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Country Blues

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Country blues



 
 
Country blues (also folk blues, rural blues, backwoods blues, or downhome blues) refers to all the acoustic, mainly guitar
Guitar

The guitar is a musical instrument with ancient roots that is used in a wide variety of musical styles. It typically has six Strings , but Tenor guitar, Seven-string guitar, Eight-string guitar, Ten-string guitar, Eleven-string guitar, Twelve-string guitar, Thirteen-string guitar and doubleneck guitar string guitars also exist....
-driven forms of the blues
Blues

Blues is a music genre based on the use of the blues chord progressions and the blue notes. Though several blues musical form s exist, the 12-bar blues chord progressions are the most frequently encountered....
. After blues' birth in the southern United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
, it quickly spread throughout the country (and elsewhere), giving birth to a host of regional styles. These include Memphis
Memphis blues

The Memphis blues is a style of blues music that was created in the 1920s and 1930s by Memphis-area musicians like Frank Stokes, Sleepy John Estes, Furry Lewis and Memphis Minnie....
, Detroit, Chicago
Chicago blues

The Chicago blues is a form of blues music that developed in Chicago, Illinois by taking the basic acoustic guitar and harmonica-based Delta blues and adding electric guitar, amplified bass guitar, Drum kit, piano, and sometimes saxophone, and making the harmonica louder with a microphone and an instrument amplifier....
, Texas
Texas blues

Texas blues is a subgenre of the blues, and of course is not limited to Texas-based musicians. It has had various style variations but typically has been played with more swing music than other blues styles....
, Piedmont
Piedmont blues

The Piedmont blues is a type of blues music characterized by a fingerpicking approach on the guitar in which a regular, alternating thumb bassline string rhythmic pattern supports a syncopated melody using the Clef#The treble clef strings generally picked with the fore-finger, occasionally others....
, Louisiana
Louisiana blues

The Louisiana blues is a type of blues music that is characterized by plodding rhythms that make the sound dark and tense. As a result of this sound, a subgenre appeared called swamp blues , which emphasizes the dark sound and laidback rhythms of the standard Louisiana blues....
, West Coast
West Coast blues

The West Coast blues is a type of blues music characterized by jazz and jump blues influences, strong piano-dominated sounds and jazzy guitar solos, which originated from Texas blues players relocated to California in the 1940s....
, Atlanta, St. Louis
St. Louis blues

The St. Louis blues is a type of blues music. It is usually more piano-based than other forms of the blues, and is closely related to the jump blues, ragtime and piano blues....
, East Coast
East Coast blues

East Coast blues casts a wide net covering all of Piedmont blues--a style that relied on fast, virtuosic fingerpicking and added influences such as ragtime--as well as the urbanized R&B of New York blues and countless smaller regional styles....
, Swamp
Swamp blues

Swamp blues is a form of blues music that is highly evolved and specialized. It arose from the Louisiana blues and is known for its laidback rhythms which dominate a music that is simultaneously funky and often lighthearted — for a blues sub-genre....
, New Orleans
New Orleans blues

New Orleans rhythm and blues refers to a type of R&B music from the U.S. city of New Orleans, Louisiana, characterized by extensive use of piano and brass instrument sections, complex rhythms and lyrics that reflect New Orleans life....
, Delta
Delta blues

The Delta blues is one of the earliest styles of blues music. It originated in the Mississippi Delta, a region of the United States that stretches from Memphis, Tennessee in the north to Vicksburg, Mississippi in the south, the Mississippi River on the west to the Yazoo River on the east....
 and Kansas City
Kansas City blues (music)

Kansas City blues is a genre of blues music. It has spawned the Kansas City Blues & Jazz festival and the Kansas City Blues Society. Today Kansas City, Missouri is home to many great blues artists and blues fans alike....
 blues.

Style
According to Richard Middleton
Richard Middleton

Richard Middleton may refer to:*Richard Middleton , English theologian, philosopher and Lord Chancellor*Richard Barham Middleton , British poet and ghost story writer...
 (1990, p.142) folk blues "was constructed as a distinct discursive category in the early decades of this century [20th], mostly as the result of the activities of record companies, marketing 'old-fashioned' music to rural Southern 'folk' and newly arrived urban dwellers." Also contributing to the documentation of the genre were John
John Lomax

John Avery Lomax was a pioneering Musicology and Folklore. Lomax was born in Goodman, Mississippi and grew up in central Texas, just north of Meridian, TX in rural Bosque County....
 and Alan Lomax
Alan Lomax

Alan Lomax was an United States folklore and musicology. He was one of the great Field work collectors of folk music of the 20th century, recording thousands of songs in the United States, Great Britain, Ireland, the West Indies, Italy, and Spain....
, Samuel Charters
Samuel Charters

Samuel Charters is an United States music historian, writer, record producer, musician, and poet. He is a noted and widely published author on the subjects of blues and jazz music, as well as a writer of fiction....
, Paul Oliver
Paul Oliver

Oliver is a researcher at the Oxford Institute for Sustainable Development . He has argued that vernacular architecture will be necessary in the future to "ensure sustainability in both cultural and economic terms beyond the short term."...
, David Evans
David Evans

David or Dave Evans may refer to:...
, Peter B.






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Encyclopedia


Country blues (also folk blues, rural blues, backwoods blues, or downhome blues) refers to all the acoustic, mainly guitar
Guitar

The guitar is a musical instrument with ancient roots that is used in a wide variety of musical styles. It typically has six Strings , but Tenor guitar, Seven-string guitar, Eight-string guitar, Ten-string guitar, Eleven-string guitar, Twelve-string guitar, Thirteen-string guitar and doubleneck guitar string guitars also exist....
-driven forms of the blues
Blues

Blues is a music genre based on the use of the blues chord progressions and the blue notes. Though several blues musical form s exist, the 12-bar blues chord progressions are the most frequently encountered....
. After blues' birth in the southern United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
, it quickly spread throughout the country (and elsewhere), giving birth to a host of regional styles. These include Memphis
Memphis blues

The Memphis blues is a style of blues music that was created in the 1920s and 1930s by Memphis-area musicians like Frank Stokes, Sleepy John Estes, Furry Lewis and Memphis Minnie....
, Detroit, Chicago
Chicago blues

The Chicago blues is a form of blues music that developed in Chicago, Illinois by taking the basic acoustic guitar and harmonica-based Delta blues and adding electric guitar, amplified bass guitar, Drum kit, piano, and sometimes saxophone, and making the harmonica louder with a microphone and an instrument amplifier....
, Texas
Texas blues

Texas blues is a subgenre of the blues, and of course is not limited to Texas-based musicians. It has had various style variations but typically has been played with more swing music than other blues styles....
, Piedmont
Piedmont blues

The Piedmont blues is a type of blues music characterized by a fingerpicking approach on the guitar in which a regular, alternating thumb bassline string rhythmic pattern supports a syncopated melody using the Clef#The treble clef strings generally picked with the fore-finger, occasionally others....
, Louisiana
Louisiana blues

The Louisiana blues is a type of blues music that is characterized by plodding rhythms that make the sound dark and tense. As a result of this sound, a subgenre appeared called swamp blues , which emphasizes the dark sound and laidback rhythms of the standard Louisiana blues....
, West Coast
West Coast blues

The West Coast blues is a type of blues music characterized by jazz and jump blues influences, strong piano-dominated sounds and jazzy guitar solos, which originated from Texas blues players relocated to California in the 1940s....
, Atlanta, St. Louis
St. Louis blues

The St. Louis blues is a type of blues music. It is usually more piano-based than other forms of the blues, and is closely related to the jump blues, ragtime and piano blues....
, East Coast
East Coast blues

East Coast blues casts a wide net covering all of Piedmont blues--a style that relied on fast, virtuosic fingerpicking and added influences such as ragtime--as well as the urbanized R&B of New York blues and countless smaller regional styles....
, Swamp
Swamp blues

Swamp blues is a form of blues music that is highly evolved and specialized. It arose from the Louisiana blues and is known for its laidback rhythms which dominate a music that is simultaneously funky and often lighthearted — for a blues sub-genre....
, New Orleans
New Orleans blues

New Orleans rhythm and blues refers to a type of R&B music from the U.S. city of New Orleans, Louisiana, characterized by extensive use of piano and brass instrument sections, complex rhythms and lyrics that reflect New Orleans life....
, Delta
Delta blues

The Delta blues is one of the earliest styles of blues music. It originated in the Mississippi Delta, a region of the United States that stretches from Memphis, Tennessee in the north to Vicksburg, Mississippi in the south, the Mississippi River on the west to the Yazoo River on the east....
 and Kansas City
Kansas City blues (music)

Kansas City blues is a genre of blues music. It has spawned the Kansas City Blues & Jazz festival and the Kansas City Blues Society. Today Kansas City, Missouri is home to many great blues artists and blues fans alike....
 blues.

Style


According to Richard Middleton
Richard Middleton

Richard Middleton may refer to:*Richard Middleton , English theologian, philosopher and Lord Chancellor*Richard Barham Middleton , British poet and ghost story writer...
 (1990, p.142) folk blues "was constructed as a distinct discursive category in the early decades of this century [20th], mostly as the result of the activities of record companies, marketing 'old-fashioned' music to rural Southern 'folk' and newly arrived urban dwellers." Also contributing to the documentation of the genre were John
John Lomax

John Avery Lomax was a pioneering Musicology and Folklore. Lomax was born in Goodman, Mississippi and grew up in central Texas, just north of Meridian, TX in rural Bosque County....
 and Alan Lomax
Alan Lomax

Alan Lomax was an United States folklore and musicology. He was one of the great Field work collectors of folk music of the 20th century, recording thousands of songs in the United States, Great Britain, Ireland, the West Indies, Italy, and Spain....
, Samuel Charters
Samuel Charters

Samuel Charters is an United States music historian, writer, record producer, musician, and poet. He is a noted and widely published author on the subjects of blues and jazz music, as well as a writer of fiction....
, Paul Oliver
Paul Oliver

Oliver is a researcher at the Oxford Institute for Sustainable Development . He has argued that vernacular architecture will be necessary in the future to "ensure sustainability in both cultural and economic terms beyond the short term."...
, David Evans
David Evans

David or Dave Evans may refer to:...
, Peter B. Lowry, Jeff Todd Titon
Jeff Todd Titon

Jeff Todd Titon is a professor of music at Brown University. His published books include Early Downhome Blues: A Musical and Cultural Analysis and Powerhouse for God ....
, Bruce Bastin
Bruce Bastin

Bruce Bastin is one of the few leading experts on the blues styles of the South Eastern states of America . He is responsible for much ground-breaking research over the decades....
 and William Ferris
William R. Ferris

William Reynolds Ferris is an American author and scholar and former chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities. He co-founded, with Judy Peiser, the Center for Southern Folklore in Memphis, Tennessee and, with Charles Reagan Wilson, the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi....
 (all bourgeois, as pointed out by Middleton).

Country blues were constructed from "a much more heterogeneous, fluid musical field" participated in by black and some white people including ragtime
Ragtime

Ragtime is an originally American musical genre which enjoyed its peak popularity between 1897 and 1918. Ragtime was the first truly American musical genre, predating jazz....
, early jazz
Jazz

Jazz is a primarily American musical art form which originated at the beginning of the 20th century in African American communities in the Southern United States from a confluence of African and European music traditions....
, religious song, Tin Pan Alley
Tin Pan Alley

Tin Pan Alley is the name given to the collection of New York City-centered History of music publishings and songwriters who dominated the American popular music of the United States in the late 19th century and early 20th century....
, minstrel
Minstrel show

The minstrel show, or minstrelsy, was an United States entertainment consisting of comic skits, variety show acts, dance, and music, performed by white people in blackface or, especially after the American Civil War, blacks in blackface....
, and other theater songs (Oliver 1984 and Russell 1970). Blues was "defined...functionally - it was 'good time music' - or experientally - blues was a feeling - rather than by reference to any formal characteristics or stereotypes," though, "at the same time, many of those characteristics (pentatonic melody, blue tonality, typical chord progression and stanza patterns, call and response) could be found in other forms and contexts too: in hillbilly and Country music, gospel song, ragtime, jazz and Tin Pan Alley hits."

Titon (1977, p.xvi) points out, however, that "downhome blues songs...do not sound like the folk songs of singers like Leadbelly...yet...early downhome blues is best regarded as folk music...despite the dangers of the implication that if downhome blues is folk music, then downhome black Americans must constitute a folk group." (Middleton 1990, p.144)

Countering the idea of country blues as folk music
Folk music

Folk music can have a number of different meanings, including:* Traditional music: The original meaning of the term "folk music" was synonymous with the term "Traditional music", also often including World Music and Roots music; the term "Traditional music" was given its more specific meaning to distinguish it from the other definition...
 is the blues individualism. Abbey Niles wrote that the blues have to do with "the element of pure 'self'." W.C. Handy wrote that they are able to "express...personal feeling in a sort of musical soliloquy" (both quoted in Levine 1977, p.222), and Robert Palmer (1981, p.75) states that the singer's "involvement becomes both the subject and substance of the work."

"The blues was the most highly personalized, indeed the first almost completely personalized music that Afro-Americans developed. It was the first important form of African-American music in the United States to lack the kind of antiphony that had marked other black musical forms. The call and response form remained, but in blues it was the singer who responded to himself either verbally or on an accompanying instrument. In all these respects blues was the most typically American music Afro-Americans had yet created and represented a major degree of acculturation to the individualized ethos of the larger society." (Levine 1977, p.221)

Middleton describes the rural blues artist as a wanderer and social outsider whose lyrical themes not surprisingly include loneliness, alienation, and travel. He and Keil (1966, p.76) suggests that blues artists may have served as "licensed" critics containing "unflinching subjectivity...in the context of its time and place...was positively heroic. Only a man who understands his worth and believes in his freedom sings as if nothing else matters" (Palmer 1981, p.75).

Szwed (1969, p.118-9) argues that the "Blues arose as a popular music form in the early 1900s, the period of the first great Negro migration north to the cities...The formal and stylistic elements of the blues seem to symbolise newly emerging social patterns during the crisis period of urbanisation...By replacing the functions served by sacred music, the blues eased a transition from land-based agrarian society to one based on mobile wage-labor urbanism."

Notable country blues musicians

  • Jimmie Rodgers
  • Etta Baker
    Etta Baker

    Etta Baker was a Piedmont blues guitarist and singer from North Carolina, United States of America....
  • Robert Lowery
    Robert Lowery (musician)

    Robert Lowery is an United States blues singer, and guitarist. As a teenager, he picked up blues tunes from records by Robert Johnson , Lightnin' Hopkins, Blind Boy Fuller, Arthur Crudup, and others, eventually developing his own distinctive style....
  • Blind Blake
    Blind Blake

    "Blind" Blake was an influential blues singer and guitarist. He is often called "The King Of Ragtime Guitar".Blind Blake recorded about 80 tracks for Paramount Records in the late 1920s and early 1930s....
  • Son House
    Son House

    Eddie James "Son" House, Jr. was an American blues singer and guitarist. House pioneered an innovative style featuring strong, repetitive rhythms, often played with the aid of slide guitar, and his singing often incorporated elements of southern gospel and spiritual music....
  • Bo Carter
    Bo Carter

    Armenter "Bo Carter" Chatmon was a popular early blues musician. He was a member of the Mississippi Sheiks in concerts, and on a few of their sound recording and reproduction....
  • Charley Patton
  • Tommy Johnson
  • Robert Johnson
  • Blind Lemon Jefferson
    Blind Lemon Jefferson

    "Blind" Lemon Jefferson was an influential blues singer and guitarist from Texas. He was one of the most popular blues singers of the 1920s, and has been titled "Father of the Texas Blues."...
  • Blind Willie Johnson
    Blind Willie Johnson

    "Blind" Willie Johnson was an United States singer and guitarist whose music straddled the border between blues music and spirituals. While the lyrics of all of his songs were religious, his music drew from both sacred and blues traditions....
  • Blind Willie McTell
    Blind Willie McTell

    William Samuel McTell, better known as Blind Willie McTell , was an influential American blues singer, songwriter, and guitarist. He was a 12-string guitar fingerstyle Piedmont blues guitarist, and recorded 149 songs between 1927 and 1956....
  • Sleepy John Estes
    Sleepy John Estes

    John Adam Estes , best known as Sleepy John Estes or Sleepy John, was a United States blues guitarist, songwriter and vocalist, born in Ripley, Tennessee, Lauderdale County, Tennessee, Tennessee....
  • Fred McDowell
    Fred McDowell

    Fred McDowell , often known as Mississippi Fred McDowell, was a blues singer and guitar player in the Delta blues style....
  • Robert Pete Williams
    Robert Pete Williams

    Robert Pete Williams was an United States Louisiana blues musician, based in Louisiana. His music characteristically employs unconventional blues tunings and structures, and his songs are often about the time he served in prison....
  • Skip James
    Skip James

    Nehemiah Curtis "Skip" James was an United States Delta blues singer, guitarist, pianist and songwriter....
  • Bukka White
    Bukka White

    Bukka White was a delta blues guitarist and singer. "Bukka" was not a nickname, but a misspelling of White's Given name by his second record label, ....
  • Barbecue Bob
    Barbecue Bob

    Robert Hicks, better known as Barbecue Bob , was an early United States country blues musician. His nickname came from the fact that he was a chef in a barbecue restaurant....
  • Memphis Minnie
    Memphis Minnie

    Memphis Minnie McCoy-Lawler was an United States Blues guitarist, vocalist, and composer....
  • Mississippi John Hurt
    Mississippi John Hurt

    "Mississippi" John Smith Hurt was an influential blues singer and guitarist....
  • Muddy Waters
    Muddy Waters

    McKinley Morganfield , better known as Muddy Waters, was an American blues musician and is generally considered "the Father of Chicago blues"....
  • Elizabeth Cotten
    Elizabeth Cotten

    Elizabeth "Libba" Cotten was an United States blues and folk musician.Self-taught and having no knowledge of conventional guitar tunings , Cotten developed her own original style....
  • Reverend Gary Davis
    Reverend Gary Davis

    Reverend Gary Davis, also Blind Gary Davis, was a blues and gospel music singer and guitarist. His unique Fingerstyle guitar style influenced many other artists and his students in New York City included Stefan Grossman, David Bromberg, Roy Book Binder, Woody Mann, Nick Katzman, Dave Van Ronk, Tom Winslow, and Ernie Hawkins....
  • Charlie McCoy
    Charlie McCoy

    Charles Ray McCoy is an United States musician noted for his harmonica playing, although he plays other instruments as well. In his career, McCoy has backed several notable musicians including Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash and Elvis Presley....
  • Jaybird Coleman
    Jaybird Coleman

    Burl C. "Jaybird" Coleman was an American country blues harmonica player, guitarist and singer.Born in Gainesville, Alabama, Coleman began performing the blues as an entertainer for American soldiers while serving in the U.S....
  • Furry Lewis
    Furry Lewis

    Furry Lewis was a country blues guitarist and songwriter from Memphis, Tennessee, Tennessee. Lewis was one of the first of the old-time blues musicians of the 1920s to be brought out of retirement, and given a new lease of recording life, by the folk blues revival of the 1960s....
  • Big Bill Broonzy
    Big Bill Broonzy

    Big Bill Broonzy was a prolific United States blues singer, songwriter and guitarist. His career began in the 1920s when he played Country blues to mostly black audiences....
  • Blind Boy Fuller
    Blind Boy Fuller

    Blind Boy Fuller was an United States blues guitarist and singer. He was one of the most popular of the recorded Piedmont blues artists with rural Black Americans, a group that also included Blind Blake, Josh White, and Buddy Moss....
  • Brownie McGhee
    Brownie McGhee

    Walter Brown McGhee was a folk music-blues singer and guitarist, best known for his collaborations with the harmonica player Sonny Terry....
  • Robert Belfour
    Robert Belfour

    Robert "Wolfman" Belfour is an United States blues musician. His father, Grant Belfour taught him the guitar at a young age and he continued his tutelage in the blues from musicians Otha Turner, R....
  • King Solomon Hill
    King Solomon Hill

    King Solomon Hill was a bluesman who sound recording and reproduction a small handful of songs in 1932. Hill is speculated to have been Joe Holmes, a self-taught guitarist from Mississippi....
     (Joe Holmes)
  • Peetie Wheatstraw
    Peetie Wheatstraw

    For the 1978 film, please see Petey Wheatstraw .Peetie Wheatstraw was the name adopted by singer William Bunch, a greatly influential figure among 1930s blues singers....
  • Josh White
    Josh White

    Joshua Daniel White , best known as Josh White, was a legendary United States of America singer, guitarist, songwriter, actor, and civil rights activist....
  • R. L. Burnside
    R. L. Burnside

    R. L. Burnside was a North Mississippi hill country blues singer, songwriter, and guitarist who lived much of his life in and around Holly Springs, Mississippi, Mississippi....
  • Lightnin' Hopkins
    Lightnin' Hopkins

    Sam "Lightnin?" Hopkins was a country blues guitarist, from Houston, Texas, Texas, United States....
  • Mance Lipscomb
    Mance Lipscomb

    Mance Lipscomb was an influential blues singer, guitarist and songster. Born Beau De Glen Lipscomb near Navasota, Texas, Texas, he as a youth took the name of 'Mance' from a friend of his oldest brother Charlie ....
  • John Lee Hooker
    John Lee Hooker

    John Lee Hooker was an influential United States post-war blues singer, guitarist, and songwriter born in Coahoma County, Mississippi near Clarksdale, Mississippi....
  • Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup
  • Buddy Moss
    Buddy Moss

    Eugene "Buddy" Moss was, in the estimation of many blues scholars, the most influential East Coast blues guitarist to record in the period between Blind Blake final sessions in 1932 and Blind Boy Fuller debut in 1935....
  • Robert Petway
    Robert Petway

    Robert Petway was an African-American blues singer and guitarist.Very little is known about Robert Petway. His birthplace is speculated to have been at or near J.F....
  • Frank Edwards
    Frank Edwards

    Frank Edwards is the name of:*Frank Edwards , British Liberal Party politician*Frank Edwards , American writer and broadcaster*Frank Edwards , Spanish Civil War veteran and Irish Workers' Party...
  • Tommy McClennan
    Tommy McClennan

    Tommy McClennan was a delta blues singer and guitarist....
  • "Homesick James" Williamson
  • David "Honeyboy" Edwards
  • Willard "Ramblin'" Thomas
  • Lonnie Johnson
    Lonnie Johnson

    Alonzo "Lonnie" Johnson was an United States blues and jazz singer/guitarist and songwriter who pioneered the role of jazz guitar and is recognized as the first to play single-string guitar solos....


Films

  • Deep Blues (1991). Directed by Robert Mugge
    Robert Mugge

    Robert Mugge is an American documentary film maker. He specializes in films about music and musicians.Mugge was born in Chicago and grew up primarily in the Washington, D.C....
    .
  • American Patchwork: Songs and Stories of America, part 3: "The Land Where the Blues Began" (1990). Written, directed, and produced by Alan Lomax; developed by the Association for Cultural Equity at Columbia University and Hunter College. North Carolina Public TV; A Dibb Direction production for Channel Four.
  • Out of the Blacks into the Blues, part 1: "Along the Old Man River" (1992). Produced by Claude Fleouter and Robert Manthoulis. Neyrac Film; distributed by Yazoo Video. ISBN 1-56633-016-5.