Paul Butterfield Band
"Walkin' Blues"
Paul Butterfield Blues Band
Paul Butterfield, one of the first blues harp players to cross over to rock, was born in 1942 in Chicago, Illinois, and began playing classical flute as a child. He also grew up listening to his father's jazz records, and in 1957 he and future bandmate Nick Gravenites began to catch blues acts in the clubs of the South Side. There he met and started jamming with the legends of the postwar blues scene-Muddy Waters, Little Walter Jacobs, Howlin’ Wolf, and others.
From the first, he began to craft his own style-unlike the older players, he didn’t tongue block (except to play octaves), and his phrases were often more drawn out than those of the Southside bluesmen.
n 1963 he and white teenage guitar virtuoso Michael Bloomfield lured a couple of Howlin' Wolf’s sidemen away from Wolf’s band to form the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. Fronted by Butterfield’s strong vocals and harp and augmented by Bloomfield’s searing guitar, the band landed a deal for their first LP with Electra in 1965, and also backed Bob Dylan when the folk hero famously defected to rock at the Newport Folk festival that year.
The first recording of the blues was in 1895. George W. Johnson's recording of "Laughing Song" was the first blues song to be recorded. Thereafter, blues songs began to appear in music rolls. The 1906 series of Music for the Aedian Grand, listed one blues title among the forty-nine music rolls.
The blues entered the forefront in 1920, when Mamie Smith's recordings of "Crazy Blues" and "It's Right Here for You" became popular and opened the doors to other blues singers. The record was priced at one dollar and sold 75,000 copies the first month of release.
The market for the recorded blues was almost entirely black during the 1920s and 1930s, and the records became known as "race records." Record companies advertised exclusively to blacks and only black stores sold the records. As a result of Smith's success, record companies seized the opportunity to make a profit in the new market. Companies searched for talented blues artists; singers such as Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey, Alberta Hunter, and Ethel Waters became popular blues artists. The popularity of the blues marked a new era for black music. It combined the styles of the past with a new type of song. The result was the creation of a style of music that would eventually contribute to the development of jazz.
"The blues is a tone that puts me in contact with a lot of things, culturally, spiritually, cosmically. I really enjoy it, and I'm not going to let it go, because it's that good." Click on the Hall of Fame Page to read biographys of all the greats. Just click their names and read. There is also some great reading and pictures about the Mississippi Delta and the Juke Joints. DougHiggins@bluesryder.com
Taj Mahal
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This site is dedicated to Mark Marchitto. He was my friend, together we found this wonderful music at an early age.....it will stay with us forever. I miss you my friend......
Mark Marchitto
1951-2001








