HILLMAN BLUES DEMO
Large print version for projection or print out
http://www.hillmanweb.com/bluesdemo.html
Popular music over the last 100
years has been driven by the blues & C/W (white guys' blues).
Woven into all forms of pop,
folk, gospel, jazz, rock, country.
Many form variations -- many
great riffs and rhythms
Procedure: Integrate landmark
songs/artists and sample riffs
Over the past 50 years we've
enjoyed playing a wide variety of styles and genres:
rock 'n' roll, country, big
band, folk, western, old time, rock, bluegrass,
pop, gospel, country rock, originals,
cajun . . . and every combination of the above. . .
but we keep returning to the
music that forms the bedrock of so many of the music styles we enjoy
. . . the Blues.
My first influences, when I started
to learn guitar and songs back in the '50s,
were largely blues-based, although
I didn't realize it at the time.
I grew up on a farm on the Canadian
prairies -- not exactly the heart of black blues culture.
I didn't have access to the
records or airplay of the blues greats
but the music on the records
I played day and night owed a great deal to
. . . the Blues.
Two Bridges to Blues Roots for
me were
Elvis and Sam Phillips' Sun
Records artists from Memphis and
Lonnie Donegan's Skiffle
Band from the UK in the '50s.
. . . these and many more
of their songs were . . . the Blues.
Elvis's success launched the
birth of a music form that would change the world: rock & roll.
This "new" music form was really
just a fusion of blues, country and gospel.
Indeed the main criticisms of
this new R&R music were actually of
the elements that make a good
blues song or performance:
-
simple chord structure and words,
-
repetitive lyrics and hooks,
-
heavy backbeat
-
"muh babee dun me wrong" themes,
-
racy lyrics full of double entendres,
-
many references to street life (booze,
drugs, sex, sin)
-
slurred southern accents,
-
slang and bad grammar,
-
over-reliance on distorted guitars
and pounding pianos,
-
singer-penned lyrics,
-
gospel/blues screams,
-
suggestive body movements,
-
sometimes far out clothing styles
-
gospel choruses. . .
all characteristics that every blues
aficionado looks for in . . . the Blues.
My music listening marathons,
guitar practice sessions and
record-buying frenzy now branched
out to encompass a wildly eclectic mix of performers
-- but the fuel that propelled
most of the music created by these artists was
. . . the Blues:
The other major influence at
this time came from the UK:
Lonnie Donegan and Skiffle
Music
This Scottish singer became
obsessed with American blues records --
even old blues artist Lonnie
Johnson inspired Donegan to adopt the first name Lonnie.
He had a string of hit records
and sold-out concert appearances
based on American blues songs
instilled with a British music hall and folk flavour:
Inspired a whole generation
to take up guitar -
and was a big influence on the
birth of Rock n Roll --
many Brits including the Beatles
-- acknowledge Donegan and the skiffle craze -- and Elvis.
Skiffle: washboard, tea chest
bass, kazoo, cigar-box fiddle, comb and paper, guitar, banjo
a sort of jug band style having
beginnings in 1900s in US
but revived by Chris Barber's
Trad Band
Lonnie the banjo player did
a vocal and it became a great hit
Soon Skiffle groups all over
the UK including the Quarrymen (Beatles)
Added to the mix was a long
parade of recordings by:
Little Richard, Chuck
Berry, Fats Domino, Bill Haley and the Comets, all the Rock-a-Billy guys,
a whole parade of one-hit-wonders, Louis Armstrong, Paul Whiteman, Jimmie
Rodgers, Dinah Washington, Ray Charles, Mahalia Jackson, the Staples Family,
Lonnie Mack, Bob Dylan and many of the artists from the folk craze.
When the British Invasion with The
Stones, Beatles, Animals, et al arrived it started to dawn on general audiences
. . . and myself . . . that the driving force behind so much of the popular
music we had been listening to since the mid-'50s was
. . . the Blues.
Largely unrecognized old blues
singers, many of whom had spent a lifetime living a hand-to-mouth existence
on the road or playing dingy juke joints came out of relative obscurity
or retirement to receive long overdue recognition, and, in some cases,
to salvage some of the royalty payments that had been denied them for so
many years. The world had finally recognized an important roots music
. . . the Blues.
REFS: Galaxie Blues on Cable
~ Satellite Radio ~ Internet Downloads ~ Many CD compilations ~ Many small
clubs
SO. . .
My two bridges to Blues Roots
were:
Elvis and Sam Phillips' Sun
Records artists from Memphis and
Lonnie Donegan's Skiffle
Band from the UK in the '50s.
SAMPLE SONGS AND PLAYING
STYLES
SUN RECORDS GUITAR PRIMER
Walk the Line/Folsom ~ CGF ~ LUTHER Runs
and Damping ~ First Guitar Lessons
Sun Records
Johnny Cash first major hit ~ Luther lesson ~ Walk Line movie
That's All Right Mama:
~ E ~ FINGER-STYLE E
Arthur "Big
Boy" Crudup wrote and recorded in 1946. RCA's first R&B 45 rpm single
in 1948.
Not a hit
until Elvis recorded it as his first record in summer 1954 at Sun Studios
Scotty Moore
on lead -- Bill Black Bass (Bill Black Combo) ~ Elvis on rhythm
Blue Moon
of Kentucky -- Bill Monroe Bluegrass BANJO G
FOLSOM PRISON BLUES ~ E ~ Cash updated ~ I
combine Damping/Finger/Rhythm
Lawdy Miss Clawdy
~ A ~ HIGH CHUG STRIP
Elvis First album ~ 1952 Lloyd
Price ~ done by scores after Elvis ~
Rhythm used by Bill Black Combo later STICK BEAT E
You Ain't Nothin' But A Hound
Dog ~ A ~ HEAVY SLOW CHUGGIN
Second great
hit "Big Mama" Willie Mae Thornton 1953 Johnny Otis band
- by Leiber
& Stoller - covered by Janis Joplin ~ Also her other big song - Ball
and Chain
Hootchie Kootchie Man ~ A ~
STRIPPER BEAT ~ STRING BENDS
Willie Dixon song - Muddy Waters
hit
SKIFFLE & DONEGAN
Rock Island Line: ~ E
~ LUTHER & FAST STROKE
Leadbelly -- Donegan ~ A Cash early recordings on Sun records Luther Guitar
riff - tempo - talking blues
(Midnight
Special ~ E ~ Leadbelly song ~ Donegan hit ~ Also CCR)
How Long Blues
~ E ~ SLOW BOOGIE segue to Guitar Boogie ~ Donegan ~ Leroy Carr 1929
(Reconsider
Baby ~ E ~ SLOW BERRY)
1954 Lowell
Fulson recording ~ Elvis comeback album after army
Wild dirty
Boots Randolph Sax solo and Elvis on great Rhythm
What'd I Say ~ E ~ SYNCHO
CLAW
Ray Charles
- Gospel influenced "call and response style" electric piano -
came out
of an improv - covered by almost all the Sun artists
Hi-Heeled Sneakers
~ C ~ NEWBEAT
1964 Tommy
Tucker - even covered by Dale Hawkins
Riff - New
Beats ~ evolve into faster Slow Down
Slow Down ~ C ~
FAST DOWN STROKE C ~ Larry Williams 1958 ~ Beatles Cover
(Suzie-Q
~E ~ CLAW RIFF TOMS)
Dale Hawkins
~ James Burton Tele player later with Ricky Nelson, Elvis, Emmylou Harris
My Babe ~ D ~ DROP D
TUNING
Willie Dixon 1955
Circle
Be Unbroken ~ G ~ GOSPEL ROCK HAND CLAP ~ SMOKE
Gospel Root
of much -Much cross over -- many got start in gospel
Southern
Baptist -church singing - handclapping
SOME JAM SONGS:
FOLSOM PRISON BLUES
LONG BLACK VEIL
SMOKE ON WATER
BEFORE YOU ‘CUSE ME A
AIN’T THAT LOVIN’ YOU BABY E
ANYWAY YOU WANT ME "GOIN' UP GOIN' DOWN"
E A
BRING IT ON HOME F
TROUBLE IN MIND F E
FEVER
PUKATAWALKIN’ BLUES E
ALBERTA / 9 POUND HAMMER
RISING SUN
MATCHBOX / FLIP FLOP & FLY
BONEY MARONY
MONEY
PETER GUNN / GREEN ONIONS / HONKY TONK
SEA CRUISE
SPAIN
WALK RIGHT BACK
EQUIPMENT
GUITARS
Fender Telecaster - old standard - 1964 pre-CBS
- solidbody - one of first electrics
Fender Telecaster - Thinline - early '70s - two humbucking
pickups - hollow cavity
Fender Telcaster - new J-5 signature model - hum bridge
& standard tele pup neck
. . . See CD insert for others in the collection
Bigsby Tremolo arm on each
Home-made B-Bender on each
Light strings 09
Light pick
2 rosewood and 1 maple fingerboard
Volume and Tone
Bridge treble - neck softer
AMP
Fender Twin
All tubes -- warmer - more natural sustain
30 or 100 watts
2-12" speakers
3 channels
Footswitch: clean ~ 1st overdrive ~ second overdrive
Reverb
Tone controls
Tilt
EFFECTS PEDALS
Volume sustain
Overdrive distortion
Echo Delay
Octave
Chorus
Equalizer
TRICKS
chords
open string keys E, G, A, C, D
barre chords
capo
bends
vibrato
damping
pick and fingers
hammer on
stick pick
pick up and down
Carter picking
slide/bottleneck
feedback
whammy bar effects
B-bender
echo delay
distortion
octave doubling
volume sustain
chorus
FROM OUR BRANDON UNIVERSITY
SITE
HILLMAN GIG NOTES
50 Years of Music Memories
www.hillmanweb.com/book/gigs
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