What is the difference between chicago and texas blues




















This is now the standard format for many rock bands. Jump blues: evolved out of Big Band. As the Big Band era faded, economic hardship forced many bands to downsize into smaller combos. As the dance-oriented Big Band sound adopted basic bar blues structure, a fun, upbeat, more dancable form of blues emerged. Some credit Jump Blues and particularly Louis Jordan with being a key evolutionary step toward the eventual birth of rock-and-roll.

Count Basie being the best example. This very danceable blues always had a big beat and often a big band with horns and arrangements. It also had elements of swing as well and again the musical styles all cross-pollinated and lead to music that was hard to pin down to any one name.

Whatever Kansas City brought to the blues table, it was welcome, and to me, one of the styles of blues I love the most. Clearly New Orleans was the birthplace of jazz.

Everyone agrees on that. But the blues tradition is a little harder to pin down. What happened after that is a little harder to say. Certainly the rich musical tradition that was already there was bound to influence them. They probably got pulled into the Gumbo just like all the other jazz, cajun, and vaudeville musicians. Certainly some blues guitarists stand out including Guitar Slim , Snooks Eaglin and Earl King , but none of these were heavily identified with a New Orleans sound. If anything, today, the New Orleans blues sound is a mix of blues, funk and almost second line grooves, that border on rhumbas.

Or at least rhumbas as defined by a blues musician. It seems you can always smell a bit of Professor Longhair and Dr. John in every New Orleans blues song. Another of those blues styles that is hard to pin down to one thing. Certainly Texas Blues has a lot of Chicago Blues in it but it also has a touch of rock and roll too. There does seem to be an attitude they all share. They have evolved the Texas sound to one of style and sophistication.

They carry on the tradition but also have their own thing to throw into the mix. West Coast Blues has the reputation of being sophisticated and jazzy. Steve S. Subject: Delta, Chicago, Texas Blues. From: Steve S Date: 27 Apr 98 - PM I am just getting into the Blues and I want to know what ypou think or if you know of any good books which can tell me the defining features of the styles of blues.

The kind of stuff that gets you in your throat when you listen to it. The pickup bar features a rolling double hammer-on on the D string, followed on beat one of bar 1 with an open low E and a trill on the G string to the major third, G , played simultaneously. Both the trill lick and the rolling double hammer on provide complementary melodic content to the insistent rhythm sounded on the lower strings.

Akin to FIGURE 1 , a repeated melodic pattern is established on the higher strings, alternating against the driving rhythm part on the lower strings.



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