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blues |
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bluesAfrican-American music that originated in the work songs and Negro spirituals of the rural American South in the late 19th century. It is usually of a slow to moderate speed and characteristic features include a 12-bar (sometimes 8-bar or 16-bar) construction and a syncopated melody line that often includes ‘blue notes’ (quarter tones lying between the minor and major third of the scale – as found on some African five-note xylophones – or between the minor and major seventh). The lyrics are melancholy and tell tales of woe or unhappy love. The guitar is the main instrument, although the harmonica and piano are also common. Blues guitar and vocal styles have played a vital part in the development of jazz, rock, and pop music in general. 1920s–1930sThe rural or delta blues was usually performed solo with guitar or harmonica, by such artists as Robert Johnson and Bukka White, but the earliest recorded style, classic blues, by such musicians as W C Handy and Bessie Smith, was sung with a small band.1940s–1950sThe urban blues, using electric amplification, emerged in the northern cities, chiefly Chicago. As exemplified by Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, and John Lee Hooker, urban blues became rhythm and blues.1960sThe jazz-influenced guitar style of B B King inspired many musicians of the British blues boom, including Eric Clapton.1980sThe ‘blues noir’ of Robert Cray contrasted with the rock-driven blues playing of Stevie Ray Vaughan.In classical music, composers such as Maurice Ravel, Aaron Copland, and Michael Tippett have used aspects of the blues (especially the ‘blue note’) in various of their works, the Ravel piano trio in A minor (1914) being a notable example. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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It's great bluesy, old style reggae (I guess some would call it roots, but that's corny and applies to so much crappy stuff as well). But it's the gays, who know a thing or two about a plague, who score the highest marks: Rufus Wainwright pays homage to the death of the firstborn with "Katonah," a bluesy elegy in three-quarter time, while Stephin Merritt of the Magnetic Fields gets his Depeche Mode on for "The Meaning of Lice," a lo-fi synthpop romp of mechanized hand claps, monophonic melodies, and hilarious rhymes. The music ranges from bluegrass to bluesy sing-alongs, and the energetic rhymes combined with parent-child bonding are sure to stimulate cognitive, physical and social development. |
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