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Paul Merry Blues and Rock.

Paul Merry Blues and Rock.

Unveiling the mystery of blues and rock history.

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Paul Merry Blues and Rock.
Paul Merry Blues and Rock.
Unveiling the mystery of blues and rock history.
  • When blues guitarists were counted on one hand.

    When blues guitarists were counted on one hand.

    ByPaul Merry August 10, 2018

    Black guitar owners – rare as gelding balls before 1890s. If you read my last post, you’ll know I featured Henry Sloan, the African-American farmer in Mississippi who taught Charlie Patton how to play early Delta Blues guitar around the turn of the 20th century. But where did Henry Sloan Henry – born in 1870, just…

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  • Blues guitarists before 1900 – the man who taught Charlie Patton

    Blues guitarists before 1900 – the man who taught Charlie Patton

    ByPaul Merry July 19, 2018

    “Always fun reading, Paul. Thanks.”  Jason Vivone  (@JVivone), leader of the Billy Bats, Kansas City. In this short series, I’m going to highlight four extremely influential, but mainly unknown nineteenth-century blues guitar pioneers, each of whom features in my blues history book, America’s Gift, at http://goo.gl/At5AZe These were the guys who did the spade-work for…

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  • Did boogie guitar start with a 14-year-old?

    Did boogie guitar start with a 14-year-old?

    ByPaul Merry June 25, 2018

    North East Texas. 1899. A tender-aged ‘songster’, as roaming black minstrels were known back then, had travelled from his home in Louisiana around 1899 to busk in neighbouring Texas. Whether the boy was 10, 11 or 14 depends on which birth date you believe – 1885, 1888 or 1889. All are given in his various biographies,…

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  • First blues families: the Thomas’s.

    First blues families: the Thomas’s.

    ByPaul Merry April 20, 2018

    George W. Thomas Jnr, Hersal and Hociel Thomas, Sippie Wallace (nee Thomas) and Bernice Edwards. Last time, we talked about the family of Henderson Chatmon, the ‘musicianer’, as musicians called themselves in the nineteenth century, from Bolton, Mississippi. Henderson, a former slave, and his wife Eliza, ran a family string band around the turn of the…

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  • First blues families: the Chatmons.

    First blues families: the Chatmons.

    ByPaul Merry April 16, 2018

    Is Bolton, Mississippi, the true birthplace of the blues? Anyone who knows the Mississippi Sheiks knows, at their core, were three sons of the nineteenth century ‘musicianer’, Henderson Chatmon, a one-time slave from Terry, Mississippi, noted for his brilliant violin playing at plantation square dances. Henderson, born around 1850, also ran a string band, the…

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