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blues genres
contributed by clair delune
Griots
The griots, or singer/storytellers, of the African tribes were both
historians and entertainers. Revered and somewhat feared, the
griots were admired much like rock stars today but were
segregated... when dead, they were “buried” in a hollow log away
from the tribe.
Work songs/field
hollers/Spirituals
This set of genres developed from the griots songs/stories and were
a way for the slaves to keep their family histories as intact as
possible. The tribes were not kept together, nor were families, so
the songs became a mixture of the total slave experience, reflecting
the shared miseries and hopes of a people as they worked in the
fields, adopted and merged old religions with the Christianity of
the plantation masters, and often, once slavery was abolished,
served time on prison chain gangs. For the field hollers, the key
was slow easy rhythms that made time pass more easily; however, the
cadence was of utmost import for the work songs, and the hope and
secret messages, coded to keep slave masters from understanding
them, were the key to the spirituals, many of which were eventually
amended into blues songs.
Classic Blues
singers
The ’20s fostered the advent of recorded music and opera was a
popular entertainment medium. The early blues was merged by women
singers into a strange mixture... blues songs delivered by
extravagantly dressed women. Topics ranged from death,
prostitution, thwarted love, cheating men, and allusions to
lesbianism. The heyday of the Classic Blues singers, notably that
of singers such as Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey, Clara Smith and Ida Cox,
ran for a little over a decade and met its demise with the advent of
the depression and moving pictures.
Itinerant singers
Lone bluesmen, toting portable and cheap instruments such as
harmonicas and guitars, took center stage away from the Classic
Blues Women. People didn’t want to hear the laments of the women
singers who drew out notes and flaunted expensive gowns and had
large entourages. Cheap and solo was the way of the ’30s, with
musicians hopping freights, catching rides from town to town or just
walking to their next gig, which might be playing a house party, a
jook joint or a street corner for tips. Early blues influences
became regionally noticeable, influenced and defined by travelers as
well as those from the region.
Delta Blues
Often considered the only “true” blues, Delta Blues sprung from the
Mississippi Delta, not truly a delta, but an affluvial plain that is
known as “the birthplace of the blues.” Artists from this region
include Tommy Johnson (who bragged that he sold his soul to the
devil at the crossroads), Charley Patton (a known trouble maker and
showstopper who is the first documented musician to play his guitar
behind his head -- sorry, Jimi!), Son House (who struggled all his
life between secular and spiritual music and finally chose blues for
the lure of whiskey and women), and Robert Johnson (who pitty-patted
as a young boy behind these seminal bluesmen, sometimes crawling
underneath the jooks to watch them through the floorboards if he was
not allowed in; and who denied the rumor attributed to him about a
crossroads deal with the devil). The list of Delta blues artists is
“as long as your right arm” and today boasts Honeyboy Edwards and
Robert Jr. Lockwood (Robert Johnson’s stepson from his common law
marriage) as its helmsmen.
Piedmont Blues
The barrier of the Appalachian Mountains geographically set the
Piedmont region off from the Delta blues region. The arrival of
immigrants from Europe added more harmonics and took away from the
pentatonic throbbing, which is Afro-centric, found in the Delta.
Piedmont blues involves more upbeat strumming and picking, which is
often called “raggy” or “ragtime.” The messages and songs were less
droning and often contained humorous references. North Carolina’s
Blind Boy Fuller, and South Carolina’s own Blind Gary Davis and Pink
Anderson are well-known Piedmont Bluesmen. You can experience
Piedmont Blues authentically replicated by the New Legacy Duo.
Jug Bands
Jug bands were a short-lived phenomenon in most cities except for
Memphis, which had the most in number and in lifespan. Homemade
instruments were a primary feature of this type of blues, with the
top billing going to the jugs. Gus Cannon and the Memphis Jug Band
are two good examples of this vaudeville based blues.
Logging Camps and
Barrelhouses
Pianos were not portable, and they were expensive, so the four
places that featured pianos were churches, houses of ill-repute (to
entertain customers when not otherwise “engaged”), barrelhouses and
logging camp meeting houses - and only three of those were likely to
play blues. Players worked on a rotating basis and traveled without
instruments. Barrelhouses were named for their trademark of
offering one price admission (usually five cents with your own cup)
for all the prohibition whiskey you could dip out of the barrel.
Ho kum
Ribald, double-entrendre blues with a humorous aspect was very
popular in the ’30s and is still popular today. Bo Carter, one of
the Chatmon family of musicians, was a prime purveyor of hokum
blues, with hits such as “Banana in Your Fruit Basket” and “Please
Warm My Weiner” bringing two quite different interpretations to
mind.
Country Blues
Simple instruments, lyrics and chord progressions mark the country
blues, which is found all over the southeast. Usually one or two
players, not bands, used this style as a form of entertainment prior
to the advent of TV and AC. Sometimes called Front Porch Blues.
White Country
Blues
The Appalachian Mountains formed a great divide between the Delta
and the Piedmont. From its protected vantage point the descendants
of Scottish and Irish immigrants in the mountains and eastward took
blues-based songs and merged them with instruments no longer popular
in blues such as the banjo, combined the blues lament with higher
pitches, shorter sustains and the yodel -- the European version of
the holler -- and out came White Country Blues. Some artists, whose
pictures had not been seen, were so reminiscent of black performers
they were considered bluesmen (and at times their recordings were
mistakenly released on what were called “Race labels”) but most were
clearly pivotal in the development of a new evolution of blues. Out
of this has come country music, with Jimmie Rodgers at the helm, and
bluegrass, with shy West Virginian Dock Boggs having led the way
playing his clawhammer banjo.
U
rban Blues
Urban blues found its roots in the cities when the great migration
took place. Lonnie Johnson is considered the father of urban blues,
and used clean picking and faster rhythms to underpin the “citified”
lyrics of urban blues. St. Louis, Kansas City, and New York City
were the triumvirate of early urban blues.
Midwest blues of
St . Louis and Kansas City
Another style of urbanized blues, although much less jazzy than the
Kansas City blues style, St. Louis Blues featured artists such as
Lonnie Johnson, Roosevelt Sykes (“The Honey Dripper”), “Little
Alice” Moore and Peetie Wheatstraw (“The Devil’s Son-in-Law”; “The
High Sheriff of Hell”) and was heavily barrelhouse-based. Kansas
City blues often featured larger combos and the
jazzier/swingier/jump stylings used by Jay McShann and Wynonie
Harris. Kansas City Blues was quite similar to New York City Blues
and both cities featured Big Joe Turner. KC Blues was strongly
influenced the evolution of West Coast Blues.
Memphis
Soul City USA is also home to Memphis Blues and the infamous Beale
Street. Just north of the Mississippi Delta, it was often one of
the first stops for sharecroppers leaving the harsh work of the
cotton fields with a dream of playing music for a living. Memphis
blues is often tinged with the soul-based sounds of horn sections,
but a good portion of Memphis blues was recorded by Sun Records
musical visionary, Sam Phillips, who recorded the early tunes of
Chicago greats such as Howlin’ Wolf and Muddy Waters (then Chester
Burnett and McKinley Morganfield), along with Memphis legends such
as Furry Lewis, and yes, Elvis Presley, the King of Rock and Roll,
who started with Arthur Crudup’s blues tune, “That’s All Right
(Mama).”
Soul Blues
Marrying horns and the soul beat to a blues tune marries them into
what is called Soul Blues. Ann Peebles, Irma Thomas, Bobby Blue
Bland, Johnny Taylor and the latest entry, Robert Cray are excellent
at this format.
Jump/Swing/Boogie-Woogie
Where blues, rock and roll, rhythm and blues and jazz intersected,
out sprang the styles of Jump and Swing and Boogie-Woogie. Although
often used to group the genres, Jump, Swing and Boogie-Woogie are
three separate genres with their own distinctions. Jump is the most
blues-based of the three and is closely associated with the roots of
Rock’n’Roll. Perhaps the best example of a great Jump artist is
Louis Jordan, who was one of the top Blues Shouters (having a voice
that could clearly be heard over a large, loud orchestra without
amplification). His Saturday Night Fish Fry is a classic
Jump tune. Early Swing is different from the term as it applies to
today’s music (the term “swing” now encompasses the three genres as
a whole, ironically with the least emphasis from the older Swing
tunes). The Swing of the ’30s and ’40s had some Jump aspect to it,
but the term Swing came from the slower, dreamy, swingy melodies
associated with Glenn Miller, and not as much with artists like Cab
Calloway, whose recordings were more upbeat and frantic than most
Swing. Boogie Woogie came into its own as it evolved from
Barrelhouse boogie piano stylings into one of the main tributaries
to the birth of Rhythm and Blues (original definition - NOT today’s
concept of R&B music) then eventually into Rock’n’Roll. One of the
seminal boogie woogie based tunes is Jackie Brenston’s (w/ Ike
Turner)Rocket 88, arguably one of the world’s first R&R
songs. Carolina boasts its own King of Jump Blues, Nappy Brown,
one of the finest blues shouters of the last half-century!
LOUSIANNA
Swamp Music
As dark as the deepest swamps, this style of music reflects the
Louisiana topography. Excello has compiled some wonderful examples
of the genre on it’s four volume collection featuring numerous
artists and songs you may not have heard of and some you have, such
as Slim Harpo’s Baby Scratch My Back.
New Orleans Blues
Professor Longhair and James Booker rolling those 88 keys in a
rollicking way that keeps one rocking were the inspiration for
latter day Nawlins greats such as Dr. John. Fird “Blind” “Snooks”
Eaglin is another example who plays with the New Orleans influence,
but is closer to traditional blues. Irma Thomas “The Crescent City
Queen” provides a good example of Nawlins predilection for
beautifully mixing a bit of soul into the blues stew. Find a
recording from the original Goldband label and you will get exposed
to this wonderful style that generated great dance beats in the
’50s.
Zydeco and Cajun
music
A common misconception is that Zydeco and Cajun styles are
interchangeable. Similar, yes, but they are quite distinctly
different. As blues is to country music, Zydeco (which is played by
Creoles) is to Cajun (which is played by Acadians). Stanley Dural
(Buckwheat Zydeco) has a rider in his contract that insists he will
not play if he is referred to as a Cajun artist. He says “they are
from two nationalities, a white and a black nationality, speaking
the same language, playing the same instruments, but different types
of music from different parts of the world. And I think that's
wonderful."
Creole originally
referred to Louisiana-born people of French or Spanish parentage.
The slave trade of the late-1700s changed the definition of Creole
to mean slaves born in the colonies (esclavos Criollos), as opposed
to those from Africa (esclavos Africanos). Cajun is a derivative of
Acadian; the group is mainly comprised of descendants of relocated
French settlers expelled from Nova Scotia in 1755 by the British.
Cajun music is associated with the fiddle but Zydeco features the
washboard and the accordion.
Regardless, both
styles are predominantly swingy and upbeat, with Zydeco getting
downright festively frenetic at times, and both feature French
lyrics and make it difficult to keep still or remain in a bad mood.
Although Clifton Chenier, whose son C.J. Chenier is currently on
tour, is often referred to as the father of Zydeco, some give that
honor to Amedé Ardoin.
Texas
Although often ascribed to Muddy Waters in Chicago, the first
guitarist to “plug in” to the electric scene was Aaron Thibeaux
(T-Bone) Walker from the Oak Cliff section of Dallas. Texas blues
is an amalgam of styles and influences, with country blues as
popularized by Blind Lemon Jefferson; swamp blues, R&B and a little
rock getting mixed together. The saying that “everything is bigger
in Texas” accounts for the big sound of Texas blues, where the
competition is fierce and the showmanship is grand. From early
country bluesmen such as Henry Thomas, who played the panpipes with
very little deviation from the original style found on the African
savannas (check out his Bull Doze Blues, covered in the ’60s
by Canned Heat as Going Up the Country) to Victoria Spivey, a
singer and composer of the ’20s and ’30s who owned her own label and
wrote Blind Lemon Jefferson’s signature tune, to the Blues Rock
explosion created by groups like the Fabulous Thunderbirds and the
late Stevie Ray Vaughn, Texas blues is as big as Texas itself. For
good roadhouse Texas blues with a little Mexican flavor, dish up
some Long John Hunter.
Chicago
The Big Four of Chicago Blues have long since passed on, but their
influence is often what people think of first when blues is
mentioned. The standard blues progression with walking bass lines
and a strong bottom end is a staple of many current musical genres,
most notably Rock. Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Little Walter and
Sonny Boy Williamson (II) were the kingpins of legendary Chess
Records Company. Electric blues driven by strong guitar leads and
powerful harmonica riffs, overlaid by growling, gruff vocals about
life, love and misery led to one of the biggest musical scenes in
American Music. Chicago is still known for its blues scene which
includes an almost endless list of greats, now deceased. The
current blues scene is led now by Chicago’s reigning blues king,
Buddy Guy.
Detroit
Three words: John Lee Hooker
British Blues
What had died out in America, or been killed by its own offspring
(note: see B.B. King’s Blues Had a Baby and They Named it Rock ‘n’Roll),
was rediscovered and revitalized in the early ’60s by British
musicians, notably John Mayall and everyone he played with and
influenced. Others found inspiration digging through their parents
record collections for swing numbers, such as Ray Davies of the
Kinks who became inspired to mimic R&B stylings by Big Bill
Broonzy’s recordings. This brought the blues/rock influence full
circle, with artists like the Rolling Stones, in the height of Rock
frenzy, paying homage to their idols by appearing on television with
artists such as Howlin’ Wolf. The British Invasion owes much of its
ammunition to the stores of blues 78s these artists were snapping up
and covering on their early records. Alexis Korner and John Mayall
and his Bluesbreakers were a revolving door for unknown players,
such as Eric Clapton, who gained huge fame in the Rock world in
later years. Later just the influences would remain. What evolved
from Blues to R&B, to Rock’n’Roll to just Rock overtook the AM and
FM stations in the late ’60s and early ’70s. Bands such as Savoy
Brown, who are to appear at the 2001 Columbia Blues Festival,
stayed true to the blues roots while deepening the rock aspects,
eventually influencing the development of Heavy Metal.
West Coast
The jump scene rose and never died in California and swing is where
it is at. Until July 2001, it was also the adopted home of John Lee
Hooker, the King of Boogie. The beat is central to this style of
music, which is usually very danceable. The 1950s is the decade
most associated with this style of music, and the bands often adopt
the clothing and hairstyles of that time along with its heartbeat
and verve. Charles Brown (composer of “Merry Christmas, Baby” and
“Black Night”) called the West Coast home, and had a gentler, albeit
swingy style. Johnny Otis, ostensibly the only Greek Bluesman,
brought a more upbeat style to the Coast. Currently, hot players
and bands such as Mitch Woods and his Rocket 88’s have been joined
by award winning-bands like Rod Piazza and the Mighty Flyers, Rusty
Zinn and other young hawks.
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