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The Devil's Music: A History Of The Blues
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Specifications
  • The Devil's Music: A History of the Blues available on February 06 2024 from BiggerBooks for 11.35
  • The Devil's Music: A History Of The Blues available on May 20 2016 from Amazon for 9.20
  • ISBN bar code 9780306807435 ξ2 registered February 06 2024
  • ISBN bar code 9780306807435 ξ3 registered May 20 2016
  • ISBN bar code 9780306807435 ξ1 registered September 21 2015
  • Product category is Book
  • Manufacturered by Da Capo Press

  • # 9780306807435R

  • Product weight is 1 lbs.
Brand Name: Oakley, Giles Mfg#: 9780306807435 Shipping Weight: 1.00 lbs Manufacturer: Genre: All music products are properly licensed and guaranteed authentic. Superbly researched and vividly written, The Devil's Music is one of the only books to trace the rise and development of the blues both in relation to other forms of black music and in the context of American social history as experienced by African Americans. From its roots in the turn-of-the-century honky-tonks of New Orleans and the barrelhouses and plantations of the Mississippi Delta to modern legends such as John Lee Hooker and B. B. King, the blues comes alive here through accounts by the blues musicians themselves and those who knew them. Throughout this wide-ranging and fascinating book, Giles Oakley describes the texture of the life that made the blues possible, and the changing attitudes toward the music. The Devil's Music is a wholehearted and loving examination of one of America's most powerful traditions.

References
    ^ (1976). The Devil's Music: A History of the Blues (revised Sep 2015)
    ^ (2015). The Devil's Music: A History of the Blues BiggerBooks. (revised Feb 2024)
    ^ The Devil's Music: A History Of The Blues, Da Capo Press. Amazon. (revised May 2016)

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Very comprehensive; from Slavery era through the 60s, provides a long list of the men and women who created the blues and the following generations that assimilated and popularized them. Discusses the social, economic and political forces that influenced them as well. Good educational read. Pretty much ends at the Muddy Waters/BB King heyday of the 60s. If you're looking more for the modern blues (the Alberts, Buddy Guy, Clapton, Hendrix, SRV even) then this one is not for y..
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