-
Most recent posts
- – The blackface lumpenproletariat and American popular culture
- – African American Music – A survival or an actual creative force in today’s culture?
- – Christmas is when the greedy give to the needy
- – The blues, they are no art
- – How criticism helped the vaudeville: The spotlight on Franklin “Baby” Seals
- – Wagner, Beethoven & Negro Folksongs, and … baseball
- – The Whitman Sisters: why we may never silence them.
- – Catfish & Cotton & Caffeine
- – Marketing Patent Medicine Folk and Blues
- – Blues from the circus tent
Categories
- – Artists (23)
- Alexis Korner (1)
- Blind Boy Fuller (1)
- Blind Willie Johnson (1)
- Deford Bailey (1)
- Franklin "Baby" Seals (1)
- Henry Thomas (1)
- Jaybird Coleman (1)
- Joe Evans and Arthur McCain (1)
- King Solomon Hill (1)
- Leroy Carr (1)
- Mavis Staples (1)
- Mississippi Fred McDowell (1)
- Rubin Lacy (1)
- Skip James (2)
- Son House (5)
- The Sparks (1)
- The Whitman SIsters (1)
- Walter Furry Lewis (1)
- – Blues history (42)
- – Did you know ? Blues facts from within (16)
- – Key figures (7)
- Butler May (1)
- Charles Peabody (1)
- H. C. Speir (1)
- Henry Edward Krehbiel (1)
- John Hammond (1)
- Lucy McKim (1)
- Perry Bradford (1)
- – Key Songs and Albums (3)
- Stagger Lee (1)
- Sweet Home Chicago (1)
- The Boll Weevil Song (1)
- – Pre Blues era (24)
- – Technology and Marketing (5)
- Minstrelsy (5)
- Vaudeville (5)
- – Artists (23)
Tag Archives: early blues
– Butler May: was he the real Father of the Blues?
Acknowledgements: I sincerely thank Kevin Nutt of the Alabama Department of Archives and History, and the Alabama Folklife Association for putting at my disposal the writings of Doug Seroff and Lynn Abbott, published in: “Tributaries, Journal of the Alabama Folklife Association”, 2002, Joey Brackner editor. It has to be mentioned, in addition, that the main […]
Posted in - Blues history, Butler May, Vaudeville
Tagged as: blues, butler may, early blues, vaudeville
Leave a comment