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Farther Up the Road. " Farther Up the Road " or " Further on Up the Road " is a blues song first recorded in 1957 by Bobby "Blue" Bland. It is an early influential Texas shuffle and features guitar playing that represents the transition from the 1940s blues style to the 1960s blues-rock style. The song became Bland's first record chart-topping ...
Blues standards are blues songs that have attained a high level of recognition due to having been widely performed and recorded. [1] They represent the best known and most interpreted blues songs that are seen as standing the test of time. [2] Blues standards come from different eras and styles, such as ragtime - vaudeville, Delta and other ...
The twelve-bar blues (or blues changes) is one of the most prominent chord progressions in popular music. The blues progression has a distinctive form in lyrics, phrase, chord structure, and duration. In its basic form, it is predominantly based on the I, IV, and V chords of a key. Mastery of the blues and rhythm changes are "critical elements ...
"Stop Messin' Round" is a song first recorded by English blues rock group Fleetwood Mac in 1968. It was written by the group's principal guitarist and singer Peter Green, with an additional credit for manager C.G. Adams. The song is an upbeat 12-bar blues shuffle and is representative of the group's early repertoire of conventional electric ...
Blues & Roots. (1960) Mingus Ah Um is a studio album by American jazz musician Charles Mingus which was released in October 1959 by Columbia Records. [1][2] It was his first album recorded for Columbia. The cover features a painting by S. Neil Fujita. [5] The title is a corruption of an imaginary Latin declension.
Producer. David Paich. Boz Scaggs chronology. But Beautiful. (2003) Greatest Hits Live. (2004) Greatest Hits Live is a live album by Boz Scaggs. It was released on August 17, 2004 by Mailboat Records.
Saturday Night Fish Fry. " Saturday Night Fish Fry " is a jump blues song written by Louis Jordan and Ellis Lawrence Walsh, [2] best known through the version recorded by Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five. [3] The recording is considered to be one of the "excellent and commercially successful" examples of the jump blues genre. [4]
Length. 2:48. Label. Keen. Songwriter (s) John Watson a.k.a. Johnny "Guitar" Watson. " Gangster of Love " is a blues song recorded by Johnny "Guitar" Watson in 1957. When he re-recorded the song in 1978, it became a hit. It is perhaps Watson's best known song and several artists have recorded interpretations.