I am swamped with another project that is sucking up all my time during the waking hours. I have less than two weeks to complete it and it’s seems to be growing arms and legs I wasn’t expecting. So…..just to rehash a bit of blues history, specifically the ladies, I thought I’d have my editor post this again as many of you have probably not seen it. I wrote three series, Women of Rock, Women of Blues and Women in Song. The Women of Blues was actually inspired by a contemporary whom I saw for the first time a couple of years ago. She had dedicated her latest album to a female blues artist I had never heard of. Read all about her and the women who contributed so, so much to the genre we call the blues. The famous and not so famous. They were tough, talented, single-minded, sexually liberated, passionate and most of them had more balls than the men. Read on, you might even learn something.
Archive for Alannah Myles
Roxanne Tellier – Don’t Get Around Much Any More
Posted in Opinion, Review with tags Alannah Myles, Alison Young, Beverlie Robertson The Chanteclaires, Bob Cohen, Bob Dylan, Bob Segarini, Bohemian Embassy, by Rosemary Solway, Chick Roberts, David Woodhead, DBAWIS, Dede Higgins, Don Cullen, Don’t Get Around Much Anymore, Eric Alper, Gordon Lightfoot, Harbourfront, Joanne Crabtree, John Robert Columbo, Judith Orban, Keith McKie, Kensington Market, Kensington Market Jazz Festival, Klaas von Graft, Linda Goldman, Lois and Bram, Lorne Michaels, Margaret Atwood, Milton Acorn and Al Purdy, Molly Johnson, Nancy Simmonds, Nancy White, Owen McBride, Perth County Conspiracy, Richard Underhill, Riverboat, Robert Priest, Roxanne Tellier, Sharon, Sharon Hampson, Sylvia Tyson, Terry Jones, The Boat, The Dirty Shames, The Shuffle Demons, The Sinners, Wayne and Shuster, Yorkville on September 26, 2016 by segariniAch and oy vey! This house move is cramping my style, big time. Haven’t been able to get out to a lot of events, because time’s a ticking, and there’s only so many hours in a day. I’d like to say I’ve become more selective in my outing choices. But the truth is, moving and packing is a bitch. There just isn’t any time to gallivant around.
But let me tell you about two recent events I did manage to squeeze in. Both were wonders in their own ways.
Pat Blythe: The Women of Blues
Posted in Opinion with tags Alannah Myles, Algiers, Aretha Franklin, Beale Street, Bessie Smith, Betty Garon, Big Bill Broonzy, Big Momma Thornton, Black Velvet, blues, Blues Hall of Fame, Bob Segarini, Bonnie Raitt, boogie woogie, Broken Heart, Bumble Bee, Chauffeur Blues, Chess Records, Chicago, Chicago blues, Christopher Blythe, Columbia Records, country blues, DBAWIS, Decca, Dinah Washington, Don't Believe a Word I Say, Erin Harpe, Ernest Lawlars, Etta James, Frisco Town, Going Back To Texas, I'm Salin', Ida Cox, Janis Joplin, Jefferson Airplan, Jeil Nursing Home, Jimmy Rodgers, Jo Ann Kelly, JOB Records, John Lee Hooker, John Roach, Johnny Shines, Julia Lee, Kansas Joe McCoy, Ken Jarvis, Kid Douglas, Kissing in the Dark, Langston Hughes, Led Zeppelin, Lester Melrose, Little Son Joe, Lizzie Douglas, Louisiana, Lucille Hegamin, Maria Muldaur, Maxine Sullivan, Mazzy Star, Me And My Chauffeur, Melrose sound, Memphis, Mount Zion Memorial Fund, Muddy Waters, National, New Hope Baptist Church Cemetery, Pat Blythe, Paul Garon, postwar blues, R&B, Ringling Brothers, Rolling Stones, Roosevelt Sykes, Sarah Vaughan, She Hangs Brightly, Signe Anderson, St. Louis Jimmy Oden, Tennessee, Texas Tessie, That Will Be Alright, The Lydia Taylor Band, urban blues, Victoria Spivey, Vocalian, Washboard Sam, When The Levee Breaks, Woman with Guitar: Memphis Minnie Blues, World of Trouble, You Got To Move (You Ain't Got To Move), You Wrecked My Happy Home on May 27, 2015 by segariniPrologue….
Anyone heard of Memphis Minnie? How about Ida Cox, Victoria Spivey, Lucille Hegamin, Julia Lee or Maxine Sullivan? Me neither. How about Bessie Smith, Etta James, Sarah Vaughan, Aretha Franklin, Big Momma Thornton, Dinah Washington or even Janis Joplin. The latter are a smattering of the ladies most frequently thought of or mentioned when we think of great female blues singers….the former, not so much.