Blues is the name given to both a
musical form and a
music
genre created within the
African-American communities in the
Deep South of the United States at the
end of the 19th century from
spirituals,
work
songs,
field hollers,
shouts and
chants, and
rhymed simple narrative
ballad. The
blues form which is ubiquitous in
jazz,
rhythm and blues and
rock and roll is characterized by the use of
specific chord progressions — the
twelve-bar blues chord progressions being
the most frequently encountered — and the
blue
note that for expressive purposes are sung or played flattened
or gradually bent in relation to the
pitch of the
major
scale.
The blues genre is based on the blues form but possesses other
characteristics such as specific lyrics, bass lines and
instruments. Blues can be subdivided in several
subgenres ranging from
country to urban blues that were more or less
popular during different periods of the 20th century. Best known
are the
Delta,
Piedmont,
Jump and
Chicago blues styles. World War II
marked the transition from acoustic to
electric blues and the progressive opening of
blues music to a wider audience. In the 1960s and 1970s, a hybrid
form called
blues rock evolved.
The term "the blues" refers to the "the blue devils", meaning
melancholy and sadness; an early use of the term in this sense is
found in
George Colman's
one-act farce
Blue Devils (1798). Though the use of the
phrase in
African American
music may be older, it has been attested to since 1912, when
Hart Wand's "
Dallas Blues" became the first copyrighted
blues composition. In lyrics the phrase is often used to describe a
depressed mood.
Form
During the first decades of the 20th century, blues music was not
clearly defined in terms of a
chord
progression. By the 1920s, probably due to the commercial
success in the African-American community of singers such as
Bessie Smith,
twelve-bar blues became the standard. Other
chords progressions are still called blues such as
8-bar forms, like "
How Long Blues", "
Trouble in Mind", and
Big Bill Broonzy's "
Key to the Highway". There would also be
16 bar blues, as in
Ray Charles's instrumental "Sweet 16 Bars" and
in
Herbie Hancock's "
Watermelon Man". Idiosyncratic
numbers of bars are also encountered occasionally, as with the
9-bar progression in "
Sitting on Top of the
World".
| Chords played over a twelve-bar
scheme: |
Chords for a blues in C: |
| I |
I or IV |
I |
I7 |
| IV |
IV |
I |
I7 |
| V |
V or IV |
I |
I or V |
|
| C |
C or F |
C |
C7 |
| F |
F |
C |
C7 |
| G |
G or F |
C |
C or G |
|
The basic twelve-bar lyric framework of a blues composition is
reflected by a standard harmonic progression of twelve bars in a
4/4 time signature. The blues
chords associated to a
twelve-bar blues are typically a set of
three different chords played over a twelve-bar scheme. They are
labelled by
Roman numbers referring to
the
degrees of the progression. For
instance for a blues in C, C is the
tonic
chord (I) and F the
subdominant (IV). The last chord is the
dominant (V)
turnaround, marking the transition to the
beginning of the next progression. The lyrics generally end on the
last beat of the tenth bar or the first beat of the eleventh bar,
and the final two bars are given to the instrumentalist as a break;
the harmony of this two-bar break, the turnaround, can be extremely
complex, sometimes consisting of single notes that defy analysis in
terms of chords.
Much of the time, some or all of these chords are played in the
harmonic seventh (7th) form. The
use of the harmonic seventh interval is characteristic of blues and
is popularly called the "blues seven". Blues seven chords add to
the harmonic chord a note with a frequency in a 7:4 ratio to the
fundamental note. At a 7:4 ratio, it is not close to any interval
on the conventional Western
diatonic
scale. Through convenience or necessity it is often
approximated by a
minor seventh
interval or a
dominant seventh
chord.
In
melody, blues is distinguished by the use
of the
flat third,
fifth and
seventh of the associated
major scale. These specialized notes are called
the
blue or bent notes.
These scale tones may replace the natural scale tones, or they may
be added to the scale, as in the case of the minor
pentatonic blues scale, in which the flattened
third replaces the natural third, the flattened seventh replaces
the natural seventh and the flattened fifth is added between the
natural fourth and natural fifth. While the twelve-bar harmonic
progression had been intermittently used for centuries, the
revolutionary aspect of blues was the frequent use of the flattened
third, flattened seventh, and even flattened fifth in the melody,
together with
crushing—playing directly adjacent notes at
the same time (i.e., diminished second)—and
sliding,
similar to using
grace notes. The blue
notes allow for key moments of expression during the cadences,
melodies, and embellishments of the blues.
Blues
shuffles or
walking bass reinforce the trance-like rhythm
and call-and-response, and they form a repetitive effect called a
groove. Characteristic of the
blues since its Afro-American origins, the shuffles played a
central role in
swing music. The
simplest shuffles, which were the clearest signature of the R&B
wave that started in the mid 1940s, were a three-note
riff on the bass strings of the guitar. When this riff
was played over the bass and the drums, the groove "feel" was
created. Shuffle rhythm is often vocalized as "
dow, da
dow, da
dow, da" or "
dump, da
dump, da
dump, da": it consists of uneven, or
"swung," eighth notes. On a guitar this may be played as a simple
steady bass or it may add to that stepwise quarter note motion from
the fifth to the sixth of the chord and back. An example is
provided by the following guitar
tablature
for the first four bars of a blues progression in E:
E7 A7 E7 E7
E |----------------|----------------|----------------|----------------|
B |----------------|----------------|----------------|----------------|
G |----------------|----------------|----------------|----------------|
D |----------------|2—2-4—2-5—2-4—2-|----------------|----------------|
A |2—2-4-2-5-2-4—2-|0—0-0—0-0—0-0—2-|2—2-4—2-5—2-4—2-|2—2-4—2-5—2-4—2-|
E |0—0-0—0-0—0-0—2-|----------------|0—0-0—0-0—0-0—2-|0—0-0—0-0—0-0—2-|
Lyrics
The lyrics of early
traditional
blues verses probably often consisted of a single line repeated
four times; it was only in the first decades of the 20th century
that the most common current structure became standard: the
so-called AAB pattern, consisting of a line sung over the four
first bars, its repetition over the next four, and then a longer
concluding line over the last bars. Two of the first published
blues songs, "
Dallas Blues" (1912) and
"
St. Louis Blues" (1914),
were 12-bar blues featuring the AAB structure.
W. C. Handy wrote that he adopted this convention to
avoid the monotony of lines repeated three times. The lines are
often sung following a pattern closer to a
rhythmic talk than to a melody. Early blues
frequently took the form of a loose narrative. The singer voiced
his or her "personal woes in a world of harsh reality: a lost love,
the cruelty of police officers, oppression at the hands of white
folk, [and] hard times."
The lyrics often relate troubles experienced within African
American society. For instance
Blind Lemon Jefferson's "Rising High
Water Blues" (1927) tells about the
Great Mississippi Flood of
1927:
- "Backwater rising, Southern peoples can't make no time
- I said, backwater rising, Southern peoples can't make no
time
- And I can't get no hearing from that Memphis girl of
mine."
However, although the blues gained an association with misery and
oppression, the lyrics could also be humorous and raunchy as
well:
- "Rebecca, Rebecca, get your big legs off of me,
- Rebecca, Rebecca, get your big legs off of me,
- It may be sending you baby, but it's worrying the hell out of
me."
- :From Big Joe Turner's "Rebecca",
a compilation of traditional
blues lyrics
Hokum blues celebrated both comedic lyrical
content and a boisterous, farcical performance style.
Tampa Red's classic "Tight Like That" (1928) is a
sly wordplay with the double meaning of being "tight" with someone
coupled with a more salacious physical familiarity. Lyrical content
of music became slightly simpler in post war-blues in which focus
was often almost exclusively on singer's relationship woes or
sexual worries. Many lyrical themes that frequently appeared in
pre-war blues such as economic depression, farming, devils,
gambling, magic, floods and dry periods were less common post war
blues.
Author Ed Morales has claimed that
Yoruba mythology played a part in early
blues, citing
Robert
Johnson's "
Cross Road Blues" as
a "thinly veiled reference to
Eleggua, the
orisha in charge of the crossroads". However,
the Christian influence was far more obvious. Many seminal blues
artists such as
Charley Patton, or
Skip James had in their repertoire
several religious songs or spirituals.
Reverend Gary Davis and
Blind Willie Johnson are examples of
artists often categorized as blues musicians for their music but
whose lyrics clearly belong to the spirituals.
History
Origins
The first publication of blues sheet music was
Hart Wand's "
Dallas
Blues" in 1912;
W. C. Handy's "
Memphis Blues" followed in the same year. The
first recording by an African American singer was
Mamie Smith's 1920 rendition of
Perry Bradford's "Crazy Blues". But the
origins of the blues date back to some decades earlier, probably
around 1890. They are very poorly documented, due in part to
discrimation within American society, including academic circles,
and to the low alphabetization of the rural African American
community. Chroniclers began to report about blues music in
Southern Texas and
Deep South at the dawn of the 20th century.
In
particular, Charles Peabody reports
about appearance of blues music at Clarksdale,
Mississippi
and Gate Thomas about
very similar songs in southern Texas around 1901–1902.
These
observations coincide more or less with the remembrance of Jelly Roll Morton, who declared having
heard blues for the first time in New Orleans
in 1902, Ma Rainey, who
remembered her first blues experience the same year in Missouri
, and
W.C. Handy, who first heard the blues in Tutwiler,
Mississippi
in 1903. The first extensive research in the
field was performed by
Howard W.
Odum who published between 1905 and 1908 a
large anthology of folk songs in the counties of Lafayette,
Mississippi
and Newton, Georgia
. The first non commercial recordings of
blues music, coined proto-blues by
Paul
Oliver, were made by Odum at the very beginning of the 20th
century for research purpose. They are now utterly lost. Recordings
which are still available were made in 1924 by
Lawrence Gellert. Later, several recordings
were performed, in particular by
Robert W. Gordon which became head of the
Archive of American Folk
Songs of the Library of Congress
. Gordon's successor at the Library was
John Lomax. Lomax recorded in the 1930s
together with his son
Alan a large amount
of non commercial blues which testimony the huge variety of
proto-blues styles, such as
field
hollers and
ring shouts. A testimony
of blues music as it was before the 1920s is also given by the
recordings of artists such as
Lead Belly
or
Henry Thomas who
both performed archaic blues music. All these sources show the
existence of many different structures distinct of the
twelve-,
eight-,
or
sixteen-bar.
The social and economic reasons for the appearance of the blues are
not fully known. The first appearance of the blues is not well
defined and is often dated after the Emancipation Act in 1863,
between 1870 and 1900, a period that coincides with
Emancipation and, later, the development of
juke joints as places where Blacks went
listening to music, dancing and often gambling after a hard day's
work. This period corresponds to the transition from slavery to
sharecropping, small-scale agricultural production and the
expansion of railroads in the southern United States. Several
scholars characterize the early 1900s development of blues music as
a move from group performances to a more individualized style. They
argue that the development of the blues is associated with the
newly acquired freedom of the enslaved people. According to
Lawrence Levine, "there was a direct
relationship between the national ideological emphasis upon the
individual, the popularity of
Booker T. Washington's teachings, and the rise of
the blues." Levine states that "psychologically, socially, and
economically, African-Americans were being acculturated in a way
that would have been impossible during slavery, and it is hardly
surprising that their secular music reflected this as much as their
religious music did."
There are few characteristics common to all blues music, because
the genre took its shape from the idiosyncrasies of individual
performances. However, there are some characteristics that were
present long before the creation of the modern blues. An early form
of blues-like music were call-and-response shouts, which were a
"functional expression... style without accompaniment or harmony
and unbounded by the formality of any particular musical
structure." A form of this pre-blues was heard in slave
ring shouts and
field
hollers, expanded into "simple solo songs laden with emotional
content".
Blues has
evolved from an unaccompanied vocal music and oral traditions of
African-American slaves (imported from West Africa; principally
present day Mali
, Senegal
, the
Gambia
and Ghana
) and rural
blacks into a wide variety of styles and subgenres, with regional
variations across the United States. Though blues, as it is
now known, can be seen as a musical style based on both European
harmonic structure and the African
call-and-response tradition, transformed into an interplay of voice
and guitar, the blues form itself bears no resemblance to the
melodic styles of the West African
griots, and
the influences are faint and tenuous. In particular, no specific
African musical form can be identified as the single direct
ancestor of the blues. However many blues elements, such as the
call-and-response format and the use of blue notes, can be traced
back to the
music of Africa. That
blue notes pre-date their use in blues and have an African origin
is attested by English composer
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor's "A Negro
Love Song", from his
The African Suite for Piano composed
in 1898, which contains
blue third and
seventh note. The
Diddley bow, a homemade one-stringed instrument
found in parts of the
American South
in the early twentieth century, and the
banjo
are African-derived instruments that may have helped in the
transfer of African performance techniques into the early blues
instrumental vocabulary. The banjo seems to be directly imported
from the western African music. It is analogous to the musical
instrument that
griots played and which was
called
halam or
akonting by African peoples such as the
Wolof,
Fula and
Madinka. However in the 1920s, at
the time country blues began to get recorded, the use of the banjo
in blues music was quite marginal and limited to individuals such
as
Papa Charlie Jackson and
later
Gus Cannon.
Blues music also adopted elements from the "Ethiopian airs",
minstrel shows and
Negro spirituals, including instrumental and
harmonic accompaniment. The style also was closely related to
ragtime, which developed at about the same
time, though the blues better preserved "the original melodic
patterns of African music".
The musical forms and styles that are now considered the "blues" as
well as modern "
country music" arose
in the same regions during the nineteenth century in the southern
United States. Recorded blues and country can be found from as far
back as the 1920s, when the popular record industry developed and
created marketing categories called "
race
music" and "
hillbilly music" to
sell music by blacks for blacks and by whites for whites,
respectively. At the time, there was no clear musical division
between "blues" and "country," except for the ethnicity of the
performer, and even that was sometimes documented incorrectly by
record companies. Though musicologists can now attempt to define
“the blues” narrowly in terms of certain chord structures and lyric
strategies thought to have originated in West Africa, audiences
originally heard the music in a far more general way: it was simply
the music of the rural south, notably the Mississippi Delta. Black
and white musicians shared the same repertoire and thought of
themselves as “
songsters” rather than
“blues musicians.” The notion of blues as a separate genre arose
during the black migration from the countryside to urban areas in
the 1920s and the simultaneous development of the recording
industry. “Blues” became a code word for a record designed to sell
to black listeners.
The origins of the blues are closely related to the religious music
of the Afro-American community, the
spirituals. The origins of the religious
music of the Afro-Americans are much older than the blues and are
usually dated to the mid of the 18th century when the slaves were
Christianized and began to sing and play Christian
hymns, in particular those of
Isaac Watts which were very popular. When the
blues appeared, before blues gained its formal definition in terms
of chord progressions, the blues was defined as the secular counter
part of the spirituals. It was the low-down music played by the
rural Blacks. Depending on the religious community a musician
belonged to, it was more or less considered as a sin to play this
low-down music: blues was the devil's music. Musicians were
therefore segregated into two categories: gospel and blues singers,
guitar preachers and songsters. However, at the time rural Black
music began to get recorded in the 1920s, both categories of
musicians used very similar techniques: call-and-response patterns,
blue notes, slide guitars. Gospel music was nevertheless using
music forms compatible with Christian hymns and therefore less
marked by the blues form than its secular counter part.
Prewar blues
The American
sheet music publishing
industry produced a great deal of
ragtime
music.
By
1912, the sheet music industry published three popular blues-like
compositions, precipitating the Tin Pan Alley
adoption of blues elements: "Baby Seals' Blues" by
"Baby" F. Seals (arranged by
Artie
Matthews), "Dallas Blues" by
Hart Wand
and "
The Memphis Blues" by
W. C.
Handy.
Handy was a formally trained musician, composer and arranger who
helped to popularize the blues by transcribing and orchestrating
blues in an almost symphonic style, with bands and singers. He
became a popular and prolific composer, and billed himself as the
"Father of the Blues"; however, his compositions can be described
as a fusion of blues with ragtime and jazz, a merger facilitated
using the Cuban
habanera rhythm
that had long been a part of ragtime; Handy's signature work was
the "
St. Louis Blues".
In the 1920s, the blues became a major element of African American
and American popular music, reaching white audiences via Handy's
arrangements and the classic female blues performers. The blues
evolved from informal performances in bars to entertainment in
theaters.
Blues performances were organized by the
Theater Owners
Bookers Association in nightclubs such
as the Cotton
Club
and juke joints such as
the bars along Beale
Street
in Memphis. Several record companies, such
as the
American Record
Corporation,
Okeh Records, and
Paramount Records, began to record
African American music.
As the recording industry grew, country blues performers like
Bo Carter,
Blind Lemon Jefferson,
Lonnie Johnson,
Tampa
Red and
Blind Blake became more
popular in the African American community. Kentucky-born
Sylvester Weaver was in 1923 the first to
record the
slide guitar style, in which
a guitar is fretted with a knife blade or the sawed-off neck of a
bottle. The slide guitar became an important part of the
Delta blues. The first blues recordings from the
1920s are categorized as a traditional, rural
country blues and a more polished 'city' or
urban blues.
Country blues performers often improvised, either without
accompaniment or with only a banjo or guitar. Regional styles of
country blues varied widely in the early 20th century. The
(Mississippi) Delta blues was a rootsy sparse style with passionate
vocals accompanied by slide guitar. The little-recorded
Robert Johnson combined elements
of urban and rural blues. In addition to Robert Johnson,
influential performers of this style included his predecessors
Charley Patton and
Son House. Singers such as
Blind Willie McTell and
Blind Boy Fuller performed in the
southeastern "delicate and lyrical"
Piedmont blues tradition, which used an
elaborate ragtime-based
fingerpicking
guitar technique. Georgia also had an early slide tradition with
George Carter,
Curley Weaver,
Tampa
Red,
"Barbecue Bob" Hicks and
James "Kokomo" Arnold as
representatives of this style.
The lively
Memphis blues style, which developed
in the 1920s and 1930s near Memphis, Tennessee
, was influenced by jug
bands such as the Memphis Jug
Band or the Gus Cannon's Jug
Stompers. Performers such as
Frank Stokes,
Blind Old Tom Anderson,
Sleepy John Estes,
Robert Wilkins,
Big Boy Brazier,
Joe
McCoy and
Memphis Minnie used a
variety of unusual instruments such as
washboard,
fiddle,
kazoo or
mandolin. Memphis
Minnie was famous for her
virtuoso guitar
style. Pianist
Memphis Slim began his
career in Memphis, but his distinct style was smoother and had some
swing elements. Many blues musicians based in Memphis moved to
Chicago in the late 1930s or early 1940s and became part of the
urban blues movement, which blended country music and electric
blues.
City or urban blues styles were more codified and elaborate as a
performer was no longer within their local, immediate community and
had to adapt to a larger, more varied audience's aesthetic.
Classic female urban and
vaudeville blues singers were popular in
the 1920s, among them
Mamie Smith,
Gertrude "Ma" Rainey,
Bessie Smith, and
Victoria Spivey. Mamie Smith, more a
vaudeville performer than a blues artist, was the first
African-American to record a blues in 1920; her second record,
"Crazy Blues", sold 75,000 copies in its first month.
Ma Rainey, the "Mother of Blues", and Bessie Smith
each "[sang] around center tones, perhaps in order to project her
voice more easily to the back of a room." Smith would "...sing a
song in an unusual key, and her artistry in bending and stretching
notes with her beautiful, powerful contralto to accommodate her own
interpretation was unsurpassed." Urban male performers included
popular black musicians of the era, such
Tampa
Red,
Big Bill Broonzy and
Leroy Carr. Before WWII, Tampa Red was
sometimes referred to as "the Guitar Wizard". Carr accompanied
himself on the piano with
Scrapper
Blackwell on guitar, a format that continued well into the 50s
with people such as
Charles Brown, and
even
Nat "King" Cole.

A typical boogie-woogie bassline
Boogie-woogie was another
important style of 1930s and early 1940s urban blues. While the
style is often associated with solo piano, boogie-woogie was also
used to accompany singers and, as a solo part, in bands and small
combos. Boogie-Woogie style was characterized by a regular bass
figure, an
ostinato or
riff and
shifts of level
in the left hand, elaborating each chord and trills and decorations
in the right hand. Boogie-woogie was pioneered by the Chicago-based
Jimmy Yancey and the Boogie-Woogie Trio
(
Albert Ammons,
Pete Johnson and
Meade Lux Lewis). Chicago boogie-woogie
performers included
Clarence "Pine Top"
Smith and
Earl Hines, who "linked the
propulsive left-hand rhythms of the ragtime pianists with melodic
figures similar to those of Armstrong's trumpet in the right hand."
The smooth Louisiana style of
Professor Longhair and, more recently,
Dr. John blends classic rhythm and blues
with blues styles.
Another development in this period was
big
band blues.
The "territory
bands" operating out of Kansas
City
, the Benny Moten
orchestra, Jay McShann, and the Count Basie Orchestra were also
concentrating on the blues, with 12-bar blues instrumentals such as
Basie's "One O'Clock Jump" and
"Jumpin' at the Woodside"
and boisterous "blues shouting" by
Jimmy Rushing on songs like "Going to Chicago" and "Sent for You Yesterday". A
well-known big band blues tune is
Glenn
Miller's "
In the Mood". In the
1940s, the
jump blues style developed.
Jump blues grew up from the boogie woogie wave and was stronly
influenced by
big band music. It uses
saxophone or other
brass instruments and the guitar in the
rhythm section to create a jazzy, up-tempo sound with declamatory
vocals.
Jump blues tunes by Louis Jordan and Big
Joe Turner, based in Kansas City, Missouri
, influenced the development of later styles such as
rock and roll and rhythm and blues. Dallas-born T-Bone Walker, which is often associated to
the California blues style,
performed a successful transition from the early urban blues à la
Lonnie Johnson and Leroy Carr to the jump blues style and dominated
the blues-jazz scene at Los Angeles
during the 1940s.
1950s
The transition from country to urban blues, that began in the
1920s, had always been driven by the successive waves of economic
crisis and booms and the associated move of the rural Blacks to
urban areas, the
Great Migration. The
long boom in the aftermath of
World War II induced a massive migration of the African American
population, the
Second Great
Migration, which was accompanied by a significative increase of
the real income of the urban Blacks. The new migrants constituted a
new market for the music industry. The name
race record disappeared and was succeeded by
Rhythm and Blues. This rapidly
evolving market was mirrored by the
Billboard Rhythm
and Blues Chart. This marketing strategy reinforced trends
within urban blues music such as the progressive electrification of
the instruments, their amplification and the generalization of the
blues beat, the blues shuffle, that became ubiquitous in R&B.
This commercial stream had important consequences for blues music
which, together with Jazz and Gospel music, became a component of
the R&B wave.
After
World War II and in the 1950s, new styles of electric blues music became popular in cities
such as Chicago
, Memphis
, Detroit
and St.
Louis
. Electric blues used amplified
electric guitars,
double bass which was progressively replaced by
bass guitar, drums, and harmonica played
through a microphone and a
PA system
or a
guitar amplifier. Chicago
became a center for electric blues from 1948 on, when
Muddy Waters recorded his first success:
"
I Can't Be Satisfied".
Chicago blues is influenced to a large extent
by the Mississippi blues style, because
many performers had migrated from the Mississippi
region. Howlin'
Wolf,
Muddy Waters,
Willie Dixon, and
Jimmy
Reed were all born in Mississippi and moved to Chicago during
the
Great
Migration. Their style is characterized by the use of electric
guitar, sometimes slide guitar,
harmonica,
and a rhythm section of bass and drums.
J. T. Brown who played in
Elmore James's bands, or
J. B. Lenoir's also used saxophones, but these were
used more as "backing" or rhythmic support than as solo
instruments.
Little Walter and
Sonny Boy Williamson are well known
harmonica (called "
harp" by
blues musicians) players of the early Chicago blues scene. Other
harp players such as
Big Walter
Horton were also influential. Muddy Waters and Elmore James
were known for their innovative use of slide electric guitar.
Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters were known for their deep, "gravelly"
voices.
Bassist and composer
Willie Dixon
played a major role on the Chicago blues scene. He composed and
wrote many
standard blues songs of
the period, such as "
Hoochie Coochie
Man", "
I Just Want
to Make Love to You" (both penned for Muddy Waters) and,
"
Wang Dang Doodle" and "
Back Door Man" for Howlin' Wolf. Most artists
of the Chicago blues style recorded for the Chicago-based
Chess Records and
Checker Records labels. Smaller blues labels
of this era included
Vee-Jay Records
and
J.O.B. Records. During the early 1950s, the
Chicagoean labels were concurenced by
Sam
Phillips'
Sun Records company in
Memphis which recorded
B. B. King and
Howlin' Wolf before he moved to Chicago in
1960. After Phillips discovered
Elvis
Presley in 1954, the Sun label turned to the rapidly expanding
white audience and started recording mostly rock 'n' roll.
In the 1950s, blues had a huge influence on mainstream American
popular music. While popular musicians like
Bo Diddley and
Chuck
Berry, both recording for Chess, were influenced by the Chicago
blues, their enthusiastic playing styles departed from the
melancholy aspects of blues.
Chicago blues also influenced Louisiana
's zydeco music, with Clifton Chenier using blues accents.
Zydeco musicians used electric solo guitar and
cajun arrangements of blues standards.

Otis Rush, a pioneer of the 'West Side
Sound'
In the late 1950s, a new blues style emerged on Chicago's
West Side pioneered by
Magic Sam,
Buddy Guy and
Otis Rush on
Cobra Records. The 'West Side Sound' had
strong rhythmic support from a rhythm guitar, bass guitar and drums
and as pefected by Guy,
Freddie King,
Magic Slim and
Luther Allison was dominated by amplified
electric lead guitar.

John Lee Hooker created his own blues
style and renewed it several times during his long career.
Other blues artists, such as
John Lee
Hooker had influences not directly related to the Chicago
style. John Lee Hooker's blues is more "personal", based on
Hooker's deep rough voice accompanied by a single electric guitar.
Though not directly influenced by boogie woogie, his "groovy" style
is sometimes called "guitar boogie". His first hit, "
Boogie Chillen", reached #1 on the R&B
charts in 1949.
By the
late 1950s, the swamp blues genre
developed near Baton
Rouge
, with performers such as Lightnin' Slim, Slim
Harpo, Sam Myers and Jerry McCain. Strongly influenced by
Jimmy Reed, Swamp blues has a slower pace
and a simpler use of the harmonica than the Chicago blues style
performers such as Little Walter or Muddy Waters. Songs from this
genre include "Scratch my Back", "She's Tough" and "
I'm a King Bee".
1960s and 1970s
By the beginning of the 1960s, genres influenced by
African American music such as
rock and roll and
soul were part of mainstream popular music. White
performers had brought African-American music to new audiences,
both within the US and abroad. However, the blues wave which
brought artists such as Muddy Waters to the foreground had stopped.
Bluesmen such as
Big Bill Broonzy
and
Willie Dixon started looking for
new markets in Europe.
Dick Waterman
and the blues festivals he organized in Europe played a major role
in propagating blues music abroad. In the UK, bands emulated US
blues legends, and UK blues-rock-based bands had an influential
role throughout the 1960s.
Blues performers such as
John Lee
Hooker and
Muddy Waters continued
to perform to enthusiastic audiences, inspiring new artists steeped
in traditional blues, such as New York–born
Taj Mahal.
John Lee Hooker blended his blues style with
rock elements and playing with younger white musicians, creating a
musical style that can be heard on the 1971 album
Endless
Boogie.
B. B. King's virtuoso
guitar technique earned him the eponymous title "king of the
blues". In contrast to the Chicago style, King's band used strong
brass support from a saxophone, trumpet, and trombone, instead of
using slide guitar or harp.
Tennessee
-born Bobby "Blue" Bland,
like B. B. King, also straddled the blues and R&B
genres. During this period, Freddie King and Albert King often
played with rock and soul musicians (Eric Clapton, Booker T &
the MGs)and had a major influence on those styles of music.
The music of the
Civil
Rights and
Free Speech
movements in the US prompted a
resurgence of interest in American
roots music and early African American music. As well as Jimmi
Bass Music festivals such as the
Newport Folk Festival brought
traditional blues to a new audience, which helped to revive
interest in prewar acoustic blues and performers such as
Son House,
Mississippi John Hurt,
Skip James, and
Reverend Gary Davis. Many compilations
of classic prewar blues were republished by the
Yazoo Records.
J.
B. Lenoir
from the Chicago blues movement in the 1950s recorded several LPs
using acoustic guitar, sometimes accompanied by
Willie Dixon on the acoustic bass or drums. His
songs, originally distributed in Europe only, commented on
political issues such as
racism or
Vietnam War issues, which was unusual for this
period. His
Alabama Blues recording had a song that
stated:
I never will go back to Alabama, that is not the place
for me (2x)You know they killed my sister and my brother,and the
whole world let them peoples go down there free
White audiences' interest in the blues during the 1960s increased
due to the Chicago-based
Paul
Butterfield Blues Band and the
British
blues movement. The style of British blues developed in the UK,
when bands such as
The Animals,
Fleetwood Mac,
John Mayall & the
Bluesbreakers,
The Rolling
Stones,
The Yardbirds, and
Cream and Irish musician
Rory Gallagher performed classic blues songs
from the
Delta or
Chicago blues traditions.
The British and blues musicians of the early 1960s inspired a
number of American
blues rock fusion
performers, including
Canned Heat, the
early
Jefferson Airplane,
Janis Joplin,
Johnny Winter,
The J. Geils
Band,
Ry Cooder,
James Montgomery Blues Band and
The
Allman Brothers Band. Many
of
Led Zeppelin's earlier hits were
renditions of traditional blues songs. One
blues rock performer,
Jimi Hendrix, was a rarity in his field at the
time: a black man who played
psychedelic rock. Hendrix was a skilled
guitarist, and a pioneer in the innovative use of
distortion and
feedback
in his music. Through these artists and others, blues music
influenced the development of
rock
music.
Since the early 1970s, The
Texas rock-blues
style emerged which used guitars in both solo and rhythm roles.
In contrast with the West Side blues, the Texas style is strongly
influenced by the British rock-blues movement. Major artists of the
Texas style are
Johnny Winter,
Stevie Ray Vaughan,
The Fabulous Thunderbirds, and
ZZ Top. These artists all began their musical
journey in the 1970s, but they did not achieve major international
success until the next decade.
1980s to the 2000s
Since the
1980s, there has been a resurgence of interest in the blues among a
certain part of the African-American population, particularly
around Jackson,
Mississippi
and other deep South
regions. Often termed "
soul blues"
or "
Southern soul", the music at the
heart of this movement was given new life by the unexpected success
of two particular recordings on the Jackson-based
Malaco label:
Z.
Z. Hill's
Down Home Blues (1982) and
Little
Milton's
The Blues is Alright (1984). Contemporary
African-American performers who work this vein of the blues include
Bobby Rush,
Denise LaSalle,
Sir Charles Jones,
Bettye LaVette,
Marvin Sease and
Peggy Scott-Adams.
During the 1980s, blues also continued in both traditional and new
forms. In 1986, the album
Strong
Persuader revealed
Robert Cray
as a major blues artist. The first
Stevie Ray Vaughan recording,
Texas Flood, was released in
1983, and the Texas-based guitarist exploded onto the international
stage. 1989 saw a revival of
John Lee
Hooker's popularity with the album
The Healer.
Eric Clapton, known for his performances with
the Blues
Breakers and
Cream, made a comeback
in the 1990s with his album
Unplugged, in which he
played some standard blues numbers on acoustic guitar. However, the
technological progresses which appeared in the 1990s in the domain
of
digital multitrack recording,
and the evolution of the marketing strategies, which now include
the production of
video clips, have led
to an increase of the costs of production and also to some loss of
the spontaneity and improvisation which always have been an
important component of blues music.
In the 1980s and 1990s, blues publications such as
Living Blues and
Blues Revue
began to be distributed, major cities began forming blues
societies, outdoor blues festivals became more common, and more
nightclubs and venues for blues
emerged.
In the 1990s, blues performers explored a range of musical genres,
as can be seen, for example, from the broad array of nominees of
the yearly
Blues Music Awards,
previously named W. C. Handy Awards or of the
Grammy Awards for
Best Contemporary and
Traditional Blues
Album. Contemporary blues music is nurtured by several blues
labels such as:
Alligator Records,
Black & Tan Records,
Ruf Records,
Chess Records (
MCA),
Delmark Records,
NorthernBlues Music, and
Vanguard Records (
Artemis Records). Some labels are famous for
their rediscovering and remastering of blues rarities such as
Arhoolie Records,
Smithsonian Folkways
Recordings (heir of
Folkways
Records) and
Yazoo Records
(
Shanachie Records).
Young blues artists today are exploring all aspects of the blues,
from classic delta to more rock-oriented blues, artists born after
1970 such as
John Mayer,
Sean Costello,
Shannon Curfman,
Anthony Gomes,
Shemekia Copeland,
Jonny Lang,
Corey
Harris,
Susan Tedeschi,
Joe Bonamassa,
Michelle Malone,
The White Stripes,
North Mississippi Allstars,
Gracie B,
Everlast,
The Black Keys,
Bob Log III, Jose P and
Hillstomp developing their own styles.
Memphis,
Texas
-based William Daniel McFalls, also known as
"Blues Boy Willie" is a performer
of traditional blues.
Musical impact
Blues musical styles, forms (12-bar blues), melodies, and the blues
scale have influenced many other genres of music, such as rock and
roll, jazz, and popular music. Prominent jazz, folk or rock
performers, such as
Louis Armstrong,
Duke Ellington,
Miles Davis,
Bob Dylan
and
the White Stripes have
performed significant blues recordings. The blues scale is often
used in
popular songs like
Harold Arlen's "Blues in the Night",
blues ballads like "Since I Fell for You" and
"Please Send Me Someone to Love", and even in orchestral works such
as
George Gershwin's "
Rhapsody in Blue" and "Concerto in F".
Gershwin's second "Prelude" for solo piano is an interesting
example of a classical blues, maintaining the form with academic
strictness. The blues scale is ubiquitous in modern popular music
and informs many
modal frames,
especially the
ladder of thirds
used in rock music (e.g., in "
A Hard Day's Night"). Blues forms
are used in the theme to the televised
Batman,
teen
idol Fabian's hit, "Turn Me
Loose",
country music star
Jimmie Rodgers' music, and
guitarist/vocalist
Tracy Chapman's hit
"Give Me One Reason".
R&B music can be traced back to
spirituals and blues.
Musically, spirituals
were a descendant of New
England
choral traditions, and in particular of Isaac Watts's hymns, mixed
with African rhythms and call-and-response forms. Spirituals
or religious chants in the African-American community are much
better documented than the "low-down" blues. Spiritual singing
developed because African-American communities could gather for
mass or worship gatherings, which were called
camp meetings.
Early country bluesmen such as
Skip
James,
Charley Patton,
Georgia Tom Dorsey played country and
urban blues and had influences from spiritual singing. Dorsey
helped to popularize
Gospel music.
Gospel music developed in the 1930s, with the
Golden Gate Quartet. In the 1950s,
soul music by
Sam
Cooke,
Ray Charles and
James Brown used gospel and blues music
elements. In the 1960s and 1970s, gospel and blues were these
merged in
soul blues music.
Funk music of the 1970s was influenced by soul; funk
can be seen as an antecedent of hip-hop and contemporary
R&B.
Before
World War II, the boundaries
between blues and
jazz were less clear. Usually
jazz had harmonic structures stemming from
brass bands, whereas blues had blues forms such
as the 12-bar blues. However, the jump blues of the 1940s mixed
both styles. After WWII, blues had a substantial influence on jazz.
Bebop classics, such as
Charlie Parker's "Now's the Time", used the
blues form with the pentatonic scale and blue notes.Bebop marked a
major shift in the role of jazz, from a popular style of music for
dancing, to a "high-art," less-accessible, cerebral "musician's
music". The audience for both blues and jazz split, and the border
between blues and jazz became more defined. Artists straddling the
boundary between jazz and blues are categorized into the
jazz blues sub-genre.
The blues' twelve-bar structure and the blues scale was a major
influence on
rock and roll music. Rock
and roll has been called "blues with a
backbeat";
Carl Perkins called
rockabilly "blues with a
country beat". Rockabillies were also said to
be twelve-bar blues played with a
bluegrass beat. "
Hound Dog", with its unmodified twelve-bar
structure (in both harmony and lyrics) and a melody centered on
flatted third of the tonic (and flatted seventh of the
subdominant), is a blues song transformed into a rock and roll
song.
Jerry Lee Lewis's style of
rock and roll was heavily influenced by the blues and its
derivative boogie woogie. His style of music was not exactly
rockabilly but it has been often called real rock and roll (this is
a label he shares with several African American rock and roll
performers).
Early
country music was infused with
the blues.
Jimmie
Rodgers,
Moon Mullican,
Bob Wills,
Bill Monroe
and
Hank Williams have all described
themselves as blues singers and their music has a blues feel that
is different to the country pop of
Eddy
Arnold. A lot of the 1970s-era "outlaw" country music by
Willie Nelson and
Waylon Jennings also borrowed from the
blues. When
Jerry Lee Lewis returned
to country after the decline of 1950s style rock and roll, he sang
his country with a blues feel and often included blues standards on
his albums. Many early rock and roll songs are based on blues:
"
That's All Right Mama",
"
Johnny B. Goode", "
Blue
Suede Shoes", "
Whole
Lotta Shakin' Goin On", "
Shake, Rattle, and Roll", and
"
Long Tall Sally". The early African
American rock musicians retained the sexual themes and innuendos of
blues music: "Got a gal named Sue, knows just what to do"
("
Tutti Frutti",
Little Richard) or "See the girl with the red
dress on, She can do the Birdland all night long" ("
What'd I Say",
Ray Charles).
In popular culture

175 px
Like
jazz,
rock and
roll,
heavy metal music,
hip hop music,
reggae,
country music,
and
pop music, blues has been accused of
being the "
devil's music" and of inciting
violence and other poor behavior. In the early 20th century, the
blues was considered disreputable, especially as white audiences
began listening to the blues during the 1920s. In the early
twentieth century,
W.C. Handy was the first to popularize
blues-influenced music among non-black Americans.
During the blues revival of the 1960s and '70s, acoustic blues
artist
Taj Mahal and legendary
Texas bluesman
Lightnin' Hopkins
wrote and performed music that figured prominently in the popularly
and critically acclaimed film
Sounder (1972). The film earned Mahal a
Grammy nomination for Best Original Score
Written for a Motion Picture and a
BAFTA
nomination. Almost 30 years later, Mahal wrote blues for, and
performed a banjo composition, claw-hammer style, in the 2001 movie
release "
Songcatcher," which focused on
the story of the preservation of the
roots music of Appalachia.
Perhaps the most visible example of the blues style of music in the
late 20th century came in 1980, when
Dan
Aykroyd and
John Landis released the
film
The Blues
Brothers. The film drew many of the biggest living
influenciers of the
Rhythm and
blues genre together, such as
Ray
Charles,
James Brown,
Cab Calloway,
Aretha
Franklin, and
John Lee Hooker.
The band formed also began a successful tour under the
Blues Brothers marquee. 1998 brought a
sequel,
Blues Brothers
2000 that, while not holding as great a critical and
financial success, featured a much larger number of blues artists,
such as
B.B. King,
Bo Diddley,
Erykah Badu,
Eric Clapton,
Steve
Winwood,
Charlie
Musselwhite,
Blues Traveller,
Jimmy Vaughn,
Jeff Baxter.
In 2003,
Martin Scorsese made
significant efforts to promote the blues to a larger audience. He
asked several famous directors such as
Clint Eastwood and
Wim
Wenders to participate in a series of documentary films for
PBS called
The
Blues. He also participated in the rendition of
compilations of major blues artists in a series of high-quality
CDs. Blues guitarist and vocalist
Keb' Mo'
performed his blues rendition of "
America, the Beautiful" in 2006 to
close out the final season of the television series
The West Wing.
See also
Notes
- The "Trésor de la Langue Française informatisé" provides this
etymology to the word blues and George Colman's farce as the first
appearance of this term in the English language, see
http://atilf.atilf.fr/dendien/scripts/fast.exe?mot=blues
- Davis, Francis. The History of the Blues. New York:
Hyperion, 1995.
- Eric Partridge, A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional
English, 2002, Routledge (UK), ISBN 0-415-29189-5
- Tony Bolden, Afro-Blue: Improvisations in African American
Poetry and Culture, 2004, University of Illinois Press,
ISBN 0-252-02874-0
- Samuel
Charters in Nothing But The Blues, pg. 20.
- Ewen, pg. 143
- Grace notes were common in the Baroque and Classical
periods, but they acted as ornamentation rather than as part of the
harmonic structure. For example, Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 21
has a flatted fifth in the dominant. In these periods, this was a
technique for building tension for resolution into the perfect
fifth; in contrast, a blues melody uses the flatted fifth as part
of the scale.
- Kunzler, pg. 1065
- Barry Pearson, in Nothing but the blues, pg. 316
- David Hamburger, Acoustic Guitar Slide Basics, 2001,
ISBN 1-890490-38-5.
- Wilbur M. Savidge, Randy L. Vradenburg, Everything About
Playing the Blues, 2002, Music Sales Distributed, ISBN
1-884848-09-5, pg. 35
- Ferris, pg. 230
- Father of the Blues: An Autobiography. by W.C. Handy, edited by
Arna Bontemps: foreword by Abbe Niles. Macmillan Company, New York;
(1941) page 143. no ISBN in this first printing
- Ewen, pgs. 142–143
- Komara, pg. 476
- Oliver, pg. 281
- Morales, pg. 277
- Mark A. Humphrey, in Nothing but the blues, pgs. 107-149
- David Evans, in Nothing but the blues, pg. 33
- Kunzler, pg. 130
- Bruce Bastin, in Nothing but the blues, pg. 206
- David Evans, in Nothing but the blues, pgs. 33-35
- John H. Cowley, in Nothing but the blues, pg. 265
- John H. Cowley, in Nothing but the blues, pgs. 268-269
- Garofalo, pgs. 46–47
- Oliver, pg. 3
- Philip V. Bohlman, "Immigrant, folk, and regional music in the
twentieth century", in The Cambridge History of American
Music, ed. David Nicholls, 1999, Cambridge University Press, ISBN
0-521-45429-8, pg. 285
- Lawrence W. Levine, Black Culture and Black Consciousness:
Afro-American Folk Thought from Slavery to Freedom,
Oxford University Press, 1977, ISBN
0-19-502374-9, pg. 223
- Southern, pg. 333
- Garofalo, pg. 44
- Ferris, pg. 229
- The rough guide to African Blues CD booklet
- Blues imported from West-Africa
- Morales, pg. 276 Morales attributes this claim to John Storm
Roberts in Black Music of Two Worlds, beginning his
discussion with a quote from Roberts: "There does not seem to be
the same African quality in blues forms as there clearly is in much
Caribbean music."
- Samuel
Charters, in Nothing But the Blues, page 25
- Oliver, pg. 4
- Samuel
Charters, in Nothing but the blues, pg. 14-15
- Samuel Charters, in Nothing but the blues, pg. 16
- Garofalo, pg. 44 Gradually, instrumental and harmonic
accompaniment were added, reflecting increasing cross-cultural
contact. Garofalo cites other authors that also mention the
"Ethiopian airs" and "Negro spirituals".
- Schuller, cited in Garofalo, pg. 27
- Garofalo, pgs. 44–47 "As marketing categories, designations
like race and hillbilly intentionally separated artists along
racial lines and conveyed the impression that their music came from
mutually exclusive sources. Nothing could have been further from
the truth... In cultural terms, blues and country were more equal
than they were separate." Garofalo claims that "artists were
sometimes listed in the wrong racial category in record company
catalogues."
- Charles Wolfe in Nothing but the Blues, pgs. 233-263
- Mark A. Humphrey in Nothing but the blues, pg. 110
- Mark A. Humphrey in Nothing but the blues, pgs. 107-149
- Garofalo, pg. 27; Garofalo cites Barlow in "Handy's sudden
success demonstrated [the] commercial potential of [the blues],
which in turn made the genre attractive to the Tin Pan Alley acks,
who wasted little time in turning out a deluge of imitations."
(parentheticals in Garofalo)
- Garofalo, pg. 27
- Clarke, pg. 138
- Clarke, pg. 141
- Clarke, pg. 139
- Garofalo, pg. 47
- Hawkeye Herman, General background on African American
Music, Blues Foundation, Essays: What is the
blues?http://www.blues.org/blues/essays.php4?Id=3
- Clarke, pg. 137
- Garofalo, pg. 76
- Komara, pg. 120
- Mark A. Humphrey, in Nothing but the blues, pgs. 175-177
- Barry Pearson in Nothing but the blues, pgs. 313-314
- Dicaire (1999), p. 79
- Komara, pg. 118
- Mark A. Humphry, in Nothing but the blues, pg. 179
- Herzhaft, pg. 53
- Mark A. Humphrey, in Nothing but the blues, pg. 180
- Mark A. Humphrey, in Nothing but the blues, pg. 187
- Barry Pearson, in Nothing but the blues, pg. 342
- Herzhaft, pg. 11
- Herzhaft, pg. 236
- Herzhaft, pg. 35
- Koroma, pg. 49
- Lars Bjorn, Before Motown, 2001, University
of Michigan Press, ISBN 0-472-06765-6, pg. 175
- Herzhaft, pg 116
- Herzhaft, pg. 188
- Jim O'Neal in Nothing but the blues, pgs 347-387
- Koroma, pg. 122
- Koroma, pg. 388
- Jim O'Neal, in Nothing but the blues, pg. 380
- Garofalo, pgs. 224–225
- Koroma, pg. 50
- Mary Katherine Aldin, in Nothing but the blues, pg.
130
- A directory of the most significant blues festivals can be
found at http://blues.about.com/od/bluesfestivals/
- A list of important blues venues in the U.S. can be found at
http://blues.about.com/cs/venues/
- A complete directory of contemporary blues labels can be found
at http://blues.about.com/cs/recordlabels/
- Blues
Babies.741.com
- SFGate
- "Sounder" Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 11-02-2007.
References
Further reading
External links