BLUES



Blues is about tradition and personal expression. At its core, the blues has remained the same since its inception. Most blues feature simple, usually three-chord, progressions and have simple structures that are open to endless improvisations, both lyrical and musical. The blues grew out of African spirituals and worksongs. In the late 1800s, southern African-Americans passed the songs down orally, and they collided with American folk and country from the Appalachians. New hybrids appeared by each region, but all of the recorded blues from the early 1900s are distinguished by simple, rural acoustic guitars and pianos. After World War II, the blues began to fragment, with some musicians holding on to acoustic traditions and others taking it to jazzier territory. However, most bluesmen followed {Muddy Waters}' lead and played the blues on electric instruments. From that point on, the blues continued to develop in new directions -- particularly on electric instruments -- or it has been preserved as an acoustic tradition.

Main Types of BLUES
Chicago Blues
Magic Sam
Koko Taylor
William Clarke
Country Blues
Dinah Washington
Clifford Gibson
John Mooney
Delta Blues
Robert Lockwood, Jr.
Earl Hooker
Skip James
East Coast Blues
Johnny Otis
Jay McShann
Nat King Cole Trio
Harmonica Blues
Various Artists
Little Walter
Little George Smith
Louisiana Blues
Champion Jack Dupree
Lightnin' Slim
Carol Fran & Clarence Hollimon
Modern Electric Blues
Fenton Robinson
Lonnie Mack
Louis Jordan
Texas Blues
Bobby "Blue" Bland
Zu Zu Bolin
Anson Funderburgh & the Rockets
West Coast Blues
Jimmy Witherspoon
Mose Allison
Amos Milburn


If you would like to read biography's about your favorite blues singers or read biography's about blues singers you didn't even know about, just go here:

List of Artists Names
and Biography's



If you would like to go back to the Main Page, just go here:

MAIN PAGE