How to Describe Blues Music

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Contributors: Andranick Tanguiane, Fred Lerdahl,

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How to Describe Blues Music

The blues is a genre of music that is steeped in history and tradition. This music has its roots in the African-American experience, and it is a genre that has been passed down from generation to generation. blues is a type of music that is characterized by its soulful, emotive sound. This music often tells a story of hardship and struggle, and it is this raw, honest quality that has made the blues so popular.

The Origins of the Blues

The blues is a genre of music that originated in the African-American communities in the United States around the end of the 19th century. The style of music is characterized by blue notes, 12-bar blues progressions, call-and-response patterns, and an emphasis on the vocals. The blues has been a major influence on other genres of music, including jazz, rock and roll, and country.

The African American experience

The blues is a style of music that originated in African American communities in the American South in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It developed from and is related to the spirituals, work songs, field hollers, shouts and chants of African American slaves and laborers. The term “blues” refers to the blue notes—flattened third, fifth and seventh notes—that are characteristic of the music.

The blues evolved from informal performances held in bars, dance halls and on street corners to becoming one of the most important musical genres in America. In the 1930s and 1940s, both urban and rural blues scenes developed, with Chicago becoming an important center for electric blues—a style that would go on to have a significant impact on rock and roll. The blues has had a lasting influence on many other genres of music, including jazz, rhythm and blues, rock and roll and country.

The influences of work songs and field hollers

The blues developed from work songs and field hollers, which were sung by workmen such as field hands, stevedores, and prisoners. These songs were often accompanied by clapping or stomping to keep time. The lyrical content of the early blues revolved around topics such as work, drinking, sex, and hanging out.

The first appearance of the blues is often dated back to 1901, when W.C. Handy published “The Memphis Blues”. However, the first recordings of the blues were made in 1920 by Mamie Smith and her Jazz Hounds. These recordings were made possible by the invention of the phonograph, which allowed for mass production and distribution of records.

The Elements of the Blues

The basic elements of blues music are simple. They include a strong beat, simple chords, and a catchy melody. But the heart of the blues is the feeling that it conveys. The best way to describe blues music is to say that it is music that makes you feel good.

The 12-bar blues chord progression

One of the defining features of blues music is the 12-bar blues chord progression. This progressions is so fundamental to blues music that it has been adopted by musicians in other genres, such as rock and roll and jazz.

The 12-bar blues chord progression is built using three chords, which are typically referred to as the “I,” “IV,” and “V” chords. In the key of C, these chords would be C, F, and G. The progression starts with the I chord, then moves to the IV chord for two bars, then back to the I chord for one bar. This pattern then repeats itself for a total of 12 bars.

The following example shows how this progression would look in the key of C:

I IV I I IV IV I I V IV I V
C F C C F F C C G F C G

The use of blue notes

One of the most distinctive features of blues music is the use of blue notes. A blue note is a note that is played at a slightly lower pitch than usual. This gives the music a sadder, more melancholy sound.

The use of blue notes is thought to have originated with African American musicians who were trying to imitate the sound of their homeland. They would sing or play their instruments in a way that made the notes sound “bluesy.” Over time, this style of playing became known as the blues.

Today, the use of blue notes is one of the things that makes blues music so distinctive. If you listen to a blues song, you will likely hear some notes that are played slightly “off” from the rest. This gives the music its characteristic sound.

The call and response format

In blues, the lead singer or lead instrument wails or “calls”, and the band or background singers respond or “answer”. This back and forth interaction is sometimes referred to as a “call and response.” The call can be in the form of a vocalized phrase, harmonic riff or instrumental solo. Theresponse is usually a sung phrase, but might also be an instrumental figure.

The Styles of the Blues

There are many different styles of blues music, from the classic Mississippi Delta sound to the more modern Chicago style. Each style has its own unique characteristics that make it distinctive.

Country blues

Country blues is perhaps the most direct ancestor of rock and roll. It developed in the rural south in the 1920s and 1930s, and it is characterized by its simple compositions and down-home lyrics. Country blues is typically played on acoustic guitar or harmonica, and it often features a distinctive, mournful slide guitar sound. The best-known exponents of country blues are Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters, and Son House.

Urban blues

Urban blues is a style of blues music that developed in the mid-1950s in Chicago and other urban areas of the Midwestern United States. It quickly became popular, appealing to a wider audience than the rural blues styles.

Musically, urban blues refers to the type of 12-bar blues that was played by small jazz bands in nightclubs, rather than the more solo-based music found in country settings. The typical instrumentation for an urban blues band includes a guitar, bass, drums, piano, and sometimes horns.

Urban blues sometimes incorporates elements of other genres, such as gospel or rock and roll. This can be seen in the use of electric guitars and amplification, which were originally adapted from those used in rock and roll.

The term “urban blues” is sometimes used interchangeably with “city blues” or “modern electric blues”, but there are important differences between these styles. “City blues” usually refers to a more modern style that developed in the 1970s and 1980s, while “urban blues” is generally used to describe the earlier style of the 1950s and 1960s.

Chicago blues

Chicago blues is a style of blues music that developed in Chicago, Illinois in the 1950s. The style is marked by a strong guitar riff and a 12-bar chord progression. Chicago blues is often played with a horn section.

The Legacy of the Blues

The history of the blues is often misunderstood. There is no one “blues sound.” Rather, the blues is a feel, or an emotion. It’s a way of life. The blues is a story, and it’s a feeling.

The influence on other genres of music

Blues music has had a large influence on other genres of music, such as jazz and rock and roll. The blues scale, which is a minor pentatonic scale with an added flat fifth, or blue note, is the basis for many other scales used in popular music. The 12-bar blues chord progression is also commonly used in other styles of music.

The blues has been a major influence on later American and Western popular music, finding expression in jazz, big band, rhythm and blues, rock and roll, country music, folk music, and gospel. The blues influenced various music genres that developed later. For instance, rock and roll originally developed from a fusion of black Rhythm & Blues with white country music. Pop music has incorporated elements of the blues throughout its history. Country blues songs were occasionally adopted by early hillbilly musicians such as Jimmie Rodgers and Ernest Tubb; Rodgers’ “Blue Yodel” (1931) was adapted from a song identified in print as a ” negro blue yodel”.

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