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Strings of the North


On his WFMT radio program in the mid-1950s, Studs Terkel asked, "Say Bill, what’s the blues?" Big Bill Broonzy replied confidently, "Well a real blues, you don’t mix that with nothing. You just play the blues. Now a real blues, a Mississippi blues, you just change [chords] when you feel like it and you play what you feel" (as heard on "The Blues", from The Folkways Collection podcast series). To Broonzy and other blues musicians, the country blues is a style born in the Mississippi Delta that laid the foundation for other, later, regional blues styles found across the USA. The country blues is music that relies on the expressive power of the voice with sparse instrumental accompaniment (usually only a guitar or harmonica), differing from the "city blues" in that it has more improvisatory freedom and a less rigidly defined structure.

Click for Track Details Mule-Ridin' Blues
Big Bill Broonzy

Click for Track Details Tell Me, Baby
Lightnin’ Hopkins

Click for Track Details Blood River Blues (Brownie's Blues)
Brownie McGhee


Singing the Blues
The country blues is the music of day to day life. It is the lonely music of lounging on the front porch, the rowdy music of the house party, and the raucous and engaging music of the concert stage. The lyrics deal with the African American experience and the hardships of work, life, and love in the American South, and themes of travel, loneliness, and wandering of the blues musician lifestyle. Revival standards such as "Candy Man," recorded by both Reverend Gary Davis and John Hurt, "I Ain’t Gonna Cry No More," recorded by Son House, and "Boll Weevil," recorded by Pink Anderson, Ma Rainey, Charlie Patton and others all demonstrate the connection of blues lyrics to daily life through their references to people, railroad work and love, and a certain agricultural pest.

Click for Track Details Candy Man
Reverend Gary Davis

Click for Track Details I Ain’t Goin’ To Cry No More
Son House

Click for Track Details Boll Weevil
Pink Anderson


The Blues Revival
Early blues music recorded by artists such as Charlie Patton, Leroy Carr, and Blind Lemon Jefferson achieved wide popularity in African-American communities of the southern USA in the 1920s and 1930s. However, recordings of this early music are scarce and by the early 1950s the music had all but faded from popular memory until revival efforts of collectors such as Samuel Charters, Frederic Ramsey, Jr., and Alan Lomax brought the blues into the international spotlight in the late 1950s and 1960s. These ardent collectors sought out country blues musicians and introduced them to concert promoters and record companies, rejuvenating their recording careers. Folkways Records also played a major role in the blues revival through some significant recording reissue projects: Frederic Ramsey, Jr.'s Jazz, Harry Smith's Anthology of American Folk Music, and Samuel Charters' Country Blues. These reissues made recordings from the 1920s and 1930s available to wide audiences in the 1950s and 1960s, drawing blues music into the awareness of American audiences from all ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds.

Click for Track Details When I First Started Hoboing
Baby Tate

Click for Track Details Longing Blues
Furry Lewis

Click for Track Details Careless Love
Josh White


Taking it To the Festival Stage
The folk and blues revival enabled country blues musicians such as Lightnin’ Hopkins, John Jackson, Furry Lewis, Sam Chatmon, Brownie McGhee, Sonny Terry and others to ascend blues festival stages to wide acclaim across the USA and internationally. The Smithsonian Folklife Festival on the National Mall hosted many country blues musicians throughout the 1960s and 1970s, granting them recognition as part of a national musical heritage. Country blues musicians strove to maintain their traditional styles of playing in these festival contexts even while significant changes to the blues were developing in regional pockets across the USA.

Click for Track Details John Henry
John Jackson

Click for Track Details Preachin' the Blues
Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee

Click for Track Details Coffee Blues
Mississippi John Hurt


"Ain’t nobody wants me, they wouldn’t be in my shoes. I be so disgusted, I got those low down rambler blues" (Peg Leg Howell, quoted in Charters 1975). The country blues expresses the shared experiences of black people in the American South, making it a powerful vehicle for African American expression and cultural reinforcement. It is a unique musical form that evolved in the early decades of the twentieth century in small dance halls and on the back steps of homes in the Mississippi delta, and these classic recordings on Smithsonian Folkways and in the Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections keep the country blues alive for listeners everywhere.

Find more country blues here from Smithsonian Global Sound.

—Jessica Keyes, MA (Ethnomusicology)

Photo of Sam Chatmon by Reid and Susan Erskin, 1974. Courtesy of the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage.

References

Charters, Samuel. The Country Blues. New York: Da Capo Press, 1975.

Pearson, Barry Lee. Liner notes to Classic Blues from Smithsonian Folkways (SFW40134) and Classic Blues from Smithsonian Folkways, vol. 2 (SFW40148).

CKUA Radio. "Episode 9: Blues." From: The Folkways Collection Podcast Series. Edmonton, Canada, 1999.



FEATURED AUDIO



Sam Chatmon

"St. Louis Blues" by Sam Chatmon
Sam Chatmon performs at the 1976 Smithsonian Folklife Festival in Washington, DC. The preservation of this recording was made possible with the generous support of The Grammy Foundation.





FEATURED ARTIST



John Jackson
Bluesman and songster John Jackson was born in the rural Blue Ridge Mountain foothill town
of Woodville, Virginia,
in 1924....




FEATURED ARTIST



Furry Lewis
Walter "Furry" Lewis (1893–1981) personified the relaxed and intimate character of the early blues.




FEATURED PODCAST EPISODE



FEATURED ALBUM



Richmond Blues
New album by piedmont blues artists Cephas & Wiggins. Part of the African American Legacy Series.



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