otis Rush on Cobra Records.[104] The "West Side sound" had strong rhythmic support from a rhythm guitar, bass guitar and drums and as perfected by Guy, Freddie King, Magic Slim and Luther Allison was dominated by amplified electric lead guitar.[105][106] Expressive guitar solos were a key feature of this music.

Other blues artists, such as John Lee Hooker, had influences not directly related to the Chicago style. John Lee Hooker's blues is more "personal", based on Hooker's deep rough voice accompanied by a single electric guitar. Though not directly influenced by boogie-woogie, his "groovy" style is sometimes called "guitar boogie". His first hit, "Boogie Chillen", reached number 1 on the R&B charts in 1949.[107]

By the late 1950s, the swamp blues genre developed near Baton Rouge, with performers such as Lightnin' Slim,[108] Slim Harpo,[109] Sam Myers and Jerry McCain around the producer J. D. "Jay" Miller and the Excello label. Strongly influenced by Jimmy Reed, swamp blues has a slower pace and a simpler use of the harmonica than the Chicago blues style performers such as Little Walter or Muddy Waters. Songs from this genre include "Scratch my Back", "She's Tough" and "I'm a King Bee". Alan Lomax's recordings of Mississippi Fred McDowell would eventually bring him wider attention on both the blues and folk circuit, with McDowell's droning style influencing North Mississippi hill country blues musicians.[110]

1960s and 1970s edit

 
Blues legend B.B. King with his guitar, "Lucille"

By the beginning of the 1960s, genres influenced by African American music such as rock and roll and soul were part of mainstream popular music. White performers such as the Rolling Stones and the Beatles had brought African-American music to new audiences, within the U.S. and abroad. However, the blues wave that brought artists such as Muddy Waters to the foreground had stopped. Bluesmen such as Big Bill Broonzy and Willie Dixon started looking for new markets in Europe. Dick Waterman and the blues festivals he organized in Europe played a major role in propagating blues music abroad. In the UK, bands emulated U.S. blues legends, and UK blues rock-based bands had an influential role throughout the 1960s.[111]

Blues performers such as John Lee Hooker and Muddy Waters continued to perform to enthusiastic audiences, inspiring new artists steeped in traditional blues, such as New York–born Taj Mahal. John Lee Hooker blended his blues style with rock elements and playing with younger white musicians, creating a musical style that can be heard on the 1971 album Endless Boogie. B. B. King's singing and virtuoso guitar technique earned him the eponymous title "king of the blues". King introduced a sophisticated style of guitar soloing based on fluid string bending and shimmering vibrato that influenced many later electric blues guitarists.[112] In contrast to the Chicago style, King's band used strong brass support from a saxophone, trumpet, and trombone, instead of using slide guitar or harp. Tennessee-born Bobby "Blue" Bland, like B. B. King, also straddled the blues and R&B genres. During this period, Freddie King and Albert King often played with rock and soul musicians (Eric Clapton and Booker T & the MGs) and had a major influence on those styles of music.

The music of the civil rights movement[113] and Free Speech Movement in the U.S. prompted a resurgence of interest in American roots music and early African American music. As well festivals such as the Newport Folk Festival[114] brought traditional blues to a new audience, which helped to revive interest in prewar acoustic blues and performers such as Son House, Mississippi John Hurt, Skip James, and Reverend Gary Davis.[113] Many compilations of classic prewar blues were republished by the Yazoo Records. J. B. Lenoir from the Chicago blues movement in the 1950s recorded several LPs using acoustic guitar, sometimes accompanied by Willie Dixon on the acoustic bass or drums. His songs, originally distributed only in Europe,[115] commented on political issues such as racism or Vietnam War issues, which was unusual for this period. His album Alabama Blues contained a song with the following lyric:

I never will go back to Alabama, that is not the place for me,
I never will go back to Alabama, that is not the place for me.
You know they killed my sister and my brother
and the whole world let them peoples go down there free

 
Texas blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan, 1983

White audiences' interest in the blues during the 1960s increased due to the Chicago-based Paul Butterfield Blues Band featuring guitarist Michael Bloomfield and singer/songwriter Nick Gravenites, and the British blues movement. The style of British blues developed in the UK, when musicians such as Cyril Davies, Alexis Korner's Blues Incorporated, Fleetwood Mac, John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers, the Rolling Stones, Animals, the Yardbirds, Aynsley Dunbar Retaliation,[116] Chicken Shack,[117] early Jethro Tull, Cream and the Irish musician Rory Gallagher performed classic blues songs from the Delta or Chicago blues traditions.

In 1963, Amiri Baraka, then known as LeRoi Jones, was the first to write a book on the social history of the blues in Blues People: The Negro Music in White America. The British and blues musicians of the early 1960s inspired a number of American blues rock performers, including Canned Heat, Janis Joplin, Johnny Winter, the J. Geils Band, Ry Cooder, and the Allman Brothers Band. One blues rock performer, Jimi Hendrix, was a rarity in his field at the time: a Black man who played psychedelic rock. Hendrix was a skilled guitarist, and a pioneer in the innovative use of distortion and audio feedback in his music.[118] Through these artists and others, blues music influenced the development of rock music. Later in the 1960s, British singer Jo Ann Kelly started her recording career. In the US, from the 1970s, female singers Bonnie Raitt and Phoebe Snow performed blues.[119]

In the early 1970s, the Texas rock-blues style emerged, which used guitars in both solo and rhythm roles. In contrast with the West Side blues, the Texas style is strongly influenced by the British rock-blues movement. Major artists of the Texas style are Johnny Winter, Stevie Ray Vaughan, the Fabulous Thunderbirds (led by harmonica player and singer-songwriter Kim Wilson), and ZZ Top. These artists all began their musical careers in the 1970s but they did not achieve international success until the next decade.[120]

1980s to the present edit

 
Italian singer Zucchero is credited as the "Father of Italian Blues", and is among the few European blues artists who still enjoy international success.[121]

Since the 1980s there has been a resurgence of interest in the blues among a certain part of the African-American population, particularly around Jackson, Mississippi and other deep South regions. Often termed "soul blues" or "Southern soul", the music at the heart of this movement was given new life by the unexpected success of two particular recordings on the Jackson-based Malaco label:[122] Z. Z. Hill's Down Home Blues (1982) and Little Milton's The Blues is Alright (1984). Contemporary African-American performers who work in this style of the blues include Bobby Rush, Denise LaSalle, Sir Charles Jones, Bettye LaVette, Marvin Sease, Peggy Scott-Adams, Mel Waiters, Clarence Carter, Dr. "Feelgood" Potts, O.B. Buchana, Ms. Jody, Shirley Brown, and dozens of others.

 
Eric Clapton performing at Hyde Park, London, in June 2008

During the 1980s blues also continued in both traditional and new forms. In 1986 the album Strong Persuader announced Robert Cray as a major blues artist. The first Stevie Ray Vaughan recording Texas Flood was released in 1983, and the Texas-based guitarist exploded onto the international stage. John Lee Hooker's popularity was revived with the album The Healer in 1989. Eric Clapton, known for his performances with the Blues Breakers and Cream, made a comeback in the 1990s with his album Unplugged, in which he played some standard blues numbers on acoustic guitar.

However, beginning in the 1990s, digital multitrack recording and other technological advances and new marketing strategies including video clip production increased costs, challenging the spontaneity and improvisation that are an important component of blues music.[123] In the 1980s and 1990s, blues publications such as Living Blues and Blues Revue were launched, major cities began forming blues societies, outdoor blues festivals became more common, and[124] more nightclubs and venues for blues emerged.[125] Tedeschi Trucks Band and Gov't Mule released blues rock albums. Female blues singers such as Bonnie Raitt, Susan Tedeschi, Sue Foley and Shannon Curfman also recorded albums.

In the 1990s, the largely ignored hill country blues gained minor recognition in both blues and alternative rock music circles with northern Mississippi artists R. L. Burnside and Junior Kimbrough.[110] Blues performers explored a range of musical genres, as can be seen, for example, from the broad array of nominees of the yearly Blues Music Awards, previously named W.C. Handy Awards[126] or of the Grammy Awards for Best Contemporary and Traditional Blues Album. The Billboard Blues Album chart provides an overview of current blues hits. Contemporary blues music is nurtured by several blues labels such as: Alligator Records, Ruf Records, Severn Records, Chess Records (MCA), Delmark Records, NorthernBlues Music, Fat Possum Records and Vanguard Records (Artemis Records). Some labels are famous for rediscovering and remastering blues rarities, including Arhoolie Records, Smithsonian Folkways Recordings (heir of Folkways Records), and Yazoo Records (Shanachie Records).[127]

Musical impact edit

Blues musical styles, forms (12-bar blues), melodies, and the blues scale have influenced many other genres of music, such as rock and roll, jazz, and popular music.[128] Prominent jazz, folk or rock performers, such as Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, and Bob Dylan have performed significant blues recordings. The blues scale is often used in popular songs like Harold Arlen's "Blues in the Night", blues ballads like "Since I Fell for You" and "Please Send Me Someone to Love", and even in orchestral works such as George Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue" and "Concerto in F". Gershwin's second "Prelude" for solo piano is an interesting example of a classical blues, maintaining the form with academic strictness. The blues scale is ubiquitous in modern popular music and informs many modal frames, especially the ladder of thirds used in rock music (for example, in "A Hard Day's Night"). Blues forms are used in the theme to the televised Batman, teen idol Fabian Forte's hit, "Turn Me Loose", country music star Jimmie Rodgers' music, and guitarist/vocalist Tracy Chapman's hit "Give Me One Reason".

"Blues singing is about emotion. Its influence on popular singing has been so widespread that, at least among males, singing and emoting have become almost identical—it is a matter of projection rather than hitting the notes."[129]

Robert Christgau, 1972

Early country bluesmen such as Skip James, Charley Patton, Georgia Tom Dorsey played country and urban blues and had influences from spiritual singing. Dorsey helped to popularize Gospel music.[130] Gospel music developed in the 1930s, with the Golden Gate Quartet. In the 1950s, soul music by Sam Cooke, Ray Charles and James Brown used gospel and blues music elements. In the 1960s and 1970s, gospel and blues were merged in soul blues music. Funk music of the 1970s was influenced by soul; funk can be seen as an antecedent of hip-hop and contemporary R&B.

R&B music can be traced back to spirituals and blues. Musically, spirituals were a descendant of New England choral traditions, and in particular of Isaac Watts's hymns, mixed with African rhythms and call-and-response forms. Spirituals or religious chants in the African-American community are much better documented than the "low-down" blues. Spiritual singing developed because African-American communities could gather for mass or worship gatherings, which were called camp meetings.

Edward P. Comentale has noted how the blues was often used as a medium for art or self-expression, stating: "As heard from Delta shacks to Chicago tenements to Harlem cabarets, the blues proved—despite its pained origins—a remarkably flexible medium and a new arena for the shaping of identity and community."[131]

 
Duke Ellington straddled the big band and bebop genres. Ellington extensively used the blues form.[132]

Before World War II, the boundaries between blues and jazz were less clear. Usually, jazz had harmonic structures stemming from brass bands, whereas blues had blues forms such as the 12-bar blues. However, the jump blues of the 1940s mixed both styles. After WWII, blues had a substantial influence on jazz. Bebop classics, such as Charlie Parker's "Now's the Time", used the blues form with the pentatonic scale and blue notes.

Bebop marked a major shift in the role of jazz, from a popular style of music for dancing to a "high-art", less-accessible, cerebral "musician's music". The audience for both blues and jazz split, and the border between blues and jazz became more defined.[132][133]

The blues' 12-bar structure and the blues scale was a major influence on rock and roll music. Rock and roll has been called "blues with a backbeat"; Carl Perkins called rockabilly "blues with a country beat". Rockabillies were also said to be 12-bar blues played with a bluegrass beat. "Hound Dog", with its unmodified 12-bar structure (in both harmony and lyrics) and a melody centered on flatted third of the tonic (and flatted seventh of the subdominant), is a blues song transformed into a rock and roll song. Jerry Lee Lewis's style of rock and roll was heavily influenced by the blues and its derivative boogie-woogie. His style of music was not exactly rockabilly but it has been often called real rock and roll (this is a label he shares with several African American rock and roll performers).[134][135]

Many early rock and roll songs are based on blues: "That's All Right Mama", "Johnny B. Goode", "Blue Suede Shoes", "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin On", "Shake, Rattle, and Roll", and "Long Tall Sally". The early African American rock musicians retained the sexual themes and innuendos of blues music: "Got a gal named Sue, knows just what to do" ("Tutti Frutti", Little Richard) or "See the girl with the red dress on, She can do the Birdland all night long" ("What'd I Say", Ray Charles). The 12-bar blues structure can be found even in novelty pop songs, such as Bob Dylan's "Obviously Five Believers" and Esther and Abi Ofarim's "Cinderella Rockefella".

Early country music was infused with the blues.[136] Jimmie Rodgers, Moon Mullican, Bob Wills, Bill Monroe and Hank Williams have all described themselves as blues singers and their music has a blues feel that is different, at first glance at least, from the later country-pop of artists like Eddy Arnold. Yet, if one looks back further, Arnold also started out singing bluesy songs like 'I'll Hold You in My Heart'. A lot of the 1970s-era "outlaw" country music by Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings also borrowed from the blues. When Jerry Lee Lewis returned to country music after the decline of 1950s style rock and roll, he sang with a blues feel and often included blues standards on his albums.

In popular culture edit

 
The music of Taj Mahal for the 1972 movie Sounder marked a revival of interest in acoustic blues.

Like jazz, rock and roll, heavy metal music, hip hop music, reggae, country music, Latin music, funk, and pop music, blues has been accused of being the "devil's music" and of inciting violence and other poor behavior.[137] In the early 20th century, the blues was considered disreputable, especially as white audiences began listening to the blues during the 1920s.[72] In the early twentieth century, W.C. Handy was the first to popularize blues-influenced music among non-Black Americans.

During the blues revival of the 1960s and 1970s, acoustic blues artist Taj Mahal and Texas bluesman Lightnin' Hopkins wrote and performed music that figured prominently in the critically acclaimed film Sounder (1972). The film earned Mahal a Grammy nomination for Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture and a BAFTA nomination.[138] Almost 30 years later, Mahal wrote blues for, and performed a banjo composition, claw-hammer style, in the 2001 movie release Songcatcher, which focused on the story of the preservation of the roots music of Appalachia.

Perhaps the most visible example of the blues style of music in the late 20th century came in 1980, when Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi released the film The Blues Brothers. The film drew many of the biggest living influencers of the rhythm and blues genre together, such as Ray Charles, James Brown, Cab Calloway, Aretha Franklin, and John Lee Hooker. The band formed also began a successful tour under the Blues Brothers marquee. 1998 brought a sequel, Blues Brothers 2000 that, while not holding as great a critical and financial success, featured a much larger number of blues artists, such as B.B. King, Bo Diddley, Erykah Badu, Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, Charlie Musselwhite, Blues Traveler, Jimmie Vaughan, and Jeff Baxter.

In 2003, Martin Scorsese made significant efforts to promote the blues to a larger audience. He asked several famous directors such as Clint Eastwood and Wim Wenders to participate in a series of documentary films for PBS called The Blues.[139] He also participated in the rendition of compilations of major blues artists in a series of high-quality CDs. Blues guitarist and vocalist Keb' Mo' performed his blues rendition of "America, the Beautiful" in 2006 to close out the final season of the television series The West Wing.

The blues was highlighted in season 2012, episode 1 of In Performance at the White House, entitled "Red, White and Blues". Hosted by Barack and Michelle Obama, the show featured performances by B.B. King, Buddy Guy, Gary Clark Jr., Jeff Beck, Derek Trucks, Keb Mo, and others.[140]

See also edit

References edit

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  139. ^ "The Blues" (2003) (mini) at IMDb  
  140. ^ . PBS.org. Archived from the original on July 24, 2018. Retrieved July 23, 2018.

Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

  • Abbott, Lynn; Doug Seroff. The Original Blues: The Emergence of the Blues in African-American Vaudeville, 1889–1926. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi, 2019. ISBN 978-1-496-81002-1.
  • Brown, Luther. "Inside Poor Monkey's", Southern Spaces, June 22, 2006.
  • Dixon, Robert M.W.; Godrich, John (1970). Recording the Blues. London: Studio Vista. 85 pp. SBN 289-79829-9.
  • Oakley, Giles (1976). The Devil's Music: A History of the Blues. London: BBC. p. 287. ISBN 978-0-563-16012-0.
  • Keil, Charles (1991) [1966]. Urban Blues. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-42960-1.
  • Oliver, Paul (1998). The Story of the Blues (new ed.). Northeastern University Press. ISBN 978-1-55553-355-7.
  • Oliver, Paul (1965). Conversation with the Blues, Volume 1. New York: Horizon Press. ISBN 978-0-8180-1223-5.
  • Rowe, Mike (1973). Chicago Breakdown. Eddison Press. ISBN 978-0-85649-015-6.
  • Titon, Jeff Todd (1994). Early Downhome Blues: A Musical and Cultural Analysis (2nd ed.). University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4482-3.
  • Welding, Peter; Brown, Toby, eds. (1991). Bluesland: Portraits of Twelve Major American Blues Masters. New York: Penguin Group. 253 + [2] pp. ISBN 0-525-93375-1.

External links edit

  • Blues at Curlie
  • The American Folklife Center's Online Collections and Presentations
  • The Blue Shoe Project – Nationwide (U.S.) Blues Education Programming
  • "The Blues", documentary series by Martin Scorsese, aired on PBS
  • The Blues Foundation
  • (archived 12 June 1998)
  • The Music in Poetry – Smithsonian Institution lesson plan on the blues, for teachers
  • American Music: Archive of artist and record label discographies

blues, this, article, about, music, genre, other, uses, disambiguation, music, genre, musical, form, that, originated, deep, south, united, states, around, 1860s, incorporated, spirituals, work, songs, field, hollers, shouts, chants, rhymed, simple, narrative,. This article is about the music genre For other uses see Blues disambiguation Blues is a music genre 3 and musical form that originated in the Deep South of the United States around the 1860s 2 Blues incorporated spirituals work songs field hollers shouts chants and rhymed simple narrative ballads from the African American culture The blues form is ubiquitous in jazz rhythm and blues and rock and roll and is characterized by the call and response pattern the blues scale and specific chord progressions of which the twelve bar blues is the most common Blue notes or worried notes usually thirds fifths or sevenths flattened in pitch are also an essential part of the sound Blues shuffles or walking bass reinforce the trance like rhythm and form a repetitive effect known as the groove BluesAmerican blues musician Mississippi Fred McDowell in 1960Stylistic originsWork songs Spirituals folk music 1 Cultural origins1860s 2 Deep South U S Derivative formsBluegrass country jazz jug band ragtime rhythm and blues rock and rollSubgenresSubgenresBoogie woogie classic female blues country blues Delta blues dirty blues electric blues hokum blues jump bluesFusion genresFusion genresBiker metal blues rock desert blues gospel blues punk blues soul bluesRegional scenesRegional scenesBritish blues Canadian blues Chicago blues Delta blues Detroit blues Hill country blues Kansas City blues Louisiana blues Memphis blues New Orleans blues Piedmont blues St Louis blues Swamp blues Texas blues West Coast bluesOther topicsList of genres list of musicians lists of musicians by genre list of standards originsBlues as a genre is also characterized by its lyrics bass lines and instrumentation Early traditional blues verses consisted of a single line repeated four times It was only in the first decades of the 20th century that the most common current structure became standard the AAB pattern consisting of a line sung over the four first bars its repetition over the next four and then a longer concluding line over the last bars Early blues frequently took the form of a loose narrative often relating the racial discrimination and other challenges experienced by African Americans 4 Many elements such as the call and response format and the use of blue notes can be traced back to the music of Africa The origins of the blues are also closely related to the religious music of the Afro American community the spirituals The first appearance of the blues is often dated to after the ending of slavery Later the development of juke joints It is associated with the newly acquired freedom of the former slaves Chroniclers began to report about blues music at the dawn of the 20th century The first publication of blues sheet music was in 1908 Blues has since evolved from unaccompanied vocal music and oral traditions of slaves into a wide variety of styles and subgenres Blues subgenres include country blues Delta blues and Piedmont blues as well as urban blues styles such as Chicago blues and West Coast blues World War II marked the transition from acoustic to electric blues and the progressive opening of blues music to a wider audience especially white listeners In the 1960s and 1970s a hybrid form called blues rock developed which blended blues styles with rock music Contents 1 Etymology 2 Lyrics 3 Form 4 History 4 1 Origins 4 2 Pre war blues 4 2 1 Urban blues 4 3 1950s 4 4 1960s and 1970s 4 5 1980s to the present 5 Musical impact 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksEtymology editThe term Blues may have originated from blue devils meaning melancholy and sadness An early use of the term in this sense is in George Colman s one act farce Blue Devils 1798 5 The phrase blue devils may also have been derived from a British usage of the 1600s referring to the intense visual hallucinations that can accompany severe alcohol withdrawal 6 As time went on the phrase lost the reference to devils and came to mean a state of agitation or depression By the 1800s in the United States the term blues was associated with drinking alcohol a meaning which survives in the phrase blue law which prohibits the sale of alcohol on Sunday 6 In 1827 it was in the sense of a sad state of mind that John James Audubon wrote to his wife that he had the blues 7 The phrase the blues was written by Charlotte Forten then aged 25 in her diary on December 14 1862 She was a free born black woman from Pennsylvania who was working as a schoolteacher in South Carolina instructing both slaves and freedmen and wrote that she came home with the blues because she felt lonesome and pitied herself She overcame her depression and later noted a number of songs such as Poor Rosy that were popular among the slaves Although she admitted being unable to describe the manner of singing she heard Forten wrote that the songs can t be sung without a full heart and a troubled spirit conditions that have inspired countless blues songs 8 Though the use of the phrase in African American music may be older it has been attested to in print since 1912 when Hart Wand s Dallas Blues became the first copyrighted blues composition 9 10 In lyrics the phrase is often used to describe a depressed mood 11 Lyrics edit nbsp American blues singer Ma Rainey 1886 1939 the Mother of the Blues Early traditional blues verses often consisted of a single line repeated four times However the most common structure of blues lyrics today was established in the first few decades of the 20th century known as the AAB pattern This structure consists of a line sung over the first four bars its repetition over the next four and a longer concluding line over the last bars 12 This pattern can be heard in some of the first published blues songs such as Dallas Blues 1912 and Saint Louis Blues 1914 According to W C Handy the AAB pattern was adopted to avoid the monotony of lines repeated three times 13 The lyrics are often sung in a rhythmic talk style rather than a melody resembling a form of talking blues Early blues frequently took the form of a loose narrative African American singers voiced their personal woes in a world of harsh reality a lost love the cruelty of police officers oppression at the hands of white folk and hard times 14 This melancholy has led to the suggestion of an Igbo origin for blues because of the reputation the Igbo had throughout plantations in the Americas for their melancholic music and outlook on life when they were enslaved 15 16 Other historians have argued that there is little evidence of Sub Sahelian influence in the blues as elaborate polyrhythm percussion on African drums as opposed to European drums and collective participation which are characteristic of West Central African music below the savannah are conspicuously absent According to the historian Paul Oliver the roots of the blues were not to be found in the coastal and forest regions of Africa Rather the blues was rooted in the savanna hinterland from Senegambia through Mali Burkina Faso Northern Ghana Niger and northern Nigeria Additionally ethnomusicologist John Storm Roberts has argued that The parallels between African savanna belt string playing and the techniques of many blues guitarists are remarkable The big kora of Senegal and Guinea are played in a rhythmic melodic style that uses constantly changing rhythms often providing a ground bass overlaid with complex treble patterns while vocal supplies a third rhythmic layer Similar techniques can be found in hundreds of blues records 17 The lyrics often relate troubles experienced within African American society For instance Blind Lemon Jefferson s Rising High Water Blues 1927 tells of the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 Backwater rising Southern peoples can t make no time I said backwater rising Southern peoples can t make no time And I can t get no hearing from that Memphis girl of mine Although the blues gained an association with misery and oppression the lyrics could also be humorous and raunchy 18 Rebecca Rebecca get your big legs off of me Rebecca Rebecca get your big legs off of me It may be sending you baby but it s worrying the hell out of me 19 Hokum blues celebrated both comedic lyrical content and a boisterous farcical performance style 20 Tampa Red and Georgia Tom s It s Tight Like That 1928 21 is a sly wordplay with the double meaning of being tight with someone coupled with a more salacious physical familiarity Blues songs with sexually explicit lyrics were known as dirty blues The lyrical content became slightly simpler in postwar blues which tended to focus on relationship woes or sexual worries Lyrical themes that frequently appeared in prewar blues such as economic depression farming devils gambling magic floods and drought were less common in postwar blues 22 The writer Ed Morales claimed that Yoruba mythology played a part in early blues citing Robert Johnson s Cross Road Blues as a thinly veiled reference to Eleggua the orisha in charge of the crossroads 23 However the Christian influence was far more obvious 24 The repertoires of many seminal blues artists such as Charley Patton and Skip James included religious songs or spirituals 25 Reverend Gary Davis 26 and Blind Willie Johnson 27 are examples of artists often categorized as blues musicians for their music although their lyrics clearly belong to spirituals Form editThe blues form is a cyclic musical form in which a repeating progression of chords mirrors the call and response scheme commonly found in African and African American music During the first decades of the 20th century blues music was not clearly defined in terms of a particular chord progression 28 With the popularity of early performers such as Bessie Smith use of the twelve bar blues spread across the music industry during the 1920s and 30s 29 Other chord progressions such as 8 bar forms are still considered blues examples include How Long Blues Trouble in Mind and Big Bill Broonzy s Key to the Highway There are also 16 bar blues such as Ray Charles s instrumental Sweet 16 Bars and Herbie Hancock s Watermelon Man Idiosyncratic numbers of bars are occasionally used such as the 9 bar progression in Sitting on Top of the World by Walter Vinson Chords played over a 12 bar scheme Chords for a blues in C I I or IV I I7IV IV I I7V V or IV I I or V C C C C7F F C C7G G C CThe basic 12 bar lyric framework of many blues compositions is reflected by a standard harmonic progression of 12 bars in a 4 4 time signature The blues chords associated to a twelve bar blues are typically a set of three different chords played over a 12 bar scheme They are labeled by Roman numbers referring to the degrees of the progression For instance for a blues in the key of C C is the tonic chord I and F is the subdominant IV The last chord is the dominant V turnaround marking the transition to the beginning of the next progression The lyrics generally end on the last beat of the tenth bar or the first beat of the 11th bar and the final two bars are given to the instrumentalist as a break the harmony of this two bar break the turnaround can be extremely complex sometimes consisting of single notes that defy analysis in terms of chords Much of the time some or all of these chords are played in the harmonic seventh 7th form The use of the harmonic seventh interval is characteristic of blues and is popularly called the blues seven 30 Blues seven chords add to the harmonic chord a note with a frequency in a 7 4 ratio to the fundamental note At a 7 4 ratio it is not close to any interval on the conventional Western diatonic scale 31 For convenience or by necessity it is often approximated by a minor seventh interval or a dominant seventh chord nbsp A minor pentatonic scale play In melody blues is distinguished by the use of the flattened third fifth and seventh of the associated major scale 32 Blues shuffles or walking bass reinforce the trance like rhythm and call and response and they form a repetitive effect called a groove Characteristic of the blues since its Afro American origins the shuffles played a central role in swing music 33 The simplest shuffles which were the clearest signature of the R amp B wave that started in the mid 1940s 34 were a three note riff on the bass strings of the guitar When this riff was played over the bass and the drums the groove feel was created Shuffle rhythm is often vocalized as dow da dow da dow da or dump da dump da dump da 35 it consists of uneven or swung eighth notes On a guitar this may be played as a simple steady bass or it may add to that stepwise quarter note motion from the fifth to the sixth of the chord and back History editOrigins edit Main article Origins of the blues Hart Wand s Dallas Blues was published in 1912 W C Handy s The Memphis Blues followed in the same year The first recording by an African American singer was Mamie Smith s 1920 rendition of Perry Bradford s Crazy Blues But the origins of the blues were some decades earlier probably around 1890 36 This music is poorly documented partly because of racial discrimination in U S society including academic circles 37 and partly because of the low rate of literacy among rural African Americans at the time 38 Reports of blues music in southern Texas and the Deep South were written at the dawn of the 20th century Charles Peabody mentioned the appearance of blues music at Clarksdale Mississippi and Gate Thomas reported similar songs in southern Texas around 1901 1902 These observations coincide more or less with the recollections of Jelly Roll Morton who said he first heard blues music in New Orleans in 1902 Ma Rainey who remembered first hearing the blues in the same year in Missouri and W C Handy who first heard the blues in Tutwiler Mississippi in 1903 The first extensive research in the field was performed by Howard W Odum who published an anthology of folk songs from Lafayette County Mississippi and Newton County Georgia between 1905 and 1908 39 The first noncommercial recordings of blues music termed proto blues by Paul Oliver were made by Odum for research purposes at the very beginning of the 20th century They are now lost 40 nbsp Musicologist John Lomax left shaking hands with musician Uncle Rich Brown in Sumterville AlabamaOther recordings that are still available were made in 1924 by Lawrence Gellert Later several recordings were made by Robert W Gordon who became head of the Archive of American Folk Songs of the Library of Congress Gordon s successor at the library was John Lomax In the 1930s Lomax and his son Alan made a large number of non commercial blues recordings that testify to the huge variety of proto blues styles such as field hollers and ring shouts 41 A record of blues music as it existed before 1920 can also be found in the recordings of artists such as Lead Belly 42 and Henry Thomas 43 All these sources show the existence of many different structures distinct from twelve eight or sixteen bar 44 45 The social and economic reasons for the appearance of the blues are not fully known 46 The first appearance of the blues is usually dated after the Emancipation Act of 1863 37 between 1860s and 1890s 2 a period that coincides with post emancipation and later the establishment of juke joints as places where African Americans went to listen to music dance or gamble after a hard day s work 47 This period corresponds to the transition from slavery to sharecropping small scale agricultural production and the expansion of railroads in the southern United States Several scholars characterize the development of blues music in the early 1900s as a move from group performance to individualized performance They argue that the development of the blues is associated with the newly acquired freedom of the enslaved people 48 According to Lawrence Levine there was a direct relationship between the national ideological emphasis upon the individual the popularity of Booker T Washington s teachings and the rise of the blues Levine stated that psychologically socially and economically African Americans were being acculturated in a way that would have been impossible during slavery and it is hardly surprising that their secular music reflected this as much as their religious music did 48 There are few characteristics common to all blues music because the genre took its shape from the idiosyncrasies of individual performers 49 However there are some characteristics that were present long before the creation of the modern blues Call and response shouts were an early form of blues like music they were a functional expression style without accompaniment or harmony and unbounded by the formality of any particular musical structure 50 A form of this pre blues was heard in slave ring shouts and field hollers expanded into simple solo songs laden with emotional content 51 Blues has evolved from the unaccompanied vocal music and oral traditions of slaves imported from West Africa and rural blacks into a wide variety of styles and subgenres with regional variations across the United States Although blues as it is now known can be seen as a musical style based on both European harmonic structure and the African call and response tradition that transformed into an interplay of voice and guitar 52 53 the blues form itself bears no resemblance to the melodic styles of the West African griots 54 55 Additionally there are theories that the four beats per measure structure of the blues might have its origins in the Native American tradition of pow wow drumming 56 Some scholars identify strong influences on the blues from the melodic structures of certain West African musical styles of the savanna and sahel Lucy Durran finds similarities with the melodies of the Bambara people and to a lesser degree the Soninke people and Wolof people but not as much of the Mandinka people 57 Gerard Kubik finds similarities to the melodic styles of both the west African savanna and central Africa both of which were sources of enslaved people 58 No specific African musical form can be identified as the single direct ancestor of the blues 59 However the call and response format can be traced back to the music of Africa That blue notes predate their use in blues and have an African origin is attested to by A Negro Love Song by the English composer Samuel Coleridge Taylor from his African Suite for Piano written in 1898 which contains blue third and seventh notes 60 The Diddley bow a homemade one stringed instrument found in parts of the American South sometimes referred to as a jitterbug or a one string in the early twentieth century and the banjo are African derived instruments that may have helped in the transfer of African performance techniques into the early blues instrumental vocabulary 61 The banjo seems to be directly imported from West African music It is similar to the musical instrument that griots and other Africans such as the Igbo 62 played called halam or akonting by African peoples such as the Wolof Fula and Mandinka 63 However in the 1920s when country blues began to be recorded the use of the banjo in blues music was quite marginal and limited to individuals such as Papa Charlie Jackson and later Gus Cannon 64 Blues music also adopted elements from the Ethiopian airs minstrel shows and Negro spirituals including instrumental and harmonic accompaniment 65 The style also was closely related to ragtime which developed at about the same time though the blues better preserved the original melodic patterns of African music 66 The musical forms and styles that are now considered the blues as well as modern country music arose in the same regions of the southern United States during the 19th century Recorded blues and country music can be found as far back as the 1920s when the record industry created the marketing categories race music and hillbilly music to sell music by blacks for blacks and by whites for whites respectively At the time there was no clear musical division between blues and country except for the ethnicity of the performer and even that was sometimes documented incorrectly by record companies 67 68 Though musicologists can now attempt to define the blues narrowly in terms of certain chord structures and lyric forms thought to have originated in West Africa audiences originally heard the music in a far more general way it was simply the music of the rural south notably the Mississippi Delta Black and white musicians shared the same repertoire and thought of themselves as songsters rather than blues musicians The notion of blues as a separate genre arose during the black migration from the countryside to urban areas in the 1920s and the simultaneous development of the recording industry Blues became a code word for a record designed to sell to black listeners 69 The origins of the blues are closely related to the religious music of Afro American community the spirituals The origins of spirituals go back much further than the blues usually dating back to the middle of the 18th century when the slaves were Christianized and began to sing and play Christian hymns in particular those of Isaac Watts which were very popular 70 Before the blues gained its formal definition in terms of chord progressions it was defined as the secular counterpart of spirituals It was the low down music played by rural blacks 24 Depending on the religious community a musician belonged to it was more or less considered a sin to play this low down music blues was the devil s music Musicians were therefore segregated into two categories gospel singers and blues singers guitar preachers and songsters However when rural black music began to be recorded in the 1920s both categories of musicians used similar techniques call and response patterns blue notes and slide guitars Gospel music was nevertheless using musical forms that were compatible with Christian hymns and therefore less marked by the blues form than its secular counterpart 24 Pre war blues edit The American sheet music publishing industry produced a great deal of ragtime music By 1912 the sheet music industry had published three popular blues like compositions precipitating the Tin Pan Alley adoption of blues elements Baby Seals Blues by Baby Franklin Seals arranged by Artie Matthews Dallas Blues by Hart Wand and The Memphis Blues by W C Handy 71 nbsp Sheet music from Saint Louis Blues 1914 Handy was a formally trained musician composer and arranger who helped to popularize the blues by transcribing and orchestrating blues in an almost symphonic style with bands and singers He became a popular and prolific composer and billed himself as the Father of the Blues however his compositions can be described as a fusion of blues with ragtime and jazz a merger facilitated using the Cuban habanera rhythm that had long been a part of ragtime 23 72 Handy s signature work was the Saint Louis Blues In the 1920s the blues became a major element of African American and American popular music also reaching white audiences via Handy s arrangements and the classic female blues performers These female performers became perhaps the first African American superstars and their recording sales demonstrated a huge appetite for records made by and for black people 73 The blues evolved from informal performances in bars to entertainment in theaters Blues performances were organized by the Theater Owners Booking Association in nightclubs such as the Cotton Club and juke joints such as the bars along Beale Street in Memphis Several record companies such as the American Record Corporation Okeh Records and Paramount Records began to record African American music As the recording industry grew country blues performers like Bo Carter Jimmie Rodgers Blind Lemon Jefferson Lonnie Johnson Tampa Red and Blind Blake became more popular in the African American community Kentucky born Sylvester Weaver was in 1923 the first to record the slide guitar style in which a guitar is fretted with a knife blade or the sawed off neck of a bottle 74 The slide guitar became an important part of the Delta blues 75 The first blues recordings from the 1920s are categorized as a traditional rural country blues and a more polished city or urban blues Country blues performers often improvised either without accompaniment or with only a banjo or guitar Regional styles of country blues varied widely in the early 20th century The Mississippi Delta blues was a rootsy sparse style with passionate vocals accompanied by slide guitar The little recorded Robert Johnson 76 combined elements of urban and rural blues In addition to Robert Johnson influential performers of this style included his predecessors Charley Patton and Son House Singers such as Blind Willie McTell and Blind Boy Fuller performed in the southeastern delicate and lyrical Piedmont blues tradition which used an elaborate ragtime based fingerpicking guitar technique Georgia also had an early slide tradition 77 with Curley Weaver Tampa Red Barbecue Bob Hicks and James Kokomo Arnold as representatives of this style 78 The lively Memphis blues style which developed in the 1920s and 1930s near Memphis Tennessee was influenced by jug bands such as the Memphis Jug Band or the Gus Cannon s Jug Stompers Performers such as Frank Stokes Sleepy John Estes Robert Wilkins Joe McCoy Casey Bill Weldon and Memphis Minnie used a variety of unusual instruments such as washboard fiddle kazoo or mandolin Memphis Minnie was famous for her virtuoso guitar style Pianist Memphis Slim began his career in Memphis but his distinct style was smoother and had some swing elements Many blues musicians based in Memphis moved to Chicago in the late 1930s or early 1940s and became part of the urban blues movement 79 80 nbsp Bessie Smith an early blues singer known for her powerful voiceUrban blues edit City or urban blues styles were more codified and elaborate as a performer was no longer within their local immediate community and had to adapt to a larger more varied audience s aesthetic 81 Classic female urban and vaudeville blues singers were popular in the 1920s among them the big three Gertrude Ma Rainey Bessie Smith and Lucille Bogan Mamie Smith more a vaudeville performer than a blues artist was the first African American to record a blues song in 1920 her second record Crazy Blues sold 75 000 copies in its first month 82 Ma Rainey the Mother of Blues and Bessie Smith each sang around center tones perhaps in order to project her voice more easily to the back of a room Smith would sing a song in an unusual key and her artistry in bending and stretching notes with her beautiful powerful contralto to accommodate her own interpretation was unsurpassed 83 In 1920 the vaudeville singer Lucille Hegamin became the second black woman to record blues when she recorded The Jazz Me Blues 84 and Victoria Spivey sometimes called Queen Victoria or Za Zu Girl had a recording career that began in 1926 and spanned forty years These recordings were typically labeled race records to distinguish them from records sold to white audiences Nonetheless the recordings of some of the classic female blues singers were purchased by white buyers as well 85 These blueswomen s contributions to the genre included increased improvisation on melodic lines unusual phrasing which altered the emphasis and impact of the lyrics and vocal dramatics using shouts groans moans and wails The blues women thus effected changes in other types of popular singing that had spin offs in jazz Broadway musicals torch songs of the 1930s and 1940s gospel rhythm and blues and eventually rock and roll 86 Urban male performers included popular black musicians of the era such as Tampa Red Big Bill Broonzy and Leroy Carr An important label of this era was the Chicago based Bluebird Records Before World War II Tampa Red was sometimes referred to as the Guitar Wizard Carr accompanied himself on the piano with Scrapper Blackwell on guitar a format that continued well into the 1950s with artists such as Charles Brown and even Nat King Cole 75 nbsp A typical boogie woogie bass line Play Boogie woogie was another important style of 1930s and early 1940s urban blues While the style is often associated with solo piano boogie woogie was also used to accompany singers and as a solo part in bands and small combos Boogie woogie style was characterized by a regular bass figure an ostinato or riff and shifts of level in the left hand elaborating each chord and trills and decorations in the right hand Boogie woogie was pioneered by the Chicago based Jimmy Yancey and the Boogie Woogie Trio Albert Ammons Pete Johnson and Meade Lux Lewis 87 Chicago boogie woogie performers included Clarence Pine Top Smith and Earl Hines who linked the propulsive left hand rhythms of the ragtime pianists with melodic figures similar to those of Armstrong s trumpet in the right hand 81 The smooth Louisiana style of Professor Longhair and more recently Dr John blends classic rhythm and blues with blues styles Another development in this period was big band blues The territory bands operating out of Kansas City the Bennie Moten orchestra Jay McShann and the Count Basie Orchestra were also concentrating on the blues with 12 bar blues instrumentals such as Basie s One O Clock Jump and Jumpin at the Woodside and boisterous blues shouting by Jimmy Rushing on songs such as Going to Chicago and Sent for You Yesterday A well known big band blues tune is Glenn Miller s In the Mood In the 1940s the jump blues style developed Jump blues grew up from the boogie woogie wave and was strongly influenced by big band music It uses saxophone or other brass instruments and the guitar in the rhythm section to create a jazzy up tempo sound with declamatory vocals Jump blues tunes by Louis Jordan and Big Joe Turner based in Kansas City Missouri influenced the development of later styles such as rock and roll and rhythm and blues 88 Dallas born T Bone Walker who is often associated with the California blues style 89 performed a successful transition from the early urban blues a la Lonnie Johnson and Leroy Carr to the jump blues style and dominated the blues jazz scene at Los Angeles during the 1940s 90 1950s edit The transition from country blues to urban blues that began in the 1920s was driven by the successive waves of economic crisis and booms that led many rural blacks to move to urban areas in a movement known as the Great Migration The long boom following World War II induced another massive migration of the African American population the Second Great Migration which was accompanied by a significant increase of the real income of the urban blacks The new migrants constituted a new market for the music industry The term race record initially used by the music industry for African American music was replaced by the term rhythm and blues This rapidly evolving market was mirrored by Billboard magazine s Rhythm amp Blues chart This marketing strategy reinforced trends in urban blues music such as the use of electric instruments and amplification and the generalization of the blues beat the blues shuffle which became ubiquitous in rhythm and blues R amp B This commercial stream had important consequences for blues music which together with jazz and gospel music became a component of R amp B 91 nbsp John Lee HookerAfter World War II new styles of electric blues became popular in cities such as Chicago 92 Memphis 93 Detroit 94 95 and St Louis Electric blues used electric guitars double bass gradually replaced by bass guitar drums and harmonica or blues harp played through a microphone and a PA system or an overdriven guitar amplifier Chicago became a center for electric blues from 1948 on when Muddy Waters recorded his first success I Can t Be Satisfied 96 Chicago blues is influenced to a large extent by Delta blues because many performers had migrated from the Mississippi region Howlin Wolf Muddy Waters Willie Dixon and Jimmy Reed were all born in Mississippi and moved to Chicago during the Great Migration Their style is characterized by the use of electric guitar sometimes slide guitar harmonica and a rhythm section of bass and drums 97 The saxophonist J T Brown played in bands led by Elmore James and by J B Lenoir but the saxophone was used as a backing instrument for rhythmic support more than as a lead instrument Little Walter Sonny Boy Williamson Rice Miller and Sonny Terry are well known harmonica called harp by blues musicians players of the early Chicago blues scene Other harp players such as Big Walter Horton were also influential Muddy Waters and Elmore James were known for their innovative use of slide electric guitar Howlin Wolf and Muddy Waters were known for their deep gravelly voices The bassist and prolific songwriter and composer Willie Dixon played a major role on the Chicago blues scene He composed and wrote many standard blues songs of the period such as Hoochie Coochie Man I Just Want to Make Love to You both penned for Muddy Waters and Wang Dang Doodle and Back Door Man for Howlin Wolf Most artists of the Chicago blues style recorded for the Chicago based Chess Records and Checker Records labels Smaller blues labels of this era included Vee Jay Records and J O B Records During the early 1950s the dominating Chicago labels were challenged by Sam Phillips Sun Records company in Memphis which recorded B B King and Howlin Wolf before he moved to Chicago in 1960 98 After Phillips discovered Elvis Presley in 1954 the Sun label turned to the rapidly expanding white audience and started recording mostly rock n roll 99 In the 1950s blues had a huge influence on mainstream American popular music While popular musicians like Bo Diddley 94 and Chuck Berry 100 both recording for Chess were influenced by the Chicago blues their enthusiastic playing styles departed from the melancholy aspects of blues Chicago blues also influenced Louisiana s zydeco music 101 with Clifton Chenier 102 using blues accents Zydeco musicians used electric solo guitar and cajun arrangements of blues standards In England electric blues took root there during a much acclaimed Muddy Waters tour in 1958 Waters unsuspecting of his audience s tendency towards skiffle an acoustic softer brand of blues turned up his amp and started to play his Chicago brand of electric blues Although the audience was largely jolted by the performance the performance influenced local musicians such as Alexis Korner and Cyril Davies to emulate this louder style inspiring the British Invasion of the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds 103 In the late 1950s a new blues style emerged on Chicago s West Side pioneered by Magic Sam Buddy Guy and Otis Rush on Cobra Records 104 The West Side sound had strong rhythmic support from a rhythm guitar bass guitar and drums and as perfected by Guy Freddie King Magic Slim and Luther Allison was dominated by amplified electric lead guitar 105 106 Expressive guitar solos were a key feature of this music Other blues artists such as John Lee Hooker had influences not directly related to the Chicago style John Lee Hooker s blues is more personal based on Hooker s deep rough voice accompanied by a single electric guitar Though not directly influenced by boogie woogie his groovy style is sometimes called guitar boogie His first hit Boogie Chillen reached number 1 on the R amp B charts in 1949 107 By the late 1950s the swamp blues genre developed near Baton Rouge with performers such as Lightnin Slim 108 Slim Harpo 109 Sam Myers and Jerry McCain around the producer J D Jay Miller and the Excello label Strongly influenced by Jimmy Reed swamp blues has a slower pace and a simpler use of the harmonica than the Chicago blues style performers such as Little Walter or Muddy Waters Songs from this genre include Scratch my Back She s Tough and I m a King Bee Alan Lomax s recordings of Mississippi Fred McDowell would eventually bring him wider attention on both the blues and folk circuit with McDowell s droning style influencing North Mississippi hill country blues musicians 110 1960s and 1970s edit nbsp Blues legend B B King with his guitar Lucille By the beginning of the 1960s genres influenced by African American music such as rock and roll and soul were part of mainstream popular music White performers such as the Rolling Stones and the Beatles had brought African American music to new audiences within the U S and abroad However the blues wave that brought artists such as Muddy Waters to the foreground had stopped Bluesmen such as Big Bill Broonzy and Willie Dixon started looking for new markets in Europe Dick Waterman and the blues festivals he organized in Europe played a major role in propagating blues music abroad In the UK bands emulated U S blues legends and UK blues rock based bands had an influential role throughout the 1960s 111 Blues performers such as John Lee Hooker and Muddy Waters continued to perform to enthusiastic audiences inspiring new artists steeped in traditional blues such as New York born Taj Mahal John Lee Hooker blended his blues style with rock elements and playing with younger white musicians creating a musical style that can be heard on the 1971 album Endless Boogie B B King s singing and virtuoso guitar technique earned him the eponymous title king of the blues King introduced a sophisticated style of guitar soloing based on fluid string bending and shimmering vibrato that influenced many later electric blues guitarists 112 In contrast to the Chicago style King s band used strong brass support from a saxophone trumpet and trombone instead of using slide guitar or harp Tennessee born Bobby Blue Bland like B B King also straddled the blues and R amp B genres During this period Freddie King and Albert King often played with rock and soul musicians Eric Clapton and Booker T amp the MGs and had a major influence on those styles of music The music of the civil rights movement 113 and Free Speech Movement in the U S prompted a resurgence of interest in American roots music and early African American music As well festivals such as the Newport Folk Festival 114 brought traditional blues to a new audience which helped to revive interest in prewar acoustic blues and performers such as Son House Mississippi John Hurt Skip James and Reverend Gary Davis 113 Many compilations of classic prewar blues were republished by the Yazoo Records J B Lenoir from the Chicago blues movement in the 1950s recorded several LPs using acoustic guitar sometimes accompanied by Willie Dixon on the acoustic bass or drums His songs originally distributed only in Europe 115 commented on political issues such as racism or Vietnam War issues which was unusual for this period His album Alabama Blues contained a song with the following lyric I never will go back to Alabama that is not the place for me I never will go back to Alabama that is not the place for me You know they killed my sister and my brother and the whole world let them peoples go down there free nbsp Texas blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan 1983White audiences interest in the blues during the 1960s increased due to the Chicago based Paul Butterfield Blues Band featuring guitarist Michael Bloomfield and singer songwriter Nick Gravenites and the British blues movement The style of British blues developed in the UK when musicians such as Cyril Davies Alexis Korner s Blues Incorporated Fleetwood Mac John Mayall amp the Bluesbreakers the Rolling Stones Animals the Yardbirds Aynsley Dunbar Retaliation 116 Chicken Shack 117 early Jethro Tull Cream and the Irish musician Rory Gallagher performed classic blues songs from the Delta or Chicago blues traditions In 1963 Amiri Baraka then known as LeRoi Jones was the first to write a book on the social history of the blues in Blues People The Negro Music in White America The British and blues musicians of the early 1960s inspired a number of American blues rock performers including Canned Heat Janis Joplin Johnny Winter the J Geils Band Ry Cooder and the Allman Brothers Band One blues rock performer Jimi Hendrix was a rarity in his field at the time a Black man who played psychedelic rock Hendrix was a skilled guitarist and a pioneer in the innovative use of distortion and audio feedback in his music 118 Through these artists and others blues music influenced the development of rock music Later in the 1960s British singer Jo Ann Kelly started her recording career In the US from the 1970s female singers Bonnie Raitt and Phoebe Snow performed blues 119 In the early 1970s the Texas rock blues style emerged which used guitars in both solo and rhythm roles In contrast with the West Side blues the Texas style is strongly influenced by the British rock blues movement Major artists of the Texas style are Johnny Winter Stevie Ray Vaughan the Fabulous Thunderbirds led by harmonica player and singer songwriter Kim Wilson and ZZ Top These artists all began their musical careers in the 1970s but they did not achieve international success until the next decade 120 1980s to the present edit nbsp Italian singer Zucchero is credited as the Father of Italian Blues and is among the few European blues artists who still enjoy international success 121 Since the 1980s there has been a resurgence of interest in the blues among a certain part of the African American population particularly around Jackson Mississippi and other deep South regions Often termed soul blues or Southern soul the music at the heart of this movement was given new life by the unexpected success of two particular recordings on the Jackson based Malaco label 122 Z Z Hill s Down Home Blues 1982 and Little Milton s The Blues is Alright 1984 Contemporary African American performers who work in this style of the blues include Bobby Rush Denise LaSalle Sir Charles Jones Bettye LaVette Marvin Sease Peggy Scott Adams Mel Waiters Clarence Carter Dr Feelgood Potts O B Buchana Ms Jody Shirley Brown and dozens of others nbsp Eric Clapton performing at Hyde Park London in June 2008During the 1980s blues also continued in both traditional and new forms In 1986 the album Strong Persuader announced Robert Cray as a major blues artist The first Stevie Ray Vaughan recording Texas Flood was released in 1983 and the Texas based guitarist exploded onto the international stage John Lee Hooker s popularity was revived with the album The Healer in 1989 Eric Clapton known for his performances with the Blues Breakers and Cream made a comeback in the 1990s with his album Unplugged in which he played some standard blues numbers on acoustic guitar However beginning in the 1990s digital multitrack recording and other technological advances and new marketing strategies including video clip production increased costs challenging the spontaneity and improvisation that are an important component of blues music 123 In the 1980s and 1990s blues publications such as Living Blues and Blues Revue were launched major cities began forming blues societies outdoor blues festivals became more common and 124 more nightclubs and venues for blues emerged 125 Tedeschi Trucks Band and Gov t Mule released blues rock albums Female blues singers such as Bonnie Raitt Susan Tedeschi Sue Foley and Shannon Curfman also recorded albums In the 1990s the largely ignored hill country blues gained minor recognition in both blues and alternative rock music circles with northern Mississippi artists R L Burnside and Junior Kimbrough 110 Blues performers explored a range of musical genres as can be seen for example from the broad array of nominees of the yearly Blues Music Awards previously named W C Handy Awards 126 or of the Grammy Awards for Best Contemporary and Traditional Blues Album The Billboard Blues Album chart provides an overview of current blues hits Contemporary blues music is nurtured by several blues labels such as Alligator Records Ruf Records Severn Records Chess Records MCA Delmark Records NorthernBlues Music Fat Possum Records and Vanguard Records Artemis Records Some labels are famous for rediscovering and remastering blues rarities including Arhoolie Records Smithsonian Folkways Recordings heir of Folkways Records and Yazoo Records Shanachie Records 127 Musical impact editBlues musical styles forms 12 bar blues melodies and the blues scale have influenced many other genres of music such as rock and roll jazz and popular music 128 Prominent jazz folk or rock performers such as Louis Armstrong Duke Ellington Miles Davis and Bob Dylan have performed significant blues recordings The blues scale is often used in popular songs like Harold Arlen s Blues in the Night blues ballads like Since I Fell for You and Please Send Me Someone to Love and even in orchestral works such as George Gershwin s Rhapsody in Blue and Concerto in F Gershwin s second Prelude for solo piano is an interesting example of a classical blues maintaining the form with academic strictness The blues scale is ubiquitous in modern popular music and informs many modal frames especially the ladder of thirds used in rock music for example in A Hard Day s Night Blues forms are used in the theme to the televised Batman teen idol Fabian Forte s hit Turn Me Loose country music star Jimmie Rodgers music and guitarist vocalist Tracy Chapman s hit Give Me One Reason Blues singing is about emotion Its influence on popular singing has been so widespread that at least among males singing and emoting have become almost identical it is a matter of projection rather than hitting the notes 129 Robert Christgau 1972 Early country bluesmen such as Skip James Charley Patton Georgia Tom Dorsey played country and urban blues and had influences from spiritual singing Dorsey helped to popularize Gospel music 130 Gospel music developed in the 1930s with the Golden Gate Quartet In the 1950s soul music by Sam Cooke Ray Charles and James Brown used gospel and blues music elements In the 1960s and 1970s gospel and blues were merged in soul blues music Funk music of the 1970s was influenced by soul funk can be seen as an antecedent of hip hop and contemporary R amp B R amp B music can be traced back to spirituals and blues Musically spirituals were a descendant of New England choral traditions and in particular of Isaac Watts s hymns mixed with African rhythms and call and response forms Spirituals or religious chants in the African American community are much better documented than the low down blues Spiritual singing developed because African American communities could gather for mass or worship gatherings which were called camp meetings Edward P Comentale has noted how the blues was often used as a medium for art or self expression stating As heard from Delta shacks to Chicago tenements to Harlem cabarets the blues proved despite its pained origins a remarkably flexible medium and a new arena for the shaping of identity and community 131 nbsp Duke Ellington straddled the big band and bebop genres Ellington extensively used the blues form 132 Before World War II the boundaries between blues and jazz were less clear Usually jazz had harmonic structures stemming from brass bands whereas blues had blues forms such as the 12 bar blues However the jump blues of the 1940s mixed both styles After WWII blues had a substantial influence on jazz Bebop classics such as Charlie Parker s Now s the Time used the blues form with the pentatonic scale and blue notes Bebop marked a major shift in the role of jazz from a popular style of music for dancing to a high art less accessible cerebral musician s music The audience for both blues and jazz split and the border between blues and jazz became more defined 132 133 The blues 12 bar structure and the blues scale was a major influence on rock and roll music Rock and roll has been called blues with a backbeat Carl Perkins called rockabilly blues with a country beat Rockabillies were also said to be 12 bar blues played with a bluegrass beat Hound Dog with its unmodified 12 bar structure in both harmony and lyrics and a melody centered on flatted third of the tonic and flatted seventh of the subdominant is a blues song transformed into a rock and roll song Jerry Lee Lewis s style of rock and roll was heavily influenced by the blues and its derivative boogie woogie His style of music was not exactly rockabilly but it has been often called real rock and roll this is a label he shares with several African American rock and roll performers 134 135 Many early rock and roll songs are based on blues That s All Right Mama Johnny B Goode Blue Suede Shoes Whole Lotta Shakin Goin On Shake Rattle and Roll and Long Tall Sally The early African American rock musicians retained the sexual themes and innuendos of blues music Got a gal named Sue knows just what to do Tutti Frutti Little Richard or See the girl with the red dress on She can do the Birdland all night long What d I Say Ray Charles The 12 bar blues structure can be found even in novelty pop songs such as Bob Dylan s Obviously Five Believers and Esther and Abi Ofarim s Cinderella Rockefella Early country music was infused with the blues 136 Jimmie Rodgers Moon Mullican Bob Wills Bill Monroe and Hank Williams have all described themselves as blues singers and their music has a blues feel that is different at first glance at least from the later country pop of artists like Eddy Arnold Yet if one looks back further Arnold also started out singing bluesy songs like I ll Hold You in My Heart A lot of the 1970s era outlaw country music by Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings also borrowed from the blues When Jerry Lee Lewis returned to country music after the decline of 1950s style rock and roll he sang with a blues feel and often included blues standards on his albums In popular culture edit nbsp The music of Taj Mahal for the 1972 movie Sounder marked a revival of interest in acoustic blues Like jazz rock and roll heavy metal music hip hop music reggae country music Latin music funk and pop music blues has been accused of being the devil s music and of inciting violence and other poor behavior 137 In the early 20th century the blues was considered disreputable especially as white audiences began listening to the blues during the 1920s 72 In the early twentieth century W C Handy was the first to popularize blues influenced music among non Black Americans During the blues revival of the 1960s and 1970s acoustic blues artist Taj Mahal and Texas bluesman Lightnin Hopkins wrote and performed music that figured prominently in the critically acclaimed film Sounder 1972 The film earned Mahal a Grammy nomination for Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture and a BAFTA nomination 138 Almost 30 years later Mahal wrote blues for and performed a banjo composition claw hammer style in the 2001 movie release Songcatcher which focused on the story of the preservation of the roots music of Appalachia Perhaps the most visible example of the blues style of music in the late 20th century came in 1980 when Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi released the film The Blues Brothers The film drew many of the biggest living influencers of the rhythm and blues genre together such as Ray Charles James Brown Cab Calloway Aretha Franklin and John Lee Hooker The band formed also began a successful tour under the Blues Brothers marquee 1998 brought a sequel Blues Brothers 2000 that while not holding as great a critical and financial success featured a much larger number of blues artists such as B B King Bo Diddley Erykah Badu Eric Clapton Steve Winwood Charlie Musselwhite Blues Traveler Jimmie Vaughan and Jeff Baxter In 2003 Martin Scorsese made significant efforts to promote the blues to a larger audience He asked several famous directors such as Clint Eastwood and Wim Wenders to participate in a series of documentary films for PBS called The Blues 139 He also participated in the rendition of compilations of major blues artists in a series of high quality CDs Blues guitarist and vocalist Keb Mo performed his blues rendition of America the Beautiful in 2006 to close out the final season of the television series The West Wing The blues was highlighted in season 2012 episode 1 of In Performance at the White House entitled Red White and Blues Hosted by Barack and Michelle Obama the show featured performances by B B King Buddy Guy Gary Clark Jr Jeff Beck Derek Trucks Keb Mo and others 140 See also edit nbsp Blues portalList of blues festivals List of blues musicians List of blues standardsReferences edit BBC GCSE Bitesize Origins of the blues BBC Retrieved September 15 2015 a b c The Historical Roots of Blues Music African American Intellectual History Society May 9 2018 Retrieved September 29 2020 Kunzler s dictionary of jazz provides two separate entries blues and the blues form a widespread musical form p 131 Kunzler Martin 1988 Jazz Lexicon Hamburg Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag Honoring Jazz An Early American Art Form Civilrightsmuseum org Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved November 7 2022 The Tresor de la Langue Francaise informatise provides this etymology of blues and cites Colman s farce as the first appearance of the term in the English language see Blues in French Centre Nationale de Ressources Textuelles et Lixicales Archived from the original on June 28 2012 Retrieved October 15 2010 a b Devi Debra 2013 Why Is the Blues Called the Blues Huffington Post 4 January 2013 Retrieved November 15 2015 Rhodes Richard 2006 John James Audubon The Making of an American Random House p 302 ISBN 9780375713934 Oliver Paul 1998 The story of the blues Internet Archive Boston Mass Northeastern University Press ISBN 978 1 55553 355 7 Davis Francis 1995 The History of the Blues New York Hyperion Partridge Eric 2002 A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 29189 7 Bolden Tony 2004 Afro Blue Improvisations in African American Poetry and Culture University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 02874 8 Ferris p 230 Handy W C Father of the Blues An Autobiography Ed Arna Bontemps New York Macmillan 1941 p 143 Ewen pp 142 143 Blesh Rudi Janis Harriet Grossman 1958 They All Played Ragtime The True Story of an American Music Sidgwick amp Jackson p 186 ISBN 978 1 4437 3152 2 Thomas James G Jr 2007 The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture Ethnicity University of North Carolina Press p 166 ISBN 978 0 8078 5823 3 Sylviane A Diouf What Islam Gave the Blues Renovatio June 17 2019 Retrieved August 17 2023 Komara p 476 From Big Joe Turner s Rebecca a compilation of traditional blues lyrics Moore Allan F 2002 The Cambridge Companion to Blues and Gospel Music Cambridge University Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 521 00107 6 Photographic image of record label JPG Wirz de Retrieved February 24 2022 Oliver p 281 a b Morales p 277 a b c Humphrey Mark A In Nothing but the Blues pp 107 149 Calt Stephen Perls Nick Stewart Michael Ten Years of Black Country Religion 1926 1936 LP back cover notes New York Yazoo Records L 1022 Archived from the original on October 2 2008 Reverend Gary Davis 2009 Archived from the original on February 12 2009 Retrieved February 3 2009 Corcoran Michael The Soul of Blind Willie Johnson Austin American Statesman Archived from the original on October 30 2005 Retrieved February 3 2009 Brozman Bob 2002 The Evolution of the 12 Bar Blues Progression Archived from the original on May 25 2010 Retrieved May 2 2009 Charters Samuel In Nothing but the Blues p 20 Fullman Ellen The Long String Instrument PDF MusicWorks Issue 37 Fall 1987 Archived from the original PDF on June 25 2008 A Jazz Improvisation Almanac Outside Shore Music Online School Archived from the original on September 11 2012 Ewen p 143 Kunzler p 1065 Pearson Barry In Nothing but the Blues p 316 Hamburger David 2001 Acoustic Guitar Slide Basics ISBN 978 1 890490 38 6 Evans David In Nothing but the Blues p 33 a b Kunzler p 130 Bastin Bruce In Nothing but the Blues p 206 Evans David In Nothing but the Blues pp 33 35 Cowley John H In Nothing but the Blues p 265 Cowley John H In Nothing but the Blues pp 268 269 Lead Belly Foundation Archived from the original on January 23 2010 Retrieved September 26 2008 Oliphant Dave Henry Thomas The Handbook of Texas Online Retrieved September 26 2008 Garofalo pp 46 47 Oliver p 3 Bohlman Philip V 1999 Immigrant Folk and Regional Music in the Twentieth Century The Cambridge History of American Music David Nicholls ed Cambridge University Press p 285 ISBN 978 0 521 45429 2 Oliver Paul 1984 Blues Off the Record Thirty Years of Blues Commentary New York Da Capo Press pp 45 47 ISBN 978 0 306 80321 5 a b Levine Lawrence W 1977 Black Culture and Black Consciousness Afro American Folk Thought from Slavery to Freedom Oxford University Press p 223 ISBN 978 0 19 502374 9 Southern p 333 Garofalo p 44 Ferris p 229 Morales p 276 Morales attributed this claim to John Storm Roberts in Black Music of Two Worlds beginning his discussion with a quote from Roberts There does not seem to be the same African quality in blues forms as there clearly is in much Caribbean music Call and Response in Blues How to Play Blues Guitar Archived from the original on October 10 2008 Retrieved August 11 2008 Charters Samuel In Nothing but the Blues p 25 Oliver p 4 MUSIC Exploring Native American influence on the blues September 17 2009 Archived from the original on December 24 2017 Retrieved October 15 2014 Duran Lucy 2013 POYI Bamana jeli music Mali and the blues Journal of African Cultural Studies 25 2 211 246 doi 10 1080 13696815 2013 792725 S2CID 191563534 Afropop Worldwide Africa and the Blues An Interview with Gerhard Kubik Afropop org Vierwo Barbara Trudeau Andy 2005 The Curious Listener s Guide to the Blues Stone Press p 15 ISBN 978 0 399 53072 2 Scott 2003 From the Erotic to the Demonic On Critical Musicology Oxford University Press p 182 A blues idiom is hinted at in A Negro Love Song a pentatonic melody with blue third and seventh in Coleridge Taylor s African Suite of 1898 before the first blues publications Steper Bill 1999 African American Music from the Mississippi Hill Country They Say Drums Was a Calling APF Reporter Archived from the original on September 6 2008 Retrieved October 27 2008 Chambers Douglas B 2009 Murder at Montpelier Igbo Africans in Virginia University Press of Mississippi p 180 ISBN 978 1 60473 246 7 Charters Samuel In Nothing but the Blues pp 14 15 Charters Samuel In Nothing but the Blues p 16 Garofalo p 44 Gradually instrumental and harmonic accompaniment were added reflecting increasing cross cultural contact Garofalo cited other authors who also mention the Ethiopian airs and Negro spirituals Schuller cited in Garofalo p 27 Garofalo pp 44 47 As marketing categories designations like race and hillbilly intentionally separated artists along racial lines and conveyed the impression that their music came from mutually exclusive sources Nothing could have been further from the truth In cultural terms blues and country were more equal than they were separate Garofalo claimed that artists were sometimes listed in the wrong racial category in record company catalogues Wolfe Charles In Nothing but the Blues pp 233 263 Golding Barrett The Rise of the Country Blues NPR Retrieved December 27 2008 Humphrey Mark A In Nothing but the Blues p 110 Garofalo p 27 Garofalo cited Barlow in Handy s sudden success demonstrated the commercial potential of the blues which in turn made the genre attractive to the Tin Pan Alley hacks who wasted little time in turning out a deluge of imitations Parentheticals in Garofalo a b Garofalo p 27 Lynskey Dorian February 16 2021 The forgotten story of America s first black superstars Bbc co uk Retrieved February 22 2022 Kentuckiana Blues Society Members aye net Retrieved September 26 2008 a b Clarke p 138 Clarke p 141 Clarke p 139 Calt Stephen Perls Nick Stewart Michael The Georgia Blues 1927 1933 LP back cover notes New York Yazoo Records L 1012 Kent Don 1968 10 Years In Memphis 1927 1937 vinyl back cover New York Yazoo Records L 1002 Calt Stephen Perls Nick Stewart Michael 1970 Memphis Jamboree 1927 1936 vinyl back cover New York Yazoo Records L 1021 a b Garofalo p 47 Hawkeye Herman Blues Foundation homepage Blues Foundation Archived from the original on December 10 2008 Retrieved October 15 2010 Clarke p 137 Stewart Baxter Derrick 1970 Ma Rainey and the Classic Blues Singers New York Stein amp Day p 16 Steinberg Jesse R Fairweather Abrol eds 2011 Blues Thinking Deep About Feeling Low Hoboken N J Wiley p 159 Harrison Daphne Duval 1988 Black Pearls Blues Queens of the 20s New Brunswick Rutgers University Press p 8 Oliver Paul Boogie Woogie Trio vinyl back cover Copenhagen Storyville SLP 184 Garofalo p 76 Komara p 120 Humphrey Mark A In Nothing but the Blues pp 175 177 Pearson Barry In Nothing but the Blues pp 313 314 Komara p 118 Humphrey Mark A In Nothing but the Blues p 179 a b Herzhaft p 53 Pierson Leroy 1976 Detroit Ghetto Blues 1948 to 1954 LP back cover notes St Louis Nighthawk Records 104 Humphrey Mark A In Nothing but the Blues p 180 Howlin Wolf amp Jimmy Reed interviewed on the Pop Chronicles 1969 Humphrey Mark A In Nothing but the Blues p 187 Pearson Barry In Nothing but the Blues p 342 Herzhaft p 11 Herzhaft p 236 Herzhaft p 35 Palmer 1981 pp 257 259 Komara p 49 Blues Encyclopedia of Chicago Retrieved August 13 2008 Bailey C Michael October 4 2003 West Side Chicago Blues All About Jazz Retrieved August 13 2008 Bjorn Lars 2001 Before Motown University of Michigan Press p 175 ISBN 978 0 472 06765 7 Herzhaft p 116 Herzhaft p 188 a b Hill Country Blues Msbluestrail org Retrieved September 13 2011 O Neal Jim In Nothing but the Blues pp 347 387 Komara Edward M 2006 Encyclopedia of the Blues Routledge p 385 a b Komara p 122 Komara p 388 O Neal Jim In Nothing but the Blues p 380 Aynsley Dunbar Retaliation AllMusic Retrieved 9 November 2022 Stan Webb s Chickenshack Beginnings Archived July 19 2011 at the Wayback Machine Stanwebb co uk Retrieved 4 November 2022 Garofalo pp 224 225 Phoebe Snow San Francisco Bay Blues AllMusic Retrieved November 4 2022 Komara p 50 Dicaire David 2001 More Blues Singers Biographies of 50 Artists from the Later 20th Century McFarland pp 232 248 ISBN 9780786410354 Martin Stephen April 3 2008 Malaco Records to be honored with blues trail marker PDF Mississippi Development Authority Archived from the original PDF on September 10 2008 Retrieved August 28 2008 Aldin Mary Katherine In Nothing but the Blues p 130 Blues By Category About com Archived from the original on October 13 2006 Retrieved October 15 2010 Blues Venues About com Archived from the original on December 21 2007 Retrieved October 15 2010 Blues Music Awards information Archived from the original on April 29 2006 Retrieved November 25 2005 Blues Record Labels About com Archived from the original on May 16 2008 Retrieved October 15 2010 Jennifer Nicole August 15 2005 The Blues The Revolution of Music Archived from the original on September 6 2008 Retrieved August 17 2008 Christgau Robert June 15 1972 A Power Plant Newsday Archived from the original on April 26 2019 Retrieved September 10 2018 Phil Petrie History of gospel music Afgen com Retrieved September 8 2008 Comentale Edward 2013 Sweet Air Chicago Illinois University of Illinois Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 252 07892 7 a b The Influence of the Blues on Jazz PDF Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved August 17 2008 Peter van der Merwe 2004 Roots of the Classical The Popular Origins of Western Music Oxford University Press p 461 ISBN 978 0 19 816647 4 The Blues Influence On Rock amp Roll Archived from the original on April 4 2007 Retrieved August 17 2008 History of Rock and Roll Zip Country Homepage Archived from the original on August 28 2008 Retrieved September 2 2008 Country music Columbia College Chicago 2007 2008 Archived from the original on June 2 2008 Retrieved September 2 2008 Curiel Jonathan August 15 2004 Muslim roots of the blues The music of famous American blues singers reaches back through the South to the culture of West Africa SFGATE Archived from the original on September 5 2005 Retrieved October 26 2021 Sounder IMDb Retrieved February 11 2007 Archived May 30 2015 at the Wayback Machine The Blues 2003 mini at IMDb nbsp Red White and Blues PBS org Archived from the original on July 24 2018 Retrieved July 23 2018 Bibliography editBarlow William 1993 Cashing In 1900 1939 In Dates Jannette L Barlow William eds Split Image African Americans in the Mass Media 2nd ed Howard University Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 88258 178 1 Bransford Steve 2004 Blues in the Lower Chattahoochee Valley Southern Spaces Clarke Donald 1995 The Rise and Fall of Popular Music St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 11573 9 Lawrence Cohn ed 1993 Nothing but the Blues The Music and the Musicians Abbeville Publishing Group Abbeville Press Inc ISBN 978 1 55859 271 1 Dicaire David 1999 Blues Singers Biographies of 50 Legendary Artists of the Early 20th Century McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 0606 7 Ewen David 1957 Panorama of American Popular Music Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 648360 1 Ferris Jean 1993 America s Musical Landscape Brown amp Benchmark ISBN 978 0 697 12516 3 Garofalo Reebee 1997 Rockin Out Popular Music in the USA Allyn amp Bacon ISBN 978 0 205 13703 9 Herzhaft Gerard Harris Paul Debord Brigitte 1997 Encyclopedia of the Blues University of Arkansas Press ISBN 978 1 55728 452 5 Komara Edward M 2006 Encyclopedia of the Blues Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 92699 7 Kunzler Martin 1988 Jazz Lexikon in German Rohwolt Taschenbuch Verlag ISBN 978 3 499 16316 6 Morales Ed 2003 The Latin Beat Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81018 3 Oliver Paul Wright Richard 1990 Blues Fell This Morning Meaning in the Blues Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 37793 5 Palmer Robert 1981 Deep Blues Viking ISBN 978 0 670 49511 5 Schuller Gunther 1968 Early Jazz Its Roots and Musical Development Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 504043 2 Southern Eileen 1997 The Music of Black Americans W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 03843 9 Curiel Jonathan August 15 2004 Muslim Roots of the Blues SFGate Archived from the original on September 5 2005 Retrieved August 24 2005 Further reading editAbbott Lynn Doug Seroff The Original Blues The Emergence of the Blues in African American Vaudeville 1889 1926 Jackson MS University Press of Mississippi 2019 ISBN 978 1 496 81002 1 Brown Luther Inside Poor Monkey s Southern Spaces June 22 2006 Dixon Robert M W Godrich John 1970 Recording the Blues London Studio Vista 85 pp SBN 289 79829 9 Oakley Giles 1976 The Devil s Music A History of the Blues London BBC p 287 ISBN 978 0 563 16012 0 Keil Charles 1991 1966 Urban Blues Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 42960 1 Oliver Paul 1998 The Story of the Blues new ed Northeastern University Press ISBN 978 1 55553 355 7 Oliver Paul 1965 Conversation with the Blues Volume 1 New York Horizon Press ISBN 978 0 8180 1223 5 Rowe Mike 1973 Chicago Breakdown Eddison Press ISBN 978 0 85649 015 6 Titon Jeff Todd 1994 Early Downhome Blues A Musical and Cultural Analysis 2nd ed University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4482 3 Welding Peter Brown Toby eds 1991 Bluesland Portraits of Twelve Major American Blues Masters New York Penguin Group 253 2 pp ISBN 0 525 93375 1 External links editBlues at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Data from Wikidata Blues at Curlie The American Folklife Center s Online Collections and Presentations The Blue Shoe Project Nationwide U S Blues Education Programming The Blues documentary series by Martin Scorsese aired on PBS The Blues Foundation The Delta Blues Museum archived 12 June 1998 The Music in Poetry Smithsonian Institution lesson plan on the blues for teachers American Music Archive of artist and record label discographies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Blues amp oldid 1186500996, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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