Here are the lyrics for tomorrow, March 31, 2026.
A few are repeated from last week and others are just added.
See y'all in class!
Here are the lyrics for tomorrow, March 31, 2026.
A few are repeated from last week and others are just added.
See y'all in class!
Here is the Blues listening list. There is a lot here, and we probably won't finish this week but I might add a few items next week.
While Blues music has only been very popular for short periods of time, it was
one of the most influential types of
music from the 20th century and has affected almost every other kind of popular
music in America (and beyond). Jazz, rock, country, soul, gospel and other
genres all owe their existence at least partly to Blues music, so it needs to
be examined in more detail than some other varieties of music.
As always, I haven't checked each link so if you find any dead links please let
me know.
Enjoy!
Blues Structure
8 bar blues (Key to the Highway)
12 bar blues (random)
16 bar blues (Watermelon man)
A more formal explanation (don't worry if you don't understand)
Another one (again, don't worry if you don't understand)
Country Blues
Black snake moan
Blind Lemon Jefferson (1926)
Devil got my woman
Skip James (1931)
Cross Road Blues
Robert Johnson (1936)
Last Kind Words
Geeshie Wiley (1930)
Good mornin' blues
Leadbelly (193?)
Key to the Highway
Big Bill Broonzy (1941)
Trouble in Mind (1924 song)
Lightning Hopkins (1967)
Classic Blues
Crazy blues
Mamie Smith (1920)
Shave 'em dry blues
Ma Rainey (1923)
Send me to the 'lectric chair
Bessie Smith (1927)
Memphis Blues
Dirty Butter
Minnie Wallace (1929)
Cocaine Habit Blues
Memphis Jug Band (1930)
Hokum/Dirty Blues
Tight like that
Clara Smith (1929)
Shave 'em dry
Lucille Bogan (Bessie Jackson) (1935)
Jazz and Blues
Fine and mellow
Billie Holiday (1939)
New blow top blues
Dinah Washington (1951)
Kind of a change in plans as I realized I made a mistake in scheduling, namely there will be Early Jazz and maybe scat singing tomorrow and the rest of Jazz will happen later, after we get through the Blues.
Anyway, here are the lyrics for tomorrow.
The notes for Early Jazz will be made available when I finish the Jazz section in a couple of weeks.
See y'all in class!
We will finish elements from the last class (Coon songs, Minstrels and Ragtime) and begin with some elements of Jazz. As always I haven't check if all the links are good, if you find any dead links then please let me know and I'll try to find replacements.
Boogie Woogie
Cleo Brown (1935)
Boogie Woogie
Gene Rodgers (1939)
Jukebox Boogie
Fats Waller (1943)
Ain't Misbehavin' (from the film Stormy Weather)
Early Jazz / New Orleans (review)
King Oliver
Canal Street Blues (1923)
Jazz Funeral of Juanita Brooks (2009)
History of Scat Singing
Gene Greene
King of the Bungaloos (1911) starting at about 1:44
Cliff Edward (1922)
Homesick
Louis Armstrong (1926)
Heebie Jeebies
Duke Ellington / Adelaide Hall (1927)
Creole Love Call
Ella Fitzgerald (1960)
How High the Moon
Evolution from Pop to Jazz singing
song: More than you know (1929)
(In class we'll just listen to a short section)
Helen Morgan (1929) Torch (nightclub) singer
Ruth Etting (1929) Pop Singer
Mildred Bailey (1936) Pop-jazz singer
Billie Holiday (1939) Jazz singer
Big Bands
Chick Webb and his Orchestra (vocal by Ella Fitzgerald)
A-tisket a-tasket
Count Basie and his Orchestra (1940)
Lousiana
Duke Ellington (1952)
Satin Doll
Duke Ellington (from the movie Reveille with
Beverly, 1943)
Take the A-Train
Lionel Hampton (1942)
Flying Home
Bebop
Dizzy Gillespie Quintet (1942)
Salt Peanuts
Charlie Parker (1946)
Confirmation
Big Bands and Dance
Cab Calloway and the Nicholas Brothers (1943)
Jumpin' Jive
Whitey's Lindy Hoppers (1941)
from Hellzapoppin
(just for fun)
Chicago Steppin' (2010)
See y'all in class!
Here are the notes for music from Africa and Early Music in America.
Here are the lyrics for the class (mostly not as important as some coming classes).
Enjoy!
See y'all in class!
Here is a pre-class listening list. Please note that these are general videos meant to give you an idea about the content to come. Not all videos will necessarily appear in class and some videos not here will be shared in class.
nb. I mostly cut and pasted links, if any are dead please let me know (email/chat on teams) and I'll try to repair.
I should have lyrics for the class videos during the weekend.
AFRICAN ROOTS
Rhythmic complexity: Adowa Dance.
Similar to Breakdancing (Northern Nigeria, 1959).
Costumed religious dance (Zaouli - Ivory Coast).
Sexualized dancing (la ventilateur from Senegal).
Singing while farming (Ghana).
Post office employees from Ghana (starts at around 0.17).
ON TO THE AMERICA:
Field Hollers and Work Songs.
Hoe Emma Hoe
Prison work songs
British rock version – Ram Jam
Spirituals
Swing Low Sweet Chariot (Fisk Jubilee Singers) -1909
Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen (Paul Robeson)
Deep River (Marion Anderson)
Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child (Odetta)
Oh Freedom! (Princely Players)
Coon songs
If the Man in the Moon was a Coon
Minstrels and Blackface
Comedy (in theory)
Black and White Minstrel Show (late 1970s UK TV)
Cake walk
Stage performance (recreated from a 1936 movie, Cake Walk starts around 0.35)
Stage performance (from 1903)
Ragtime
Dueling Pianos (something like a cutting session).
The Entertainer (piano version)
The Entertainer 1973 version (from the Sting)
A Real Slow Drag from Treemonisha
Enoy! And See y'all in class!
This will be the blog for the African American Musical Tradition.
Here are the first notes (some basic information on African Americans).
Enjoy!