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Exploring the History of Blues in America Through Music

todaySeptember 18, 2023 6

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If you want to know where your favorite musician came from, the answer is probably the blues. One of the most distinct and influential forms of American music and culture, specifically Black music and culture, the blues is the foundation on which rock, R&B and even hip-hop was built.

But Jessica Parr, professor of the practice in history at Northeastern University, says the genre’s roots dig deeper than the history of American pop music. The blues is Black history itself. 

At a time when Black history is under attack, Parr says there has never been a better time to sing the blues. The genre is a reminder that “Black culture is central to American life.” It’s why she is bringing The History of Blues in America, a trio of musicians and storytellers, to Northeastern for a concert on Sept. 21.

“We are in a moment right now where there is a lot of hostility to talking about Black history and talking about Black culture outside of Black communities, and I think that’s something that needs to change, to be blunt,” Parr says. “Emphasizing Black contributions to American history and American culture is more important than ever.”

As a genre, the blues came out of the post-Civil War Deep South at the turn of the 20th century, as formerly enslaved people continued to labor away on Southern plantations, although its roots go back farther than that. The genre brought together spirituals, work songs, chants and stories and myths among African Americans. It also heavily incorporated elements of African music that enslaved Africans brought with them to the Americas. 

“The storytelling ethos of blues music, that is especially from West African griot heritage,” Parr says. “And there are other forms of oral storytelling and oral tradition in African history as well that survives a horrific Middle Passage and gets disseminated in the Americas more broadly in what becomes the United States but also all throughout the Caribbean in all its various flavors and mixes.”

Made up of veteran musicians Joey Leone, Earl Irving and Darrow Sandler, the History of Blues in America guides the audience on a journey through the genre’s centuries-spanning history, from slavery to the modern day. The concert, scheduled for 7:30 to 8:40 p.m. in Blackman Theater, is an extension of Parr’s own work on public memory, public history and early modern Atlantic history, particularly around race.





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Written by: Soft FM Radio Staff

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