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Smokestack Lightnin' Home Page' -- The Blues Profile Page
The West Coast Blues is a type of blues
music characterized by jazz and jump blues influences, strong
piano-dominated sounds and jazzy guitar solos, which originated
from Texas blues players relocated to California in the 1940s.
West Coast blues also features smooth, honey-toned vocals,
frequently crossing into urban blues territory.
Texas and the West Coast
The towering figure of West Coast blues may be guitarist
T-Bone Walker, famous
for the song 'Call It Stormy Monday (But Tuesday Is Just As
Bad)', a relocated Texan who had made his first recordings in
the late 1920s. During the early 1940s Walker moved to Los
Angeles, where he recorded many enduring sides for Capitol,
Black & White, and Imperial. Walker was a crucial figure in the
electrification and urbanization of the blues, probably doing
more to popularize the use of electric guitar in the form than
anyone else. Much of his material had a distinct jazzy jump
blues feel, an influence that would characterize much of the
most influential blues to emerge from California in the 1940s
and 1950s. Other Texas bluesmen followed: Pianist/songwriter
Amos Milburn, singer
Percy Mayfield,
famous for the song 'Hit the Road Jack', and Charles Brown moved
to Los Angeles. Guitarist
Pee Wee Crayton
divided his time between Los Angeles and San Francisco, while
Lowell Fulson, from
Texas by way of Oklahoma, moved to Oakland.
Through the effort of Tom Mazzolini, producer of the legendary
San Francisco Blues Festival, founded in 1974, and with the
presence of excellent recording companies like Arhoolie and
HighTone, the West Coast is one of the most important blues
areas in the country.
This section was created from www.wikipedia.com