≈ ¤ Blues jam ⇓ 1966
1. Muddy Waters + 2. James Cotton + 3. Sonny Terry +
4. Brownie McGhee + 5. Mable Hillery +
6. Sunnyland Slim + 7. Otis Spann + 8. Willie Dixon
♦ Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee […]
|
||||||
Jimi was always one of Bob Dylan’s greatest admirers. His mates used to take him the piss for looking up to a white folk singer. Here’s the result: simply brilliant! Bob must have got fascinated with the result; it didn’t take him long to go electric himself, despite all the booing and rejection… […]
George «Buddy» Guy (born July 30, 1936, in Lettsworth, La) is perhaps the greatest living exponent of classic Chicago electric blues. He is a thrillingly inventive guitarist, a passionately soulful singer and a peerless showman. In the course of a decades-long professional career, he has sold more than 2 million albums, […]
‾ Muddy Waters transformed the soul of the rural South into the sound of the city, electrifying the blues at a pivotal point in the early postwar period. His recorded legacy, particularly the wealth of sides he cut in the Fifties, is one of the great musical treasures of this century. Above all others, it […]
Chuck E. Weiss grew up in Denver, Colorado, where his parents owned a record store (Record Center). Through his parents, and by spending time at the local blues bar Ebbett’s Field, he met Lightnin’ Hopkins. Hopkins was impressed with his drum playing and took him on tour, where Weiss had the opportunity […]
∠ When Howlin’ Wolf [1910-1976] made his trademark entrance the audience went wild. He took the stage crawling on all tours, a fierce Black animal, loosing the ferocious howl that gave him his name. The energy level was enormous, a combination of excitement, fear and fascination that thrilled deep. […]
¤ Son Seals [1942-2004] Seals’ debut album, The Son Seals Blues Band, established him as a groundbreaking new blues artist. His 1977 album, Midnight Son, was his true breakthrough. The album received widespread acclaim from every major music publication. Rolling Stone called it «one of the most significant blues albums of the decade.» A strong series of six more […]
♦ FREDDIE KING [1934-1976] Although Freddie King, “The Texas Cannonball”, was born and raised in Texas, he matured as a musician in Chicago. His guitar style combined country and urban influences. As a child, King grew up on the music of such legendary country blues guitarists as Blind Lemon Jefferson, Lightnin’ Hopkins, […]
¤ Harmonica Blues → http://www.bluesharp.ca/legends/ ← ¤ Sonny Boy Williamson [1912-1965] Why Alex ‘Rice’ Miller took the name Sonny Boy Williamson is a mystery. John Lee ‘Sonny Boy’ Williamson had already made a name for himself in the early 40s as a harp master and blues idol, only to be murdered in 1948. Miller adopted the […]
¤ Jimmy Reed [1925-1976] No other bluesman has ever experienced the success that came to Jimmy Reed from 1953 to 1966, 14 of his singles hit Billboard’s R&B Top 20. Even more impressive, 12 of these recordings “crossed over” to the Billboard POP 100, demonstrating the breath of his appeal to both black […] |
||||||