Sunday, April 9, 2017
Saturday, April 8, 2017
“N.C.’s musicians take songs from Juke Joints to Carnegie”
“N.C.’s
musicians take songs from Juke Joints to Carnegie”
The
Associated Press – Nov 9, 1986
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — In the 1930s and 1940s, they picked and wailed in tobacco warehouses and juke joints for fellow farmers and workers or they buck-danced on their back porches for family and friends.
Now
many of North Carolina's blues musicians have an international following and
perform in places from Carnegie Hall to Southeast Asia. Others, however,
continue to work the blue-col-lar jobs they've had for years.
"North
Carolina has been intensively investigated for blues," said Glenn Hinson,
a Creedmore resident who is re-searching a book on North Carolina blues
musicians. "As a result, public awareness of the blues is high enough so
many musicians here are able to do gigs regularly. Many of them now rep-resent
not only their state, but also their region nationally and internationally as
they tour and perform."
Hinson
said the Piedmont blues differs from the more publicized Delta blues in its
complex, delicate guitar picking style. It was influenced by rag-time and white
country styles, while the Delta blues sounds rougher and sparser.
Delta
blues moved up the Mississippi to Chicago and the West Coast. Its most famous
practitioners included B.B. King and John Lee Hooker.
Piedmont
blues moved to New York with musicians like Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee.
Terry,
a blind musician who came from the Durham blues tradition in the 1930s, died
last March. His partner, McGhee, now lives in California.
But
many other blues musicians in black communities around North Carolina continue
to perform, and some sell records worldwide.
Among
them is Thomas Burt, who lives near Creedmore. Born in 1900, Burt has
"watched the entire development of the music, the transition from set
dances to city house parties, said Hinson.
Burt
played guitar for round dances and buck-dancing, a rhythmic solo dance that was
the precursor of tap dancing. As the blues developed, he played for farmers who
brought their crops into eastern North Carolina tobacco markets.
In
the late 1940s when rhythm and blues became more popular, Burt con-tinued to
play for family and friends. But an appearance at a 1978 folk festival in
Durham helped revive his popularity. He went on to perform at the National
Folklife Festival at Wolf Trap in 1980 and the National Down Home Blues Festival
in Atlanta in 1984.
Many
women played the blues in North Carolina, but not many became well known
outside their own neighbor-hoods. Hinson said an exception is Etta Baker, 73,
of Morganton.
"Etta
is probably one of the finest guitar players in the Piedmont style," he
said. "She has an incredibly light and delicate touch, fingering very
complex runs on an acoustic or electric guitar."
Baker
was one of the
first Piedmont blues musicians
recorded during the folk revival of the 1950s. Since then, she has appeared
regularly at folk festivals and has been included on other albums.

Algia Mae Hinton was one blueswoman who didn't, mind
playing for the rollicking house parties that produced many musicians. Hinson
said Hinton, 57, still performs in her native Johnston County.
"She's also one of the area's better
buck-dancers," he said. "She's still able to perform with all the
facility of a teenager."
Hinton dances while she plays, sometimes playing the
guitar behind her head when inspired. She was re-corded for a statewide blues
album in 1978, has played at national folk festivals and last year performed at
Carnegie Hall in New York. She also plays with the Black Folk Heritage Tour of
the North Carolina Arts Council.
Another performer on the statewide tour is John Dee
Holeman, 57, who has combined the Durham guitar blues tradition with the best
of Chicago blues. "He's also a buck-dancer who literally can tell stories
with his feet," said Hinson.
"His voice is powerful. It can vary from very
lighthearted vocals, almost joking, to a deep, brooding meanness."

It wouldn't have died out, it would have survived in its
own way," he said. "But the music has enabled people like Algia Mae
to stop doing farmwork and rely more on their artistry. That's a real change,
and that's allowed the music to grow and develop in new ways."
"Singer Z.Z. Hill dies in Dallas"
"Singer Z.Z. Hill dies in Dallas"
Clarion Ledger, Apr 28, 1984.

Hill, 48, known as "the
Blues Man," made music industry history last year when his Malaco album,
"Down Home Blues," became the best-selling blues album of the past
decade. It remained on Billboard magazine's black album charts for more than 85
weeks.
Hill was pronounced dead at
Charlton Methodist Hospital at 11:50 a.m. Friday. Doctors worked for nearly an
hour to revive Hill, but there was no response, according to Gerald
"Wolf" Stephenson, a Miami producer.
Hill was
preparing for a weekend of singing engagements, Stevenson said.
Hill, who was born in Naples, Texas, had recorded in Jackson
the past four years and recently renewed his con-tract with Malaco for another
four-year stint. His Malaco album catalogue includes "Down Home
Blues," "The Rhythm and the Blues" and his latest release,
"I'm a Blues Man," currently No. 29 on the black album charts.
His funeral was held at First Baptist Church in Hughes
Springs, Texas on May 3, 1984. His
remains were laid to rest to Gethsemane Cemetery, Naples, Cass County, Texas.
Thursday, April 6, 2017
Tutwiler Mural and Map of SBW II's Grave
![]() |
Juan Urbano Lopez (c.2007) |
Cristen Craven Barnard is the artist responsible for the mural in downtown Tutwiler, where she lived at the time of its painting in the early 1996. She painted the map to the grave of Sonny Boy Williamson II.
![]() |
The Clarksdale Press Register, Aug 3, 1995. |
![]() |
The Clarksdale Press Register, Feb 3, 1996. |
![]() |
The Clarksdale Press Register, March 3, 1996. |
![]() |
The Clarksdale Press Register, May 29, 1996. |
Cristen Barnard began as an artist at age 4, and has grown to be a major illustrator of blues festival posters since her first in 1997 for the King Biscuit Festival. Since then, she has supplied the posters for six more King Biscuit Festivals. She has also supplied the art for the Notodden Blues Festival (four times), the Highway 61 Blues Festival (ten), Clarksdale’s Juke Joint Festival (seven), the Sunflower River Blues and Gospel Festival (four), Haney’s Big House Ferriday Music Festival (three), the Mississippi Development Authority’s Road Trip tours (three), the Natchez Art and Soul Festival, Charleston’s Gateway to the Delta Festival, and the Pinetop Perkins Homecoming. In addition, Barnard designed the famous Railroad Park murals of W.C. Handy and Sonny Boy Williamson in downtown Tutwiler, as well as murals in Helena, Leland, Batesville, and Ruleville, and a huge hanging mural for Notodden’s 25th anniversary. She is perhaps best known for her painting of the legendary “Deal at the Crossroads.”
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