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Smokestack Lightnin' Home Page' -- The Blues Profile Page
Kansas City Blues is a genre of blues music. It has spawned
the Kansas City Blues & Jazz festival and the Kansas City Blues
Society.
Kansas
Although Kansas City, Missouri is known primarily for jazz, it
has also contributed to the history of and the preservation of
the blues.
Kansas City did not enter into blues history until the 1940s.
Kansas City blues artists Pete Johnson and Big Joe Turner
recorded a style of music called jump blues, which later
provided the foundation for rhythm and blues, and later rock and
roll. Charlie Parker dabbled in the blues in the late 1940s with
his release of the hit 'Now's the Time', a bebop jazz number
that gave a nod to the popularity of the blues in Kansas City,
by using the familiar blues pentatonic scale and blue notes.
The blues scene in Kansas City produced Jay McShann, Sonny
Kenner, Little Hatch and Cotton Candy and the blues was popular
in small nightclubs and after-hours jam sessions. Many Kansas
City musicians would finish their 'paying' gigs at weddings,
jazz clubs etc. and then pack up and head to the 18th and
Vine-Downtown East, Kansas City district to participate in
all-night parties that would sometimes continue well into
daylight. The 18th & Vine jam sessions continue today at Kansas
City's Musician's Foundation. The Musician's Foundation has
immunity from liquor laws, and has not changed its look since
the 1940s.
Notable Kansas City blues artists
Sonny Kenner - June 2, 1933 – January 23, 2001
Clarence 'Sonny' Kenner spent a lifetime entertaining audiences,
both in Kansas City and around the world. Born into a family of
entertainers, Kenner grew up only a block away from what is now
the Kansas City Musicians Foundation. During his career he
shared the stage with Bob Hope, Quincy Jones, Redd Foxx and
Charlie Parker. 'I could hardly play when I was on stage with
'Bird,' remembered Kenner. 'I was too busy just trying to listen
to him! He was a real idol of mine.' Over the years Kenner
became friends with Redd Foxx. 'We'd hang out together after
shows and he would take me to all the parties. I couldn't
believe all the movie stars I used to see at those things.'
Little Hatch - October 25, 1921 – January 16, 2003
Little Hatch was a regionally famous Kansas City harmonica
player and band leader from the 1950s until his death in 2003.
Little Hatch spent decades tirelessly performing the blues all
over Kansas City and the Midwest.
Cotton Candy - January 1, 1931 – December 25, 2007
Cotton Candy was Kansas City's queen of the blues. She was an
accomplished singer, songwriter, pianist, author, and poet.
Cotton was born a New Year's Day baby in 1931. Cotton won
numerous awards, including being one of the few women inducted
into the Elder Statesmen of Jazz. She is a founding member of
the Kansas City Blues Society, and donated her time and energy
to a variety of charities.
Brody Buster - born August 22, 1984
Kansas City harmonica prodigy Brody Buster became a professional
musician at the age of seven. For a short time Buster teamed up
with a child street dancer and performed as a duo on Beale
Street for tips. It was there that he was discovered by B.B.
King who owned a nightclub in the area. King invited the then
eight year old Buster to perform at his nightclub on Beale
Street, and later asked him to open his new nightclub in Los
Angeles, called B.B. King's Blues Club. Buster became a regular
at King's club in Los Angeles, where he was spotted by the cast
and crew from The Tonight Show, who invited Buster to appear on
the show. Buster later performed at the Montreux Jazz Festival
hosted by Quincy Jones, where he sat in with several of the
headline acts. Today he resides in Lawrence, Kansas, and
continues to perform at major concerts and festivals.
| Arnold 'Gatemouth' Moore | Big Joe Turner | Jay McShann | Jimmy Rushing |
| Scrapper BlackwellWalter Brown |
This section was created from www.wikipedia.com