[150 years ago this week, the great W.C. Handy was born. So this week I’ve AmericanStudied Handy and other icons of the Blues, leading up to this special weekend post on some contemporary Blues greats!]
One
telling song from each of a handful of 21st century Bluesmen &
-women.
1)
Gary Clark Jr.’s “12 Bar
Blues”: I’m obviously far from an expert (and welcome responses in comments
as always), but from what I can tell no 21st century American artist
is more grounded in the Blues tradition than Gary Clark Jr. (about whom I’ve written
a good bit through one of my favorite
21st century songs). And for proof, check out that hyperlinked
video of Clark playing, teaching, & analyzing the genre’s core elements
through his “12 Bar Blues.”
2)
Barbara Carr’s “If You Can’t
Cut the Mustard”: As I highlighted in Friday’s post, female Blues artists like
Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith have long pushed the boundaries of sexuality, and so
it’s only fitting that one of the 21st century’s most successful
Blues singers has consistently done the same. I could have chosen any number of
Carr’s classics, but who can resist the line “If you can’t cut the mustard, I don’t
want you licking around the jar”?
3)
Buddy Guy’s “Blues Don’t Lie”:
A protégé of another of my Friday post subjects, Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy has
brought the Chicago Blues into the 21st century. And despite being
87 years old, he hasn’t slowed down in the slightest—this song was the title
track from his acclaimed 2022 album The
Blues Don’t Lie, which won 2023
Blues Music Awards for both Album of the Year and Song of the Year.
4)
Lil’ Ed & the Blues
Imperials’ “Bluesmobile”: Another Chicago Blues legend from the generation
after Guy’s, Lil’ Ed Williams has two Blues Music Awards of his own (and six
other nominations), all for Band of the Year with the Blues Imperials. The
Imperials have released ten albums over the last thirty-five years, so there
are plenty of songs to choose from in this spot—but at the risk of repeating
myself, who can resist a great metaphor for how the Blues can transport us to
another place?
5)
Jaspects’ “Peachtree Blues”
(featuring Janelle Monáe): Monáe is one of our most unique contemporary
artists, a reflection (like Gary Clark Jr. certainly is as well) of how all our
musical genres have become more interconnected and cross-pollinating here in
the 21st century. But I’m highlighting this particular song not only
because it’s a collaboration with another contemporary Blues group, but also
because of a central lyric that implies the important question of where the
Blues go from here: “A lonely night on Peachtree/clubs are closed; it’s only
three.”
Next
series starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Blues figures or contexts you’d highlight?
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