05-
Louisiana Blues Louisiana blues gave birth to many styles, among them the New Orleans Second Line, the Zydeco, Swamp Pop and the Jazz.
The music is not very defined, in the records of Bayout Blues (or Swamp Blues) feel lazy rhythm and ambience of fate as if it had been carried out in a swamp, river, just the bayou.
Among Artists: Slim Harpo, Silas Hogan, Lazy Lester, Lightin 'Slim and Lonesome Sundown.
06-Country Blues
E 'a style that expresses all forms of acoustic blues, and covers all regional styles, such as the Mississippi Delta, the Piedmont, the first Chicago style, the pre-electric Louisiana and Atlanta.
The country blues covers all variants of the first blues guitar like folk, blues Songster (performed by great artists such as Mance Lipscomb and Leadbelly) and Ragtime (Blind Blake).
representative Artists: Blind Blake, Mississippi John Hurt, Skip James, Leadbelly, Bukka White, John Lee Hooker, Holmes Brothers, JBLenoir.
07- And Jump Blues' style with a clear jazz influences that saw the limelight in the mid 40s.
E 'characterized by a singer with an orchestra of wind instruments create a style with a driving rhythm and vocals of tenor sax solo.
All the elements that later led to the birth of rock 'n roll.
The Jump, with less strings, it becomes the bridge between old styles and the sound of the great jazz orchestras of the 40s.
The most representative artists are: Jay McShann, Nat King Cole, Al Sears, Ella Mae Morse, Helen Humes, Louis Jordan.
08-Piedmont Blues
The Piedmont is also known as Piedmont Blues Fingerstyle.
It refers to a distinctive regional style of the musicians blacks in southeastern Georgia, the Carolinas and Virginia.
This style uses a complex method guitar arpeggio, highly syncopated, accompanied by an alternation of the bass, with a result very similar to ragtime.
Artists: Josh White KCDouglas, Blind Willie McTell and Blind Willie.
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