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Blues
Blues is an African American musical tradition defined by expressive "blue notes," call-and-response phrasing, and a characteristic use of dominant-seventh harmony in cyclical song forms (most famously the 12‑bar blues). It is as much a feeling as a form, conveying sorrow, resilience, humor, and hard-won joy. Musically, blues commonly employs the I–IV–V progression, swung or shuffled rhythms, and the AAB lyric stanza. Melodies lean on the minor/major third ambiguity and the flattened fifth and seventh degrees. Core instruments include voice, guitar (acoustic or electric), harmonica, piano, bass, and drums, with slide guitar, bends, and vocal melismas as signature techniques. Over time the blues has diversified into regional and stylistic currents—Delta and Piedmont country blues, urban Chicago and Texas blues, West Coast jump and boogie-woogie—while profoundly shaping jazz, rhythm & blues, rock and roll, soul, funk, and much of modern popular music.
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Classic Blues
Classic blues (often called "classic female blues") is the early, urban, theater-bred form of the blues that flourished primarily in the 1920s. It is characterized by powerful lead vocalists—frequently women—fronting small jazz ensembles or a piano accompanist, with arrangements that translated the blues idiom to vaudeville stages and recording studios. Musically it typically uses the 12‑bar blues form, AAB lyric stanzas, swung or shuffle rhythms in 4/4, and prominent use of blue notes (flattened 3rd, 5th, and 7th). The style sits at the crossroads of Southern blues traditions, ragtime and early jazz, and the songcraft and professionalism of vaudeville and Tin Pan Alley. Classic blues differs from country/delta blues by its more formal arrangements, band instrumentation, and theatrical delivery. It launched the commercial “race records” era with Mamie Smith’s 1920 hit "Crazy Blues," and set the template for later jazz and R&B vocal performance.
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Country Blues
Country blues—also called rural blues or folk blues—is the earliest widely documented form of the blues, rooted in the everyday music-making of African Americans in the rural American South. It typically features a solo singer accompanying themselves on acoustic guitar, with flexible time, expressive vocal delivery, and abundant use of blue notes. While 12‑bar structures are common, country blues often stretches or compresses measures to fit the lyric, making phrasing elastic and conversational. Regional flavors emerged—Delta (driving, droning thumb bass and slide), Piedmont (ragtime‑inflected fingerpicking), and Texas (looser phrasing and single‑string leads)—but all share storytelling lyrics about work, travel, love, hardship, and spiritual longing.
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Delta Blues
Delta blues is a raw, emotionally direct style of country blues that emerged in the Mississippi Delta—an alluvial plain stretching from Memphis to Vicksburg. It is typically performed by a solo singer accompanying themselves on acoustic guitar, often with bottleneck slide. Hallmarks include expressive, speech-like vocals; flexible, rubato timing; insistent thumb-driven bass patterns; syncopated treble figures; and frequent use of open tunings. Lyrics are vivid and personal, touching on hardship, migration, love, work, spirituality, and folklore. Though commonly framed by 12‑bar and 8‑bar blues forms, Delta blues thrives on elastic phrasing, blue notes, and call-and-response between voice and guitar. Its sound is earthy, gritty, and intimate—music for porches, juke joints, and field gatherings—yet it became one of the most influential sources for electric urban blues and rock.
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Jazz Blues
Jazz blues is a hybrid idiom that merges the expressive, melodic language and 12‑bar song forms of the blues with the harmony, improvisational vocabulary, and rhythmic feel of jazz. Typically, it retains a blues structure (often the 12‑bar form) while enriching it with jazz devices such as ii–V progressions, secondary dominants, turnarounds, tritone substitutions, and extended chords (9ths, 11ths, 13ths). The feel commonly swings, with walking bass lines, comping on piano or guitar, blue notes, call‑and‑response phrasing, and solos that mix blues scales with mixolydian and bebop lines. The result ranges from earthy shuffles to urbane, harmonically sophisticated vehicles for improvisation, sitting comfortably between New Orleans roots, Kansas City riff traditions, and modern bop language.
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Swamp Blues
Swamp blues is a laid‑back, hypnotic offshoot of Louisiana blues that took shape in the 1950s around Baton Rouge and Crowley. It is marked by loping mid‑tempo grooves, tremolo‑soaked electric guitar, prominent harmonica riffs, and echo‑laden, lo‑fi production that evokes the humid, nocturnal atmosphere of the bayou. Stylistically, it blends rural Delta blues structures with New Orleans R&B backbeats and subtle Cajun/zydeco accents. Records produced by J. D. "Jay" Miller for Excello Records defined the genre’s signature sound: minimal arrangements, space between parts, and swampy reverb that turns simple I–IV–V blues into a moody, rolling trance.
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Artists
Various Artists
Simon, Paul
Reinhardt, Django
Mills, Hayley
Covay, Don
Contours, The
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