Survive + Thrive

Sounds In the Open

17 Comments

I¡¦ll immediately grab your rss feed as I can't in finding your email subscription link or newsletter service. Do you've any? Kindly let me recognise in order that I could subscribe. Thanks.

I am often to blogging and i really appreciate your content. The article has really peaks my interest. I am going to bookmark your site and keep checking for new information.

Good story. Please post more in the future. I'll check back in a few days. If you need a Orlando Plumber please call me! www.dgplumber.net

You may have not intended to do so, but I think you have managed to express the state of mind that a lot of people are in.

An attention-grabbing discussion is value comment. I feel that you simply ought to compose extra on this subject, it might not be considered a taboo topic but typically people are not adequate to speak on this sort of subjects. To the future. Cheers

Yeah bookmaking this wasn't a bad conclusion great post!

hi!,Is extremely good writing a whole lot! share we communicate a lot more about this post on AOL? I want an experienced on this area to end my problem.

You for several get more or less agreeable thoughts and orientations. Your journal produce a warm appearance with the substance.

the dollar Per cash - 28%

The main onward switch comes with a pair treatments, at the same time interbank, the word dried up (as the maxim goes outright throughout English), relatively little bit of concentration, together with trades. Dissimilar to various other real estate markets, any organized commodity promotes haven't ever charged over a forex as well as are minimal.

Negotiation It is usually in order to reap some benefits from errors within charge or simply ad hoc program on the very same marketing, precisely the same foreign exchange for one or two different stock markets. A arbitrageur are capable of doing a majority of these functions within a single promote, for example spot-or multi-markets for example cash swaps. Highly effective accessories (titled pricers) letting this so that you can analyze numerous rates or just interest of a arbitrage settlement.

some really tremendous work on behalf of the owner of this site, utterly great content material .

I love your wp format, where did you get a hold of it?Hey. Cool article. There's a problem with your site in chrome, and you may want to check this... The browser is the market leader and a huge component of other people will omit your wonderful writing because of this problem.

I was very pleased to find this web-site.I wanted to thanks for your time for this wonderful read!! I definitely enjoying every little bit of it and I have you bookmarked to check out new stuff you blog post.

I was very pleased to find this web-site.I wanted to thanks for your time for this wonderful read!! I definitely enjoying every little bit of it and I have you bookmarked to check out new stuff you blog post. kambella vanderhee

Thanks for the nice article. I have saved it to read another time. Thanks so much then keep it up. Free Edu Links

I was searching all over the internet for this particular information. I am so happy you wrote about this. I have read it like ten times. Looking forward for you next post Pest Repeller Ultimate AT 5 in 1


Leave a comment


Remember personal info?

Brief History of Blues Music

Blues music developed in the 1890s in response to the hardships endured by generations of black people. Initially the songs consisted of field hollers, which served as a means of communication among plantation workers and slaves.

The earliest blues music, known as country or delta blues, was a product of the 19th-century Southern rural experience after Emancipation. Itinerant singers, guitarists, or harmonica players traveled around singing about love, freedom, sex, loneliness and the sorrows of life.

The first recording of the blues was made in 1895 and the first blues song recorded was George W. Johnson's "Laughing Song."

It was said that W.C. Handy, musician and bandleader of the Mahara Minstrels, came across the blues in a Tutwiler, Mississippi train station in 1903. According to Handy, while he was waiting for the train he heard the sound of a man running a knife against the strings of his guitar while he sang, "Goin' where the Southern cross the Dog." Handy was struck by the music. In 1912 Handy published "Memphis Blues." He was among the first to publish a song with "blues" in the title.

Important early blues musicians include Charlie Patton, Son House (who developed the bottleneck slide technique), and Robert Johnson.

In the early 20th century, folk singers migrated north bringing the blues with them. Country singers joined the New Orleans and Fast Western pianists' migration, and brought their style to Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, and New York. Classic blues singers along with these musicians introduced their blues style in clubs, theaters, and dance halls.

The blues came to the forefront in 1920, with Mamie Smith's recording of "Crazy Blues." The record sold 75,000 copies the first month of release.

Another landmark in blues history was the release of Blind Lemon Jefferson's "Long Lonesome Blues" which set the stage for a new era of the blues. However, the Depression of 1929, hit many blues singers hard.

After World War II, the center of blues activity moved to cities such as Chicago, where the musicians like Muddy Waters, BB King and Buddy Guy intensified the sound by amplifying the guitars and emphasizing the drums.

During the 1960s, white musicians from the US and England discovered the old recordings of the early bluesmen. This led the way to a blues revival.

Today, the blues is recognized for its influence on other genres of music, such as rock and roll, rhythm and blues, jazz, country, rap and hip-hop.

Sources and links to related sites:

The History of Blues Music: The Classic Era

History of Blues

The Blue Highway

Deep Blues: A Musical and Cultural History of the Mississippi Delta by Robert Palmer

The History of the Blues: The Roots, The Music, The People by Francis Davis

The Devils Music: A History of the Blues by Giles Oakley