Muddy Waters-Muddy as Can Be

Muddy Waters

{Muddy Waters}

Muddy as Can Be

Born McKinley Morganfield on April 4th of 1913, Muddy Waters has since then contributed greatly to the Blues genre, and to the music world in general.

A Chicago native, Muddy Waters was deemed the Father of Chicago Blues, and was ranked #17 in Rolling Stone’s Magazine list of 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.

Starting his career in 1941, Waters carried the sound of the Delta Blues to Chicago, where he adopted many Chicago Blues influences, and he himself inspired many of the great musicians of that era. His first recordings were destined to the Library of Congress, performing in a style similar to that of legendary artist Robert Johnson.

Waters was known for playing mean Chicago, Delta and Electric Blues that, since then, has influenced multiple generations of blues guitarists and blues inclined musicians. Also one of the most proficient guitar players in the history of music, Waters notable Gibson Les Paul and Fender Telecaster have sung classic tunes like ‘Hoochie Coochie Man’, ‘I Can’t Be Satisfied’ and ‘Got My Mojo Workin”, just to name a few.

Lifetime Achievements

During his active years  (1941-1983), Waters played with iconic blues performers such as Little Walter, Willie Dixon and Junior Wells; while inspiring the adoption of the blues by young, white artists like Johnny Winter, Eric Clapton and The Rolling Stones.

Also skilled at blues vocals and the harmonica, Muddy Waters recorded with popular Chicago record labels like Testament Records, Aristocrat Records and Chess Records (the label that also signed blues songwriter Chuck Berry upon Water’s recommendation). In his lifetime, Waters released more than 40 albums, and 40 singles, and was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in 1980, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987, and was awarded a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1992.

After his Death: Waters Remembered

Waters died in his sleep in 1983, while at home in Westmont, IL. A year after his death, the city of Chicago honored his musical achievements and cultural influences by assigning a one street block near his former home on E. 43rd St. the ‘Honorary Muddy Waters Way’.

A true icon of music history, and one of the biggest contributors to blues based genres, Muddy Waters will be remembered not only for his immense talent and contagious tunes, but also for imminent effect he has had, and still has, on American music.

Lynyrd Skynyrd Set to Tour with Kid Rock

Lynyrd Skynyrd Set to Tour with Kid Rock, New Album for Release Late 09 

The southern blues-rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd will be joining Kid Rock for a second year of their ‘Rock & Rebels’ Tour in June 09. The groups will be kicking off in West Palm Beach, Florida on June 26, to follow with shows in 19 other U.S. cities.

In addition to their upcoming tour, Lynyrd Skynyrd has recently signed a recording contract with Loud & Proud/Roadrunner Records to release a new album by the end of this year. The album has not yet been scheduled, but it is estimated to be out by late 2009.

Skynyrd’s last studio album ‘Vicious Cycle’ was released on May 2003; a record that no longer included the musicianship of Leon Wilkenson, who died of lung and liver disease in a Florida hotel in 2001.

Once again, the band will be recording a new album remembering fallen fellow musician, Billly Powell. Powell was a founding member of Lynyrd Skynyrd, songwriter and keyboardist to the band since 1972. He passed away this last January 28th, of a heart attack – making him the 7th member in Lynyrd Skynyrd’s history to pass on.

Nevertheless, Lynyrd Skynyrd has always went on to continue the show, determined to fulfill the wishes of their departed band-mates.

The band will be performing, along Kid Rock for 20 dates starting June 26:

Date Location Venue
June 26 West Palm Beach, FL Cruzan Amphitheatre
June 27 Tampa, FL Ford Amphitheatre
June 28 Atlanta, GA Lakewood Amphitheatre
June 30 Houston, TX Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
July 1 Dallas, TX Superpages.com Center
July 7 Buffalo, NY Darien Lake Performing Arts Center
July 8 Holmdel, NJ PNC Bank Arts Center
July 10 Cuyahoga Falls, OH Blossom Music Center
July 11 Indianapolis, IN Verizon Music Center
July 12 Tinley Park, IL First Midwest Bank Amphitheatre
July 14 Pittsburg, PA Post Gazette Pavilion
July 21 Maryland Heights, MO Verizon Music Center
July 22 Cincinnati, OH Riverbend Music Center
July 24 Raleigh, NC Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion at Walnut Creek
July 25 Virginia Beach, VA Verizon Virginia Beach Amphitheatre
July 26 Charlotte, NC Verizon Amphitheatre Charlotte
July 29 Boston, MA Comcast Center
July 20 Hershey, PA Hersheypark Stadium & Star Pavilion
August 1 Washington, DC Nissan Pavilion
August 2 New York, New York Nikon at Jones Beach Theater

Eric Clapton 2009 Confirmed Tour Dates

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The musician is performing in Japan, with Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, UK, and U.S.A to follow in his upcoming schedule.

Three-time Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductee, CBE and 18-time Grammy Award-winner Eric Clapton simply is a timeless icon of music history.
Known both for being a former member of great bands such as The Yardbirds, John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers, Cream, Blind Faith and Delaney and Bonnie and Friends, as well as for his remarkable solo guitar work and collaborations, Clapton has played with stars like The Beatles, Roger Waters, Dire Straits and Joe Cocker, amongst many.

Clapton’s 2009 World Tour began this February in Japan, and it is currently 3 dates into the tour.  Featuring special edition tickets due to Clapton’s 35th anniversary since his debut in Japan in 1974, the musician will be playing in Tokyo on February 18th and 19th, traveling to Saitama and Budokan for 2 shows with legendary guitarist Jeff Beck on the 21st and 22nd, only to return to Tokyo on the 24th for 3 more solo performances.

Along with Clapton, this year’s shows will feature musicians Doyle Bramhall II on guitar, Chris Stainton on keyboards, Willie Weeks on bass, Abe Laboriel Jr. on drums and Sharon White & Michelle John on backing vocals as his supporting band.
After closing in Japan, Eric Clapton and his group will be then hitting New Zealand’s Vector Arena on March 4th, moving on to Australia from the 7th to the 14th of that month.
The Australian venues Clapton will be playing at include the Hunter Valley Hope Estate Winery (07/03), the Sydney Entertainment Centre (08/03) and Melbourne’s Rod Laver Arena (11/03).

The songwriter will be taking a brief break before resuming his tour in Dublin’s O2 Arena, in Ireland, on May 11th, then moving on to the UK for two consecutive weeks of performances.
The UK Tour opening show will take place in Liverpool’s Echo Arena on May 13th, followed by one performance at the MEN Arena in Manchester on the 14th, and sixteen consecutive shows at the Royal Albert Hall in London from the 16th to 31st of May.
Along for the ride will be 1990’s blues group the Arc Angels (featuring Charlie Sexton) who will be presenting the supporting act for each of Clapton’s concerts in the UK.

Following the UK tour, Clapton will be stopping by 15 cities in the U.S.A. starting June 10th with former band mate and fellow guitarist Steve Windwood. Clapton and Windwood had formed the group Blind Faith in 1969 after Cream’s dissolution in 1968. Following the opening act in East Rutherford on June 10th, the performers will be moving down to Philadelphia, PA (12/06), Washington, DC (13/06), Columbus, OH (15/06), Chicago, IL (17/06); St. Paul, MN (18/06), Omaha, NE (20/06), Denver, CO (21/06), Dallas, TX (23/06), Houston, TX (24/06), Glendale, AZ (26/06), Las Vegas, NV (27/06), Oakland, CA (29/06) and Los Angeles, CA (30/06).

Clapton was born in Ripley in Surrey, England on 1945 and got his first guitar in 1960. In more than 45 years of musicianship, the artist has recorded many hits, both in his former bands as in his solo work. Deemed one of Rolling Stone’s ‘100 Guitarists of All Time’ and the only musician to be a triple Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductee, Eric Clapton is one the most legendary, iconic and influential guitarists still active today.

B.B. King to Play 4 Concerts in UK with John Mayall

B.B. King to Play 4 Concerts in UK with John Mayall
The late June ‘09 Tour will hit Manchester, Birmingham, Cardiff and London.

Despite having had announced retirement from international touring in 2006, B.B. King is set to play four arena concerts in Manchester, Birmingham, Cardiff and London at the end of June. Both King and John Mayall (75) – a blues-rock pioneer for his release of ‘Bluesbreakers’ in 1966 – will be splitting performances, each of them taking over one half of the show.

King had last performed in UK during his 5-date UK Farewell Tour in 2006 with Gary Moore. Now 83, with over 15,000 performances and 61 years of music making under his belt following his debut in 1947, King continues to represent music’s crème de la crème.

He has collected many empowering acknowledgements during his career such as three honorary doctorates in music by Mississippi, Yale and Brown University; over 15 Grammy’s -including the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1987 – and a prestigious Presidential Medal of Freedom, given to King by President G.W. Bush at the age of 80.

B.B. King’s top works include songs “The Thrill is Gone”, “Every Day I Have the Blues” and “I Like to Live the Love”; as well as albums ‘My Guitar Sings the Blues’ (1986), ‘Blues Summit’ (1994) and ‘Live at the Apollo’  (1992) between many, many others.  His numerous collaborations have aided iconic artists such as Eric Clapton, Jimmi Vaughan, Robert Cray, Bo Diddley and U2.

IMHO

B.B. King is one of the greatest blues players of his style around. He has sporned so many good players to take up the blues guitar. I am really looking forward to these up and coming performances.

T.J.

A Minor Harmonic Scale Video

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Hi All

This is the A Minor Harmonic Scale. It’s useful to use for improvising when playing blues in A minor.

A flavour of the Orient!

Have fun

Tony J


 

How To Play Guitar – Blues Style

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Hi All,

This lesson is how to play guitar ‘Blues Style’. Before we start the video lesson of how to play ‘Blues Style’ here is a bit of history of how ‘The Blues’ evovled.

Blues: the Birth and Evolution of a new Era

Blues is a musical genre that began as an African American cathartic form of self-expression in response to generations of adversity in the south of the United States. In reference to the blue devils or ‘down’ spirits like melancholy and grief, the blues style incorporates in its vocals, themes that concentrate on life’s troubles and hindrances.

The origin of  folk blues traces back to the African American working class of the Mississippi Delta in the beginning of the 20th century. Its birth was foretold by the slave and field work songs of the time. Songs about oppression and the need for freedom, these ‘hollers’ prefigured the explosion of a genre that would forever impact the music world.

The Delta Blues

After the Emancipation of the African-American people, blues’ expansion began inevitably as folk singers migrated, thus introducing the Delta blues to the rest of the country. Each region then adopted their own localized style, giving rise to various forms and distinctions of the genre. Country blues was the first, earthier, variation to appear as the movement traveled out of the work camps and into the rural zones. The genre continued to evolve as the musicians presented it in bigger cities, giving place to the more polished, refined style of urban blues.

Among leading performers, early recordings of Mammie Smith, Bessie Smith and Ma Rainey popularized classic blues, while Son House was one of the early performers of country blues as well as the developer of the bottleneck slide technique.

Despite the genre becoming popular and well established around the late 1920’s, the 1929 depression left many performers out of work, slowing down and forcing its evolution to take place passively. Nonetheless, after World War II, musicians such as Muddy Waters from Chicago and B.B. King from Memphis surfaced to intensify guitar sounds and accentuate on percussion, thus creating a new form called electric blues. Big cities also inspired award winning John Lee Hooker, who revolutionized the Delta blues with a freer, lively, rhythmical form that combined his Mississippi style with the boogie-woogie piano style of New Orleans (‘Boogie Chillen’ 1948). It was in the late 1950’s and early 60’s that, by the hand of folk singer Jimmie Rogers, white listeners became more interested in the trend. Revivalists sought recordings of its performers to search them out, and induced the resurgence of the genre in post-war U.S. A.

The Great Depression

After the appearance of Riley B. King and the electric blues, the movement became a big hit in Britain. In this way, the trend made its way across the world to find new distinctions to the genre. The British ‘beat’ began subsequently and the blues and its derivatives influenced renowned bands such as The Yardbirds or Eric Clapton, also paving the way for the 1964 British Invasion. Blues rock, R&B, Jazz and Bluegrass are just a few of the genres that were impacted by the evolution of this musical style.

Harmonically, blues consists of a dominant 4/4 rhythm; flattened thirds, fifths and sevenths of the related major scale, and a 12-bar structure. The blues scale is roughly a minor pentatonic scale with an added ‘blue’ note.  Before settling on the 12 bar progression, blues wasn’t defined in terms of chord structure as there were many blues in 6-bar and 8-bar, even in 16-bar form. The work of Ray Charles on ‘Sweet 16-bars’ or Herbie Hancock on ‘Watermelon Man’ are examples of the latter. By 1930, however, 12-bar form became the standard blues, as well as the use of flatted 3rds and 7ths, crushing and sliding.
Within its text, the genre comprises 3 line stanzas in which the first two lines repeat each other; the third one acting as an affirmation or conclusion of what had previously been sung.

In essence a vocal music form, blues incorporates the African call-and-response tradition where one musical phrase responds to another; primitively a form of democratic participation.
The development of blues has forecasted the beginning of a musical revolution that branched into vast selection of different sounds and new genres. While also becoming the roots and base of many acclaimed guitarists that have emerged since its birth- such as Jimmi Hendrix and Jimmy Page- the blues caused a shift in the music equilibrium that will forever mark the path of its history.

Did you take that all in? Good! Then, on with the lesson

[Here is the backing track for you  (to download backing track right click ‘save target as’ )

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Keep prapticing and eventually you will come up with something like this or better!