Blues Music, Part 1

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2004-11-21

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VOICE ONE:

Welcome to THIS IS AMERICA, in VOA Special English. I'm Doug
Johnson. Today we have the first of two programs about the kind of
music called blues.

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No American form of music would be
what it is today without blues. The influence is heard not just in
rhythm and blues, but also jazz, country and rock and roll. What you
just heard was from a song called "Sweet Little Angel," by one of
the best-known blues musicians of all, B.B. King.

So where did blues come from? You could say it arrived hundreds
of years ago with the ships that brought slaves from Africa. These
men and women lost almost everything, but not their music.

They brought it with them. This music was played on simple
instruments. And it was sung by both men and women. Much of it also
had a beat that people danced to.

If you want to dance, music has to have a tempo that lets you
move with the music. Listen for a few moments to the great African
recording star Miriam Makeba. This song is called "Kwazulu."

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Could you hear the rhythm? It is hard to listen to that song and
not move your feet. You don't have to understand the language. You
just want to be part of the music.

Perhaps you want to tap your fingers in time with the music.
American blues almost always has this same kind of beat.

Musicians call this beat four-four time. This means the music has
four beats per measure, like this: one-two-three-four. A
quarter-note equals one beat. You can play it faster or slower, but
it is still a four-four beat.

Listen for a moment to this blues song and see if you can keep
time with the four-four beat. Just listen and tap your foot with the
music. The name of the song is "Dark Road Blues." The lead singer is
the great blues harmonica player Sonny Terry.

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Now that we understand the beat of blues music, let's discuss the
instruments. The first and perhaps the most important instrument in
blues is the human voice.

Blues began with the human voice. You can play blues without any
singing. But blues music is connected with the voice and always will
be.

Slaves often sang to help make the work in the fields easier.
Blues music grew out of these work songs. It also grew out of the
religious singing in black churches.

The next most important instrument in blues may be the guitar. It
became popular with black musicians in the South in the nineteen
twenties. The harmonica closely followed. If you add drums, a piano
and perhaps a bass violin, you have the instruments for a blues
band.

You can add other instruments -- really, as many as you want. But
blues music is usually played by small bands. Blues music first
became popular with the American public in the nineteen twenties.
The reason is simple.

Slavery ended in the late eighteen-hundreds, after the Civil War.
Thousands of black families left farm work in the South. Many moved
to cities to look for work and a better life. They brought blues
music with them. Many people in major cities heard this unusual
music for the first time.

Blues became popular in places outside the South like Chicago and
Kansas City. In fact, two kinds of blues are named after these
cities.

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Now, let's talk about one of the early great blues musicians and
play some of his music.

As we said, the guitar became popular in the nineteen twenties.
One of the early great guitar players was a young black man named
Robert Johnson. He also wrote the words to his songs and, like all
good blues musicians, he sang them.

Robert Johnson also recorded his songs, mostly in the early
nineteen thirties. These were not recorded on the best equipment.
Listen closely to a true master of blues. What you will hear is just
Robert Johnson with his guitar. The song is called "Come On In My
Kitchen."

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The work of Robert Johnson is still an influence in the world of
blues. Eric Clapton, the singer and guitarist, is one of the most
successful of all rock musicians. He says he learned blues by
listening to many Robert Johnson recordings.

Eric Clapton put together his own blues album called "Me and
Mister Johnson."

Now, listen to the same song you just heard. Only this time, the
recording equipment is the best that modern technology can produce.
And Eric Clapton plays an electric guitar. He has help from a piano,
drums and harmonica. But the music and the words are pure Robert
Johnson.

The song is as fresh and alive today as when Robert Johnson wrote
it.

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So today we looked at the very beginnings of a music form that
first became popular with the American public in the nineteen
twenties. We talked about the instruments. And we listened to some
proof of the lasting influence of Robert Johnson.

Next week, learn more about the history of the blues. We will
play some great sounds of the past. And we will play songs by some
of the top blues performers of today.

We leave you with a song by another one of the truly great blues
artists. His name was McKinley Morganfield. Most people have never
heard that name.

Come back next week and we'll tell you the name he used on stage.
For now, just listen. The song is called "Soon Forgotten."

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Our program was written and produced by Paul Thompson. I'm Doug
Johnson. Join us for part two of our blues program next week on THIS
IS AMERICA, in VOA Special English.


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