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Description of Chicago Blues

 
At one time, Chicago Blues meant any blues played through an amplifier. Countless Delta-bred musicians migrated to Chicago in the 1930s and '40s. These musicians married the rolling rhythms and sparse Country Blues sound of the South to the humming stewpot of the Chicago club scene, creating a loud, mean and dirty sound they constantly turned up so it could be heard over the din of a major city. Howlin' Wolf, Elmore James and Muddy Waters formed some of the first amplified blues bands with fellow servicemen recently discharged from duty. The line-up usually consisted of slide guitar, harmonica, a rock-solid rhythm section and barrelhouse piano with a singer shouting at the top of his lungs to be heard over the ungodly amount of distortion. Eventually the scene expanded to include the stark precision of Otis Rush's soul-flavored blues and the Boogie Rock of Jimmy Reed and Robert Nighthawk. Chicago Blues lives today with the continuing work of Buddy Guy and James Cotton as well as an ever-growing list of newcomers to the scene.
 

Chicago Blues Key Tracks

 
 

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Chicago Blues Key Artists

 
Big Walter "Shakey" Horton

Finessed and soulful harp
player Big Walter has been
churning out classic
Harmonica Blues since the
1940s.

Buddy Guy

Even though he sometimes
wears polka dot spandex,
Buddy Guy is a blazing
showman and powerful
force in Modern Blues cir...

Charlie Musselwhite

One of the first white
bluesmen to make a name
for himself thanks to his
passionate, direct skills on
the harmonica.

Hound Dog Taylor

Perpetually on-fire slide
guitarist for whom Chicago's
famed Alligator Records was
formed. With his band the
Houserockers, Hound Do...

Howlin' Wolf

Delta bluesman Howlin' Wolf
was one of the most
influential musicians of the
post-World War II era, and
his electric Chicago blues...

Koko Taylor

Koko Taylor has a shattering
voice that can swoop from a
raspy low groan to gritty,
high notes with amazing
power. Taylor's most rec...

Lil' Ed Williams

Blistering slide blues with
Chicago stylings and a
bloodline that goes back to
J.B. Hutto. Hound Dog
Taylor fans take note.

Little Walter

Little Walter (born Marion
Walter Jacobs in 1930) is
generally considered the
most influential harp player
in all of blues. He quit sch...

Muddy Waters

Bluesman Muddy Waters
defined Chicago's post-war
blues scene with his skillful
slide guitar and growling
vocals. Muddy Waters wa...

Otis Rush

Rush's tortured, intense
music became one of the
trademarks of Chicago
Blues. His early sides are
positively blistering.

Paul Butterfield

Butterfield's ferocious harp
work made him one of the
first white players who
could sit in with early-'60s
Chicago Blues-men. Unde...

Sonny Boy Williamson

Influential harmonica player
Sonny Boy Williamson was a
hilarious and heartbreaking
beacon of blues until his
death in 1965.

Sonny Boy Williamson I

Williamson basically wrote
the language for blues
harmonica. In 1948,
Williamson was murdered
outside a bar in Chicago, I...

Willie Dixon

Dixon provided the bass
bottom for countless '50s
Chess tracks; he later
performed his own
bellowing blues numbers.

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