Contrary to what some people believe, the blues is not “slave music.” Although it was cultivated by the descendants of slaves, the blues was the expression of freed African Americans. The Great Migration directly influenced the blues' many evolutions.
The fallboard (or key lid) is the hinged piece of wood that folds down to protect the keys when the piano isn't in use. Mar 12, 2021
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Read More »By the turn of the century, the boll weevil began to devastate the Southern cotton industry, becoming one of the many catalysts of the Great Migration. From this point on, we would hear many songs addressing the boll weevil. One in particular is by the legendary Charley Patton, a pioneer and one of the most influential practitioners of the Delta Blues. Born near Bolton in southern Mississippi in 1891, Patton and his family relocated to the Dockery Farms Plantation around 1900, a place where many early blues legends either passed through or lived. On June 14, 1929 Patton recorded “Mississippi Boweavil Blues”: “Sees a little boll weevil keeps movin’ in the, Lordie! You can plant your cotton and you won’t get a half a bale, Lordie.” These lyrics are a fitting example of the the relationship between farmers, cotton and the boll weevil. Along with the boll weevil, the turn of the century also brought Jim Crow. Still looking to rekindle slave labor in the South, white supremacists established what became known as prison farms, with Parchman Farm being the epicenter as well as a popular topic of blues recordings. Blues legends such as Bukka White(Booker White) and Son House would make songs that depicted Black life on prison farms. Now known as the Mississippi State Penitentiary, Parchman Farm was a convict lease hub, which spawned the business of kidnapping freed Black men who landed there for free labor. Lessees paid fees to the state and were responsible for feeding, clothing and housing prisoners who worked for them as laborers. A lucrative business for both the state and lessees, as in other states, the system led to entrapment and a high rate of convictions for minor offenses for Black men, whose population as prisoners increased rapidly in the decades after the Civil War. Wrongly accused of having a high rate of criminality, Black men often struggled for years to get out of the convict lease system. It was at these farms that African American musicians such as Leadbelly and Bukka White, who went by the name “Washington Barrelhouse White,” recorded numbers for John and Alan Lomax for the Library of Congress Field Recordings of Black traditional music. During the mid-1940s to the mid-1950s, African Americans migrated to the Midwest, West, and the Northeast. This migration, for some, was not just about escaping the South or even searching for better working conditions. For some Black southerners, it was about taking an opportunity to become a professional recording artist. McKinley “Muddy Waters” Morganfield, one of the most celebrated blues musicians who made a name for himself as the father of Chicago Blues, was part of this migration. He brought with him to Chicago a traditional style of Delta blues learned on the Stovall Plantation where he grew up, incorporating elements from the new urban terrain. Howlin’ Wolf, another Chicago Blues legend and Muddy’s label mate, who also migrated from Mississippi, sang the songs of the newly migrated freed African Americans. Wolf, born Chester Arthur Burnett, in West Point, Mississippi, learned how to play the guitar from Charley Patton. Howlin’ Wolf was one of the first artists to run his band like a business–among other things, he paid band members a salary and offered them health insurance benefits.
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Read More »Today, many African American historians, practitioners and enthusiasts revere blues music. Some perform public domain songs that introduce old tunes to new audiences, and others, like myself, create new blues songs that speak of the current experiences of African Americans that mirror times past. Both pay homage to our ancestors, who created blues music as an expression of their experiences as freed Black men and women. These songs are reminders of a past long gone but also speak to many of the challenges that still impacts us in this New Jim Crow era.
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