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The History Of: Blues Music, date: july 15, 2006
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The History Of: Blues Music

author: info2new date: 07/15/2006 category: the history of
rating: 3.5 / votes: 33 

Introduction

From blues music came great artists, such as Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Buddy Guy, Bessie Smith, and others. But the blues might never have been created if it had not been for the influence of hollers, calls, and the changes that occurred in the lives of blacks. The evolution of the blues provides insight into the changes that took place in the lives of African Americans after slavery ended.

Because of its personalized form, the popularity of blues music among blacks marked a unique period in the history of secular African American song. Prior to the emergence of the blues, solo music was atypical. Such individualized song had never been the main ingredient of black music. Prior song consisted of field hollers, which served as a means of communication among plantation workers, and work calls, which were chanted by peddlers in Northern and Southern cities.

Effect Of Blues

Despite the blues uniqueness from hollers and calls, it was forged from the same musical repertory and traditions. The call and response form of expression remained, but instead of incorporating a response from another participant, the blues singer responded to himself or herself. Thus, it was not created from a new type of music, but from a new perception about oneself.

Blues music reflected the new status of African Americans. Slaves newly acquired freedom, Booker T. Washington’s teachings, and the Horatio Alger model, which asserted that the individual molds his own destiny, influenced this form of personalized music. 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. Psychologically, socially, and economically, Negroes 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." (Levine, Lawrence W., Black Culture and Black Consciousness.) As a consequence, it was the emphasis on the individual that influenced the blues personalized form of song.

The blues was first sung by men at leisure and was called the folk blues. Some folk blues singers sung in medicine shows and touring carnivals. As black vaudeville singers came in contact with country singers, they eventually learned to sing the blues. Vaudeville singers brought a professional quality to it and constructed the foundation for the Classic Blues.

Deep In The Blues Feel

As African Americans migrated north in the early 20th century, they brought the blues with them. Coming from New Orleans, black-butt pianist who played the blues in Texas, Louisiana, and Arkansas, gave way to the Fast Western pianist who sang as they played, imitating Southern guitarists. Country singers joined the black-butt and the Fast Western pianist migration, and brought their style to Chicago, Detroit, and New York, where the classic blues singers united with the New Orleans and Fast Western musicians, and introduced their blues style in clubs, theaters, and dance halls.

The Classic Blues style was popular among newly arrived African Americans in the cities. The migration of many blacks to the cities gave them a new freedom from the church and community that had not been experienced in rural areas. Blacks demanded entertainment, and black theaters, dance halls, and clubs were opened. Women stopped singing in their churches and schools, and began to perform in theaters, clubs, dance halls, and vaudeville shows.

The first recording of the blues was in 1895. George W. Johnson's recording of "Laughing Song" was the first blues song to be recorded. Thereafter, blues songs began to appear in music rolls. The 1906 series of Music for the Aedian Grand, listed one blues title among the forty-nine music rolls.

The blues entered the forefront in 1920, when Mamie Smith's recording of "Crazy Blues" and "It's Right Here For You" became popular and opened the doors to other blues singers. The record was priced at one dollar and sold 75,000 copies the first month of release.

Conclusion

The market for the recorded blues was almost entirely black during the 1920s and 1930s, and the records became known as "race records." Record companies advertised exclusively to blacks and only black stores sold the records. As a result of Smith's success, record companies seized the opportunity to make a profit in the new market. Companies searched for talented blues artists, and singers such as Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey, Alberta Hunter, and Ethel Waters, became popular blues artists.

The popularity of the blues marked a new era for black music. It combined the styles of the past with a new type of song. The result was the creation of a style of music that would eventually contribute to the development of jazz.

POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 06:35 am + print this article + mail to a friend
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 22 
 comments posted, 5 removed | this article is 81% spam-free
Malmsteen07 :
You tryed to fit the history of the blues into one short page... Was never gona work... Entire books on the subject can just touch on it. The blues has far too vast a history to cover in one article. Futile trying. Was also incredibly badly structured and made very little sense, highlighted none of the stages in the progression of the blues. Weak
POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 07:55 am / quote |
atc228 :
yeah that was a very very very basic "history" of blues music. you basicly stopped at the 20s. many many more chapters to the history of blues happened after the 20s, like the white man pulling it off too and then the forming of it into rock music (you barely stated jazz too.) i think those are some defining moments in its history. you also didnt mention much about the guitar aspects or harmonica aspects or any other instruments besides piano. most black people didnt have pianos cus they were so expensive, but a harmonica was accessable and portable.
POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 08:42 am / quote |
RJSadler1982 :
Interesting article, I enjoyed reading it. Perhaps it would have been titled the 'origins of the blues' but that's only a minor quibble.
POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 08:51 am / quote |
Maverick49 :
Its hould be called "The History of the Blues part 1" and be a series of articles but yeah pretty good
POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 09:38 am / quote |
sweet_leaf_777 :
He would have 'written' more, but there isn't much else in this article: http://afroamhistory.about.com/od/bluesmusic/a/bluesmusic.htm.
I don't think adding subtitles means this is viewed as an original piece of writing, does it?

POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 10:55 am / quote |
peterocker :
never hapy you guys eh?
POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 11:04 am / quote |
 
 m 
  :
sweet_leaf_777 wrote:

He would have 'written' more, but there isn't much else in this article: http://afroamhistory.about.com/od/bluesmusic/a/bluesmusic.htm.
I don't think adding subtitles means this is viewed as an original piece of writing, does it?


pwnt.

POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 11:38 am / quote |
info2new :
isten you mutha f*cken f*ck ups, as i said: The Complete short history of the blues music, that arrived here a long long time ago, before you were born.

So READ exactly before making silly and stupid comments, you f*ck ups, f*ck you!!!!! ALL!!!!

POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 12:34 pm / quote |
Encore_God :
A blues article put together without even mentioning W.C. Handy, Robert Johnson, Son House, B.B. King, Charley Patton or Howlin' Wolf? Eh?!
POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 01:52 pm / quote |
Abnormal_Omish :
haha nice copy and pasting skills there.
POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 02:55 pm / quote |
Guitar_Dude777 :
hahah yah i agree with primusfan....pwnd
POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 02:59 pm / quote |
Henlo :
Ever heard of Alan Lomax?
POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 04:38 pm / quote |
Mr. Raw :
Booker T. Washington... 'cast down your bucket' buhbubhubhubhubhbuhbubhbu
bhb yeahhhhh

POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 05:34 pm / quote |
santyclaws :
No Leadbelly, no Deal!
POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 09:45 pm / quote |
edwardthegreat5 :
Plagarism is bad.
POSTED: 07/15/2006 - 10:13 pm / quote |
RIP Dime :
edwardthegreat5 wrote:

Plagarism is bad.


yes it is

POSTED: 07/16/2006 - 12:37 am / quote |
vanceboy :
Man...why can't people do a LITTLE research, is it that hard? Instead, you get really really lazy bastards that just copy and paste everything...including their final essays.
POSTED: 07/16/2006 - 07:12 am / quote |
cefasnacht :
info2new :
isten you mutha f*cken f*ck ups, as i said: The Complete short history of the blues music, that arrived here a long long time ago, before you were born.

So READ exactly before making silly and stupid comments, you f*ck ups, f*ck you!!!!! ALL!!!!


haha! hey everyone, this guy is a jackass! hey always has shiit to say in the comments on his own article. he was pming me for 2 weeks cuz he didn't like what i said about one of this articles! i'm sure i will hear more from him about this. i think from now on everyone should stop reading and commenting on his articles, cuz as Sweet_Leaf pointed out, it's obviously plagarism! not to mention the fact that he's a piece of shiit, but i do give it 5 stars on copy and pasting!!! thanks for pointing out the rip-off Sweet_Leaf! now let the angry pming begin...

POSTED: 07/16/2006 - 07:15 am / quote |
Guitarded8988 :
on a factual note, all those who read this article should know that the date of the first blues recording is much more debated and generally accepted as unknown. The author's (whoever he may be) date of 1895 seems skeptical. the first recordings to have the word "blues" in their titles were "baby seals blues" recorded by vaudevillian baby seals in 1912 as well as "st louis blues" by wc handy. the first blues recordng is estimated (by men much older and more scholarly than myself) to be within 10 years previous to this date. I have written many papers on blues including blues history and would recommend reading Francis Davis, and the cambridge companion to blues by allan moore (excellent writer with excellent facts), and any internet article copied by a 12 year old shithead.....er maybe not the last one
POSTED: 07/16/2006 - 10:29 am / quote |
 
 m 
  :
Okay. There isn't much point in continuing to post comments for this column. info2new has been 'dealt' with. So any more comments are just unneccessary. So I may decide to warn people if they keep posting more comments here.
POSTED: 07/16/2006 - 10:51 pm / quote |
 
 m 
  :
Wtf?! Why is this still here!!!
POSTED: 11/09/2006 - 08:53 am / quote |
AtakoftKillrV :
what the hell kind of history was that did u find that in a picture book
POSTED: 03/05/2007 - 03:12 am / quote |
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