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As a genre, blues music was developed at the beginning of the twentieth century by rural black musicians. They shaped it with brilliant inspiration from disparate elements of black song. By the early 1920's, recorded urban performers solidified the standard three-verse, 12 bar meter structure that has identified most blues. Fortunately, during that same period , there were recorded musicians who grew up with the blues and whose guitar-styles were more fluid and improvisational. They played with a personal adaptation of their regional style, shaping blues and related material to their own needs and those of their audience.

The music they played was alien to formula, possessing such skill and robustness as to be captivating. Their fame was local, tied intimately to their time and place, and only the providence of a chance encounter with a talent scout or record company preserved their art. Even then, it seemed fated that they would remain flamboyant names on exotic record labels.

The blues revival of the early 1960s brought many of these survivors to the forefront of traditional music. The technique of a Rev. Davis, the power of a Son House, the charm of a Mississippi John Hurt suddenly leaps into sight, becoming more tangible, more awesome and more human. The rare footage presented in this video is a treasure beyond imagining, drawn from a myriad of sources, depicting some of the greatest blues musicians who ever lived.

Tracks:
Mance Lipscomb
Silver City
Angel Child

Mississippi John Hurt
Spike Driver
You're Going To Walk That Lonesome Valley Blues

Big Bill Broonzy
Worried Man Blues
How You Want It Done
John Henry
Blues in E

Brownie McGhee
Don't Kid Me

Son House
Death Letter Blues
I Had A Woman in Hughes

Rev. Gary Davis
Children of ZionDeath Don't Have No Mercy

Robert Pete Williams
Mamie

Henry Townsend
Cairo Blues

Josh White
Jelly Jelly
Screen Standard 1.33:1 Color
Standard 1.33:1 B&W
Subtitles None
Audio ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Stereo
Rating NR
Average of ratings:
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