Blues Music, Part 2

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2004-11-28

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Welcome to THIS IS AMERICA, in VOA Special English. I'm Doug
Johnson. This week ... the second of our two programs about the
history of blues music.

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If you listened last week, you heard that song. It's called "Soon
Forgotten." It is one of thousands of great blues songs. You might
remember that we said it was sung by McKinley Morganfield. Who is
that?

McKinley Morganfield was much
better known as Muddy Waters, one of the greatest blues musicians of
all. He died in nineteen eighty-three. He left a lasting influence
on blues music.

Muddy Waters grew up in the American South, in the area by the
mouth of the Mississippi River called the Mississippi Delta. Blues
also grew up in the Mississippi Delta. Muddy Waters learned blues
guitar from Robert Johnson there. Robert Johnson was another big
influence on this kind of music. We talked about him last week.

Muddy Waters left Mississippi and moved north to Illinois in
nineteen forty-three. It was in Chicago that the American public
came to know him. It was in Chicago that Muddy Waters put together
bands of several musicians. These bands played a kind of music that
was soon called Chicago Blues.

Muddy Waters made Chicago Blues famous. And Chicago Blues helped
make Muddy Waters famous. His first big hit was with a recording of
an old Mississippi Delta blues song called "I Can't Be Satisfied."

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The great guitar work you heard was also Muddy Waters. Soon after
he recorded that song, he began playing electric guitar. The
electric guitar became another strong voice for blues music.

With an electric guitar, blues musicians could add more to their
music. The electric guitar permitted them to create sounds that were
not really possible before.

For a moment, we would like you to listen to the man who is
perhaps the best-known blues guitarist today, B.B. King. Listen to
him and Lucille. Lucille is what he named his electric guitar. The
song is called "How Blue Can You Get?"

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B.B. King makes Lucille almost
talk. She seems to speak a language. You might not understand the
words, but you can understand the meaning. B.B. King and Lucille
create all of the feeling and emotion that is the tradition of blues
music.

The human voice was the first blues instrument. It still is.
Lucille can get very close, but you still need the human voice for
blues.

The words in blues music almost always tell a story. The words
are usually simple and easy to remember. Usually, the opening line
of a song is repeated and then followed by a third line that rhymes.
It's like a poem.

That B.B. King song we just played begins with these lines:

"I've been downhearted baby, ever since the day we met.

"I say, I've been downhearted baby, ever since the day we met.

"You know our love is nothing but the blues. Baby, how blue can
you get?

Those words were meant to be sung by someone who really knows how
to sing the blues.

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To feel "blue" is to feel sad or disappointed. The Historical
Dictionary of American Slang says this term was in use by the late
seventeen hundreds.

To "sing the blues," however, meant to complain, especially in
the kind of sing-song voice of a child unhappy about a rainy day.
The expression "singing the blues" goes back at least to nineteen
eighteen.

Today a lot of people pay good money to hear musicians sing the
blues. But what about the future?

Many blues musicians are playing and recording today. One of them
is a young woman named Shemekia Copeland. She was born in nineteen
seventy-nine. Shemekia Copeland grew up listening to blues. Her
father is the famous blues musician Johnny Copeland.

Listen as Shemekia Copeland sings a song from "Wicked," one of
her albums. The name of the song is "The Other Woman."

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Some people will try to tell you that blues music is sad. The
words may be sad. But the music has always been a way to lift the
soul, a kind of medicine for dealing with hard times.

Blues music came from the Mississippi Delta. It came from the
cotton fields of North Carolina. It came from the red dirt farms of
Georgia.

Blues music began as very much a part of the black experience in
America. The beat and the vocal tradition came with the slaves from
Africa. But, years later, it grew into an American form of music
like no other.

Today, blues music comes from everywhere. Johnny Lang, a popular
artist, is not even from the South. He is from North Dakota. His
first album came out in nineteen ninety-seven. He was immediately
recognized as a top blues performer. And Johnny Lang was only
sixteen years old.

We end our program with the modern sound of blues music as
performed by Johnny Lang. The song is called "Lie To Me!"

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Our program was written and produced by Paul Thompson. I'm Doug
Johnson. To send us e-mail, write to special@voanews.com. Join us
again next week for THIS IS AMERICA, in VOA Special English.


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