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The Rough Guide to Jug Band Blues: Reborn and Remastered

Various Artists
Barcode 0605633135824
CD

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Original price £13.74 - Original price £13.74
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Release Date: 26/05/2017

Edition: Album
Genre: Blues
Sub-Genre: Blues
Label: World Music Network
Number of Discs: 1

PRODUKTBESCHREIBUNGEN
The Rough Guide To Jug Band Blues - By incorporating all manner of homemade instruments, jug bands were hugely popular in America during the 1920s and early 1930s. With an unparalleled vibrancy this 'do it yourself' and often overlooked approach to music was highly influential in the history of the blues. - The original jug bands had their origins in the 1890s amongst African-Americans, and were then known as 'spasm bands'. This 'do it yourself' approach to their instrument-making gained immense popularity in America during the 1920s and early 1930s, and became closely linked to the development of the blues. The jug could be earthenware or glass and was played by buzzing one's lips into it's mouth from about an inch away, thus creating a sound somewhere between that of a tuba or trombone. The swoop sounds that could be made gave the impression of sliding notes and a good player could get two octaves out of a good-sized jug. Incorporating all manner of homemade instruments, early jug bands were typically made up of African-American vaudeville and medicine show musicians and played a mixture of blues, ragtime and jazz music with a strong backbeat. - Further highlights include the sublime slide guitar playing of blues legend Tampa Red who formed his own Hokum Jug Band, as well as the frenzied and voice-like harp of Jaybird Coleman, the virtuoso harmonica player of the Birmingham Jug Band. Although other well-known blues performers embraced the jug-band craze, by the mid-1930s it had run it's course due to a combination of the depression and the devastating effect of radio on record sales. This collection goes to show how during it's heyday this not-often-talked-about genre was a highly influential and most vibrant of musical styles in the history of the blues.

Track Listing:
1: He's in the Jailhouse Now - The Memphis Sheiks
2: The Jug Band Special - Whistler & His Jug Band
3: Going to Germany - Cannon's Jug Stompers
4: Giving It Away - Birmingham Jug Band
5: Casey Bill - Earl McDonald's Original Louisville Jug Band
6: It's Tight Like That - Tampa Red's Hokum Jug Band
7: This Will Bring You Back - Carolina Peanut Boys
8: The Spasm - Daddy Stovepipe & Mississippi Sarah
9: The Old Folks Started It - Minnie Wallace
10: What's That Tastes Like Gravy - King David's Jug Band
11: Wipe 'Em Off - Seven Gallon Jug Band
12: Grandpa and Grandma Blues - Memphis Minnie and Her Jug Band
13: Stealin', Stealin' - Memphis Jug Band
14: Tear It Down - Bob Coleman & The Cincinnati Jug Band
15: Mammy O'mine Blues - Clifford's Louisville Jug Band
16: Ticket Agent Blues - Noah Lewis' Jug Band
17: My Good Gal's Gone Blues - Jimmie Rodgers & The Louisville Jug Band
18: Beale Street Breakdown - Jed Davenport & His Beale Street Jug Band
19: Don't Drink It in Here - Bill Johnson's Louisiana Jug Band
20: Bottle It Up and Go - Picaninny Jug Band
21: Banjoreno - Dixieland Jug Blowers
22: Jug Rag - The Prairie Ramblers
23: Red Ripe Tomatoes - Jack Kelly & His South Memphis Jug Band
24: Blues, Just Blues, That's All - Old Southern Jug Band
25: Sugar Blues - Alabama Jug Band