Ad
related to: young blues guitar players
Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Acoustic blues [9] Barbecue Bob: 1902 1931 Georgia Acoustic blues [10] Ed Bell: 1905 1960s Alabama Piedmont blues [11] Gladys Bentley: 1907 1960 Pennsylvania Vaudeville blues [12] Black Ace: 1905 1972 Texas Country blues [13] Scrapper Blackwell: 1903 1962 North Carolina Urban blues [14] Blind Blake: 1896 1934 Florida Piedmont blues [15] Lucille ...
Kingfish was the #1 album on The Billboard Blues Chart [27] and the #1 Billboard Heatseeker album [28] upon release. Billboard called Kingfish "a blues prodigy." [29] No Depression magazine said the album was "a stunning debut from a young bluesman with an ancient soul and a large presence in the here-and-now."
Guitarist, mandolinist, and singer, one of the major blues accompanists of his time. [37] Mississippi Fred McDowell (January 12, 1904 – July 3, 1972). Hill country blues singer and guitar player. [38] Mississippi John Hurt (March 8, 1892 or 1893, Teoc, Mississippi – November 2, 1966, Grenada, Mississippi).
Gary Clark Jr. began playing guitar at the age of 12. Born and raised in Austin, Texas, Clark played small gigs throughout his teens until he met promoter Clifford Antone, proprietor of the Austin music club Antone's. Antone's was the launch pad where Jimmie and Stevie Ray Vaughan redefined blues at the time. [7]
This group consisted of three founding members of the Bad Medicine Blues Band: Ted "Lightnin' Boy" Larsen on guitar, his brother Michael Rey Larsen on drums, and Jeff Hayenga on bass. Keyboardist Bruce McCabe joined The Big Bang in 1995 after Lang and this young band from Fargo impressed him with their set opening for McCabe's band at the time ...
His best known track was "Guitar Pete's Blues". Franklin variously worked with a number of fellow blues musicians including St. Louis Jimmy Oden, Jazz Gillum, John Brim, Sunnyland Slim, and Tampa Red. [103] A versatile and accomplished musician, Franklin was able to adapt to electric blues, and provided backing to many musicians. [104]
Juke Boy Bonner – (March 22, 1932 – June 29, 1978) Born in Bellville, Texas, as Weldon Bonner, Bonner was a Texas blues and West Coast blues guitarist and blues harp player as well as a vocalist. Though based primarily in Texas for most of his career, he did work in the 1950s in Oakland, California , and recorded there for Irma Records .
C. Chris Cain; Charles Caldwell (bluesman) J. J. Cale; Mississippi Joe Callicott; Blind James Campbell; David Paul Campbell; Eddie C. Campbell; John Campbell (blues guitarist)
Ad
related to: young blues guitar players