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#264390 - 05/25/09 04:56 PM Youngsters learnin the BLUES!!........
Dnj Offline
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Registered: 09/21/00
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#264391 - 05/25/09 06:07 PM Re: Youngsters learnin the BLUES!!........
keybplayer Offline
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Registered: 10/27/03
Posts: 2417
Loc: CA
Blues as a musical term can describe an oral tradition of African American poetry set to music using blues form (typically three-line stanzas with the first two lines being similar, set to a twelve-bar harmonic framework called a blues progression); the form of the poetry and/or the music; and an aesthetic that remains an ideal for Jazz performance in general. Blues originated as an expression of the individual and interactive social tradition of a displaced African American population. It began with the African American agrarian working class of the Mississippi Delta and combined African American and European American traditions, particularly hollers (field work songs) and British ballads. Only after blues was well established did it broaden to include the white middle class and function as a form of entertainment. In fact, Black Gospel music, which is very popular among religious African Americans, has its roots in Blues as a genre.

In my opinion, Blues has "soul". It can evoke deep feelings and emotions that can deeply affect a person, depending on the source and content of a particular Blues tune. Having listened extensively to Black Gospel music, both upbeat and "blues" in nature, I can personally attest to its transforming power in changing a person from within. I highly recommend both Blues music in general as a genre, and also Black Gospel music in particular which derives a lot of its material from Blues, and indeed vice versa as well.

All the best,
Mike

[This message has been edited by keybplayer (edited 05-25-2009).]
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#264392 - 05/26/09 05:22 AM Re: Youngsters learnin the BLUES!!........
ianmcnll Offline
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Registered: 07/27/05
Posts: 10606
Loc: Cape Breton Island, Canada
My family was poor. I mean, blues singers would show up at our house when they had writer's block...that's how poor we were.
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#264393 - 05/26/09 05:36 AM Re: Youngsters learnin the BLUES!!........
Dnj Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 09/21/00
Posts: 43703
They should make arranger videos like this for kids too.

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#264394 - 05/27/09 08:47 AM Re: Youngsters learnin the BLUES!!........
124 Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 01/01/09
Posts: 2195
Interesting topic. Here's a pull quote from Wikipedia:
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"The British blues is a type of blues music that originated in the late 1950s. American blues musicians like B.B. King and Howlin' Wolf were massively popular in Britain at the time. Muddy Waters is said to have been the first electric blues player to have performed in front of British audiences circa 1959, and others like Sonny Boy Williamson, Bo Diddley and Chuck Berry followed him. British teenagers began playing the blues, imitating various styles of American blues. Gradually, a new distinctly British sound arose by the mid-1960s, called Beat. This form of the blues, and various derivatives, became massively popular in the US, leading to the British Invasion and British R&B."
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I'm just curious that were it not for the importing of British Blues back into the U.S., would the blues have remained what was essentially a minority music in it's home country?



[This message has been edited by 124 (edited 05-27-2009).]

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