Uncensored History of the Blues

[email protected] (Mike Rugel)

Mike Rugel and the Delta Blues Museum take a raw look at the early history of blues music. Each show includes a series of pre-war blues tracks along with context and exposition. Visit www.deltabluesmuseum.org or Uncensored History of the Blues blog at www.purplebeech.com/blues.

  • Coronavirus Special - Disease Blues
    If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element This time we’ll revisit songs about disease. There have been a lot of comparisons to the Spanish Flu epidemic of 1918. The epidemic was still fairly recent when Blind Willie Johnson recorded this song in 1928 and surely remembered well by Johnson who would have been 21 years old in 1918. The song is pure
    6 April 2020, 6:03 pm
  • Robert Johnson and Records
    If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element Robert Johnson was both a consumer and creator of records. We look at what he listened to and how it led to two of his songs, Robert Johnson - Phonograph Blues Mississippi Sheiks - Sitting On Top of the World Tampa Red - Things about Comin' My Way Skip James - Devil Got My Woman Robert Johnson - Come on
    29 May 2017, 10:13 pm
  • The Mississippi Roots of John Lee Hooker
    If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element We’ll take a look at the Mississippi John Lee Hooker, his roots and influences, the music that impacted him when he was young. John Lee Hooker’s music has an undeniable urban grit that came from his detroit surroundings, but Mississippi was at his core and you could hear it in every song he ever recorded.
    10 August 2016, 12:56 am
  • Show 68 - Short-Haired Woman
    If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element Songs about the tight-haired woman, short-haired and bald-headed woman are a type of insult song. Many include one of the classic floating verses: "Babe you know I did more for you than the good Lord ever done. You know I bought you some hair because he sure didn't give you none." Charley Jordan
    27 July 2016, 12:25 am
  • Show 67 - Back-biting Man
    If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element "They call me a back biter, I’ll bite any man in the back." There’s nothing unusual about cheating songs in the blues. Stepping put on your man or woman could be considered one of the cornerstones of the genre. Today we’ll take a look at a specific subset of those songs: men who stole their friend’s
    23 January 2015, 3:56 pm
  • Show 66 - Biographical Mysteries
    If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element The New York Times ran a fascinating story about Elvie Thomas where the author uncovered a lot of new biographical details and interviewed folks that knew her decades after she’d made blues records in 1930 or 1931. Elvie Thomas was found to be a Texan who’d left the blues for the church and who lived until
    16 July 2014, 4:58 pm
  • Show 65 - Snitcher's Blues
    If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element A few years back, the Stop Snitching movement received a lot of attention in the media with high profile rappers and athletes using songs and films to urge people not to cooperate with police investigating crimes. Of course, disdain for snitchers was nothing new and there have always songs about the
    7 March 2014, 6:32 pm
  • Show 64 - Where the Weather Suits My Clothes
    If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element I think I'm going back down South where the weather suits my clothes. Variations on that line appear in a lot of blues songs. In the context of the great African-American migration to the North, leaving Chicago or Detroit to return South for the better weather can be a metaphor for a few things. The
    16 December 2013, 2:42 am
  • Show 63 - Drink Brands
    If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element Some blues singers were clearly paid to advertise products. In later years, b.b. king sang songs to famously sold peptikon and sonny boy williamson king biscuit flour. Were gonna take a look at some early songs that may be ads or may just be folks singing about products they enjoy. J.T "Funny Paper"
    17 October 2013, 7:05 pm
  • Show 62 - Historical Figures and the Law
    If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element Many blues songs feature real historical figures. Some are figures who operate on both side of the law, sometimes straddling that divide. These are all folks from Memphis, North Mississippi and Arkansas. We'll start with a song about a man Jim Kinane, the man who ran the Memphis underworld including
    1 July 2013, 2:29 am
  • Show 61 - Preacher Blues
    If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element As frequently as the blues was called the devil's music, it's no surprise that blues singers had a little something to say about preachers as well. There are plenty of songs about the hypocrite that says one thing from the pulpit, while he's stealing your crops or your woman. Hi Henry Brown sang about
    9 April 2013, 11:04 pm
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