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The Blues
I'm sitting here listening to W.C. Clark out of Austin and I had to start a topic on the blues, one of only original American art forms, and my favorite music style. Blues doesn't get its due, it's the most performed style of live music in the world. I've seen many blues artists over the years, happy to say I've seen such artists as B.B. King, Joe Williams, Etta James, Ruth Brown, The Staple Singers, Sam Moore, Bonnie Raitt, Irma Thomas, The Meters, and lots more I can't remember. I'm a big fan of the old Atlantic/Stax-Volt artists like Ray Charles, Otis Redding, Sam & Dave, etc, etc. Sad to say I didn't catch some of my favorites, mostly because I was too young to see them before they died. Robert Cray is among my favorites. Feel free to share your favorite blues artists/songs and some of your experiences. |
Re: The Blues
Good idea for a thread.
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Re: The Blues
Growing up in Austin, I saw WC Clark, Stevie Ray Vaughn, Jimmy Vaughn, and a slew of others all over town. Good times back in the day. Watching them live is just one of those experiences that listening to an album could never replicate. Although, I do love listening to blues from time to time at work.
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Re: The Blues
Originally Posted by E Unit
(Post 13093192)
Growing up in Austin, I saw WC Clark, Stevie Ray Vaughn, Jimmy Vaughn, and a slew of others all over town. Good times back in the day. Watching them live is just one of those experiences that listening to an album could never replicate. Although, I do love listening to blues from time to time at work.
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Re: The Blues
I might be a purist, but I don't consider almost any of the musicians in the OP Blues. Some of my favorites:
Muddy Waters Son House Blind Willie McTell Robert Johnson Little Walter Blind Lemon Jefferson Howlin Wolf Leadbelly I could go on, but for something contemporary I would recommend almost anyone on the Alligator label. |
Re: The Blues
Originally Posted by JasonX
(Post 13093239)
I might be a purist, but I don't consider almost any of the musicians in the OP Blues. Some of my favorites:
Muddy Waters Son House Blind Willie McTell Robert Johnson Little Walter Blind Lemon Jefferson Howlin Wolf Leadbelly I could go on, but for something contemporary I would recommend almost anyone on the Alligator label. Come on, Ray Charles isn't blues? Etta James, Irma Thomas, WC Clark, etc? We're still having this argument? The line between Blues/R&B/Jazz is a fine one. To say that someone like Joe Williams isn't a blues singer is just plain silly. I'm a harp player and could listen to Little Walter all day, but I realize there's more to blues than just that. |
Re: The Blues
Originally Posted by Eric F
(Post 13093504)
So nobody born after 1940 can be blues?
Come on, Ray Charles isn't blues? I have never heard of anyone calling Ray Charles blues music, nor would I ever think to do so. If you are going to meld R&B or soul music into blues, you might as well just do away with categories all together. |
Re: The Blues
Originally Posted by JasonX
(Post 13093765)
I have never heard of anyone calling Ray Charles blues music, nor would I ever think to do so. If you are going to meld R&B or soul music into blues, you might as well just do away with categories all together.
If you don't think the artists I mentioned are blues, then we obviously have different tastes in music. |
Re: The Blues
Originally Posted by Eric F
(Post 13093968)
If you don't think the artists I mentioned are blues, then we obviously have different tastes in music.
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Re: The Blues
A more recent act is Kaleo.
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Re: The Blues
Originally Posted by JasonX
(Post 13093239)
I might be a purist, but I don't consider almost any of the musicians in the OP Blues. Some of my favorites:
Muddy Waters Son House Blind Willie McTell Robert Johnson Little Walter Blind Lemon Jefferson Howlin Wolf Leadbelly I could go on, but for something contemporary I would recommend almost anyone on the Alligator label. For more modern blues, anyone on Fat Possum Records is excellent too - some who've passed away recently like RL Burnside and Junior Kimbrough were great north Mississippi hill country figures carrying on that old-time sound. And if you want to get into the really old, hardcore blues precursors I've got to recommend sets like this Paramount Blues compilation or the American Primitive collection. You'll have to be someone who doesn't mind a bit of hiss and crackle to the old recordings though (to me that adds to the atmosphere). |
Re: The Blues
Some of my favorite contemporary blues artists like Joe Louis Walker straddle the line between blues/soul/R&B. The same could be said for guys like Robert Cray, WC Clark even Jimmy Vaughan.
You can say that about artists like Freddie King, Albert King and Little Milton who were old enough to start out doing "traditional" blues, and then changed their styles to fit the times. Music is not static. I'm listening to one of Freddie King's last albums right now- Woman Across the River. Not "traditional" in any sense, but still blues in my book. |
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