Home / Tag Archives: Acoustic Memphis Blues

Tag Archives: Acoustic Memphis Blues

Willie Borum

b. 4 November 1911, Memphis, Tennessee, USA, d. c.60s. Borum discovered guitar as a kid from his dad and Jim Jackson, afterwards adding harmonica, which he discovered very much from Noah Lewis. He performed in the roads in jug rings, and proved helpful in Mississippi with Garfield Akers, Willie Dark …

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Dan Sane

Most widely known for his function in cooperation with electric guitar partner Frank Stokes, Dan Sane was created in Michigan, Mississippi on January 24, 1904. Upon relocating to Memphis through the 1920s, he performed in the string music group led by violinist Will Batts; there Sane first started using Stokes, …

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Gus Cannon

An extraordinary musician (he could play five-string banjo and jug simultaneously), Gus Cannon bridged the difference between early blues as well as the minstrel and folk designs that preceded it. His music group from the ’20s and ’30s, Cannon’s Jug Stompers, represents the apogee from the jug music group style. …

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Charlie “Little Buddy” Doyle

No biographical information are for sale to Doyle, an obscure, impoverished, blind American road blues vocalist who, as his name implies, was also a dwarf. He was considered to have been delivered in Memphis, probably at the convert from the twentieth hundred years and documented 10 monitors there for Columbia …

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Will Batts

Fiddler Can Batts was the principal instrumentalist in Jack port Kelly’s South Memphis Jug Music group, a favorite string music group whose music owed much debt towards the blues aswell as minstrel tracks, vaudeville amounts, reels and rags. Delivered January 24, 1904 in Michigan, Mississippi, Batts was functioning as a …

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Hattie Hart

Blues vocalist Hattie Hart recorded using the Memphis Jug Music group in the 1920s. During this time period, she was also known for the celebrations she threw. Hart continued to record modern blues after shifting to Chicago in the middle ’30s, then vanished from the general public eye.

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Cannon’s Jug Stompers

Gus Cannon was the very best known of all jugband music artists and a seminal shape for the Memphis blues picture. His recollections also have supplied us with a lot of our understanding of the earliest times of the blues in the Mississippi Delta. Cannon led his Jug Stompers on …

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Richard Rabbit Brown

A FRESH Orleans songster who lived in the city’s roughest section and made up songs about many of its most notorious murders, Richard Rabbit Dark brown was created in 1880, probably in rural Louisiana. It isn’t known when he resulted in in New Orleans, but after arriving he migrated towards …

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Walter Vinson

One half from the renowned Mississippi Sheiks, singer/guitarist Walter Vinson was also being among the most noteworthy blues accompanists of his era. Blessed Feb 2, 1901 in Bolton, Mississippi, Vinson (also known variously as Vincson and Vincent) started performing as a kid, and during his teenager years was a fixture …

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Jack Kelly & His South Memphis Jug Band

Jack port Kelly & His South Memphis Jug Music group rivaled the Memphis Jug Music group in popularity through the 1930s and continued taking part in in to the 1950s, when jug rings were a rarity. Founded in the first ’30s by guitarist and vocalist Jack port Kelly, the music …

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