Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Koerner, Ray & Glover was a loose-knit group of three blues musicians from Minneapolis, Minnesota: "Spider" John Koerner on guitar and vocals, Dave "Snaker" Ray on guitar and vocals, and Tony "Little Sun" Glover on harmonica. They were notable figures of the revival of folk music and blues in the 1960s.
A definitive history of the store was written in 2006 by Penny Peterson and Charlene Roise: "A History of the Electric Fetus" as prepared for the Greater Twin Cities Blues Music Society. The Electric Fetus Onestop is the wholesale distribution portion of the Electric Fetus.
The Twin Cities' oldest major choral society is The Bach Society of Minnesota (f. 1932). [ 84 ] [ 85 ] The New York Times International Datebook calls the Christmas performance of the St. Olaf College choir "one of the five significant global holiday events". [ 86 ]
Sartell Historical Society; Big Stone County, Minnesota. Big Stone County Historical Society; Blue Earth County. Blue Earth County Historical Society; Betsy-Tacy Society; Madison Lake Area Historical Society; Rapidan Heritage Society; Brown County. Brown County Historical Society; Comfrey Area Historical Society; Sleepy Eye Area Historical Society
Allmusic critic William Ruhlmann called it "one of the defining albums of the folk revival. The Minneapolis, MN, trio, with Koerner and Ray on guitar and vocals, plus Glover on harmonica and vocals, were the quintessential young, white collegiate folk-blues enthusiasts from the North striving to play the traditional music as if they were old, black, uneducated musicians from the South.
“The Blues Society,” a documentary that unpacks the Memphis Country Blues Festival, will be released on video on demand in July. The film, which is narrated by actor Eric Roberts ...
In the days before the first Memphis Country Blues Society festival in July 1966, some 400 members of the KKK marched at Overton Park, even burning a cross at the parking lot. That didn’t stop ...
George Carter "Mojo" Buford Jr. (November 10, 1929 – October 11, 2011), [1] was an American blues harmonica player best known for his work in Muddy Waters's band. Biography [ edit ]