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The rise and downfall of Urban Blues

Termpaper, 2005, 20 Pages
Author: Lars Nemeth
Subject: American Studies - Culture and Applied Geography

Details

Event: The Afro - American Blues
Institution/College: Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg (Anglistik)
Tags: Urban, Blues, Afro, American, Blues
Category: Termpaper
Year: 2005
Pages: 20
Grade: 2
Bibliography: ~ 12  Entries
Language: English
Archive No.: V50400
ISBN (E-book): 978-3-638-46630-1

File size: 180 KB


Excerpt (computer-generated)

Carl von Ossietzki Universität Oldenburg
Seminar: Afro American Blues
Wintersemester 2004/05
7. Semester

The rise and downfall of Urban Blues

von: Lars Nemeth

 


Table of contents

1. Introduction 3

2. Which were the conditions that made this development take place in Chicago? 5

2.1 Migration 5
2.2 A new cultural context 6
2.3 The advanced technology 7

3. Chess 8

4. McKinley Morganfield aka Muddy Waters 10

4.1 The electric guitar 11
4.2 Lyrics 12
4.3 Godfathers and sons 13

5. “It`s like beeing black twice”  15

6. Conclusion 19

7. Bibliography 20




 

Introduction

The Urban Blues is a form of blues music that developed in the big cities in the U.S.. The one city that dominated this development is Chicago. That is why, often the Chicago Blues is meant when talking about Urban Blues. There is probably no other blues style with such a high quality of recognition considering form, feeling and sound like the Chicago Blues. It is based on the rough and direct Delta Blues which came in contact with urban life. Besides, Urban Blues is the first blues style that reached a mass audience. Not just in the bigger cities of the U.S. but also worldwide. One of the most popular musicians of those days is a man called Muddy Waters. He helped to transform a style and technique which guided bluesmusic into a new dimension. He adopted the rural delta blues sound and combined with the feeling of the new living conditions of the Afro Americans.

But the urban blues became more popular, left the black quarters and ghettos and was absorbed by the mainstream very soon. Urban blues, released from the subcultural status, a white mass audience and economy started to control the buisness. In the mid fifties the blues hybrid Rock`n Roll took over public attention and Blues and Rock `n Roll were delivered from the Afro American identity. At the end of this development there was a huge lack of authenticity for ‘black’ audience although it once was the Afro-American culture through which they expressed themselves. Consequently most parts of the afro american audience disappeared and started searching for a new musical home.

I will try to work out the development from the Urban Blues as an Afro-American identification and its rise until the downfall and alienation for the ‘black’ audience. I will proof this development by the example of the live and career of Muddy Waters and his record company Chess. His roots in the Mississippi Delta Blues, his reputation as one of the heads in Urban Chicago Blues and how he lost his native base and audience. Why did the Afro- Americans turn away from the blues? Why did they leave their cultural roots and where did they arrive, where did the Afro- American culture find their new home? First of all I will concentrate on the demographic, social and cultural changes the Afro American population caused to move in the big cities and how their life and living conditions changed. There were three social changes taking place in the first half of the twentieth century that led to urban blues.

2. Which were the conditions that made this development take place in Chicago?

2.1 Migration

Chicago experienced great growth in the first half of the twentieth century. There was the so-called “Great Migration” of World War I continuing through the post World War II period.1 The population of Afro-Americans in Chicago between the years 1900 and 1960 grew from a total of 30,150 ‘black’ inhabitants to 812,637. Remarkable is the increase between 1910 – 1920 (World War I) and between 1940 – 1950 (World War II).2 Most of the artists mainly came from the state of Mississippi, right where the so-called Delta Blues has its roots. Afro-Americans just followed the main transportation routes when they left their Southern homes. This led the people from Mississippi to Chicago and the people from Texas to California for instance. Chicago became a symbol of escapism for ‘blacks’ from the rural South.3

[...]


1 Carney, George O.: (table 15-1) pp. 242

2 Carney, George O.: p. 245

3 Carney, George O.: p. 244


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