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Beginning of Blues: The Sibling of Jazz

Beginning of Blues: The Sibling of Jazz. 1800’s to 1930’s. Blues also had its beginnings as a result of slavery. J azz happened to reach mass popularity first but as you’ll see, blues eventually caught up.

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Beginning of Blues: The Sibling of Jazz

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  1. Beginning of Blues: The Sibling of Jazz 1800’s to 1930’s. Blues also had its beginnings as a result of slavery. Jazz happened to reach mass popularity first but as you’ll see, blues eventually caught up

  2. -“field calls” later known as “blues calls” are the earliest forms of vocal performance by African Americans • -these are used not only to communicate in the field world, but to set tempos in order to work to. • -plantation owners often permitted the slaves to sing while they worked because they were more productive • -these calls were based on “call and response” and could also pass secret messages from the masters through hidden messages in the lyrics

  3. -when slavery ended, most blacks didn’t have the means to travel to other parts of the country, nor the education to find other employment other than what they had done as slaves

  4. Sharecropping • -cotton producers still needed to harvest cotton, so a new form of payment had to be arranged because slavery was now illegal. • -this new arrangement was called “sharecropping” where employees would earn a “share” of the profits

  5. This share was usually enough to rent a shack of a residence, feed your family and nothing more. Ironically, slave owners housed and fed their slaves. Check out the poster

  6. Blues music became a rare outlet to express the suffering blacks still endured in the post-slave era

  7. -many of the first public performances where held at “juke joints” a small barn or cabin back in the bush or swamp out of sight and earshot to white law enforcement, so that bootleg whiskey and lyrics unflattering toward southern white society wouldn’t be discovered. The penalties could be fatal.

  8. Hidden Messages continue • Hidden messages fill blues lyrics. Musicians use analogy, allegory and imagery to tell their stories. A common example is “a woman” replacing the white boss. It was acceptable for a black man to complain about how your woman abuses you, but not how your boss does. • “HuddyLedbelly” Ledbetter • “On a Monday”

  9. On a Monday, I was arrested On a Tuesday, I was locked up in jail On a Wednesday, my trial was attested On a Thursday, nobody would go my bail Almost done, I'm almost done, almost done And I ain'tgonna bring them yellow women no pail Take these stripes, stripes from around my shoulder Take these chains, these chains from around my legs Lord, these stripes, it sure don't worry me But these chains, these chain's gonna kill me dead Yes, I'm almost done, almost done, almost done And I ain'tgonna bring them yellow women no pailOn Friday, my baby went a-walking On a Saturday, she locked me outa the door On a Sunday, we were sitting down a-talking On a Monday, she pawned all of my clothes

  10. Blues was hidden in juke joints buried in the swamps of the rural south. Until…

  11. Robert Johnson

  12. Robert Johnson was a young man who wanted to learn to play the guitar. • This is one of two known photos of him • He took lessons from a blues legend named Son House

  13. When he returned… • He sounded like this…

  14. People are stunned… • He starts playing at the local juke joints. • Shortly after that a group from Columbia records comes through town looking to capture traditional music

  15. He becomes a star • His songs make the airwaves all throughout America • He goes on tour and comes as far north as Windsor Ontario • He brings blues out of the juke joints of the deep south. • Let the rumours begin. • The rumours are supported by his lyrics

  16. Crossroads Hellhound on my Trail • I got to keep moving, I got to keep moving Blues falling down like hail, blues falling down like hail Mmm, blues falling down like hail, blues falling down like hail And the day keeps on remindin' me, there's a hellhound on my trail Hellhound on my trail, hellhound on my trail If today was Christmas eve, if today was Christmas eve And tomorrow was Christmas day If today was Christmas eve and tomorrow was Christmas day All I would need is my little sweet rider Just to pass the time away, to pass the time away You sprinkled hot foot powder, mmm, around my door All around my door You sprinkled hot foot powder, all around your daddy's door It keeps me with ramblin' mind rider Every old place I go, every old place I go I can tell the wind is risin', the leaves tremblin' on the tree Tremblin' on the tree I can tell the wind is risin', leaves tremblin' on the tree All I need is my little sweet woman And to keep my company, hey, hey, hey, hey, my company • I went to the crossroads, fell down on my knees I went to the crossroads, fell down on my knees Asked the Lord above, have mercy now, save poor Bob if you please • Standin' at the crossroads, tried to flag a ride Whee-hee, I tried to flag a ride Didn't nobody seem to know me, everybody pass me by • Standin' at the crossroads, risin' sun goin' down Standin' at the crossroads baby, the risin' sun goin' down I believe to my soul now, po' Bob is sinkin' • You can run, you can run, tell my friend Willie Brown You can run, you can run, tell my friend Willie Brown That I got the crossroad blues this mornin', Lord, baby I'm sinkin' down • I went to the crossroad, mama, I looked east and west I went to the crossroad, babe, I looked east and west Lord, I didn't have no sweet woman, ooh well, babe, in my distress

  17. “Hellhound” turned out to be his last recording • Robert Johnson start s acting REALLY strange • He was killed after a show at a juke joint in Mississippi. As with the tale that Robert Johnson had sold his soul to the devil in exchange for the power to make music beyond the reach of his rivals, it was reported by his partner Johny Shines that he had died on his hands and knees “Barking like a dog” • Word gets around the blues community of his death and the bluesmen panic. • Son House would put his guitar away, and not take it out again until the 1960s • “Devil’s Music” is born

  18. True or False? Supports the Legend Discredits the Legend • Did die violently of being poisoned • Did dissappear for a while when learning to play • Did have very erratic behaviour • Apparently had a thing with the club owners wife • Apparently met another guitar teacher • May have suffered from mental illness Check out the next poster

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