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        <title>Preserving The Legacy - Linda Tillery and the Cultural Heritage Choir - Blog</title>
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            <title>Memphis Minnie</title>
            <link>http://culturalheritagechoir.com/blog.html/memphis_minnie</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;"><strong><span style="color: #800000;">&nbsp;<img title="Memphis_Minnie-1.jpg" src="http://www.culturalheritagechoir.com/images/Memphis_Minnie-1.jpg" alt="Memphis_Minnie-1.jpg" width="188" height="188" /> &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <img title="Joe_Louis_Story-2.jpg" src="http://www.culturalheritagechoir.com/images/Joe_Louis_Story-2.jpg" alt="Joe_Louis_Story-2.jpg" width="189" height="189" /> </span></strong></p><br /><p style="text-align: justify;"><strong><span style="color: #800000;">Lizzie Douglas</span> </strong>(a.k.a. <span style="color: #800000;"><strong>Memphis Minnie</strong></span>) was a blues guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter born in Algiers, Louisiana. She was born on June 3, 1897 in <strong>Algiers, LA</strong>, a city located near the mouth of the Mississippi River, across from the old slave docks in New Orleans.</p><br /><p>&nbsp;</p><br /><p style="text-align: justify;">Minnie was the first of thirteen children born to <strong><span style="color: #800000;">Abe and Gertrude  Douglas</span></strong>, who were Baptist sharecroppers. In 1904 Minnie moved with her  family to Walls, Mississippi, located just south of Memphis. Soon after  the move, Minnie's parents gave her a guitar for her birthday. She  quickly learned how to play her guitar and began entertaining at parties  in her neighborhood, picking up the nickname "Kid Douglas." When she  got a little older, "Kid" often snuck into Memphis, where she sang and  played in parks and on the street corners around town for tips, meeting  other musicians and getting her first taste of the early Memphis blues  scene.She&nbsp; also went by the names Texas Tessie, Minnie McCoy, and Gospel Minnie</p><br /><p>&nbsp;</p><br /><p style="text-align: justify;">The blues scene in the 1920s and 1930s was diverse in style--spanning classic, urban, and country blues--but almost completely homogenous in terms of gender. Men dominated the stages of juke joints and nightclubs, with very few women breaking the ranks of blues  musicians. However, there were a few exceptions who made their mark. One  such woman was Memphis Minnie, the most significant female country  blues singer to emerge during that era.</p><br /><p>&nbsp;</p><br /><p style="text-align: justify;">She is credited as being  one of the first blues artists--male or female--to use the electric  guitar, preceding Muddy Waters' use of the instrument by a year. Memphis  Minnie's style of guitar playing reflected how she lived her  life--hard-driving, passionate, and contrary to what was expected of  women at the time. Although she made numerous recordings over the course  of a career which spanned three decades, none of them captured the raw  energy of the live performances that earned her a place next to other  female blues greats like <span style="color: #800000;"><strong>Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith</strong></span>.  Fortunately, the power of her musical style lives on through the many  well-known blues performers influenced by this dynamic musician,  including <span style="color: #800000;"><strong>Brewer Phillips, Big Momma Thornton,</strong> </span>and <strong><span style="color: #800000;">Koko Taylor,</span> </strong>as well as Rock &amp; Roll artists such as <span style="color: #800000;"><strong>Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley,</strong></span> and <span style="color: #800000;"><strong>the Rolling Stones.</strong></span></p><br /><p>&nbsp;</p><br /><p style="text-align: justify;">For several years, Minnie was a member of the<strong> Memphis Jug Band</strong> and recorded with several artists. In 1929 Minnie was discovered by a  talent scout from Columbia Records and recorded her first song, "Bumble  Bee," under the name of Memphis Minnie, along with her second husband,  the guitarist <span style="color: #800000;"><strong>Kansas Joe McCoy</strong></span> (her first husband was guitarist<strong> <span style="color: #800000;">Casey  Bill Weldon</span></strong>). The recording brought the pair enough recognition to move  on to Chicago, the hub of the blues scene, where Minnie would live for  the next twenty-five years. Besides being a woman in a male-dominated  music scene, Minnie literally "stood out" from other musicians by  playing lead guitar while standing, at a time when everyone else played  their guitars sitting down. She also tried new styles of music, new  picking styles, and new instruments. Minnie was the first to record with  what came to be known as the "classic" 1950s blues combo:  electric guitar, piano, bass, and drums. It has also been noted that  Minnie was among the first to play the electric guitar in 1943, at least  one year before Muddy Waters did. Writer <span style="color: #800000;"><strong>Langston Hughes </strong></span>described her  performance in an article about her in the January 9, 1943, <em>Chicago Defender</em>, noting, "She grabs the microphone and yells, 'Hey now!' Then she hits a few deep chords at random, leans  forward ever so slightly on her guitar, bows her head and begins to beat  out...a rhythm so contagious that often it makes the crowd holler out loud....All these things cry through the strings on Memphis  Minnie's electric guitar, amplified to machine proportions--a musical  version of electric welders plus a rolling mill."</p><br /><p style="text-align: justify;">Unfortunately, Minnie was never recorded playing her characteristic  hard-driving electric sound. Minnie, like many other African-American  blues artists, was essentially controlled by the impresario <strong><span style="color: #800000;">Lester  Melrose</span></strong>, who handled all the details of the recording business for most  of the "race record" labels during that era. Melrose instructed his  musicians to record a toned-down version of the blues, a formulaic  approach that became known as the <strong>Melrose Sound, the Bluebird Beat, the  Melrose Mess, or the Melrose Machine.</strong> Even Minnie's recordings for other  labels such as Decca failed to capture her spirited approach to the blues. However, Minnie's willingness to teach and nurture other young musicians ensured that her style was passed on to the next generation of blues artists.</p><br /><p>In addition to watering down her music, the record labels prevented  Minnie from reaping the economic benefits of her success. One of her  proteg&eacute;s, <strong><span style="color: #800000;">Brewer Phillips,</span></strong> conveyed that Minnie claimed to have been  "messed around in the music" and gave him the advice, "You can learn to  play, but don't let them take your money." In 1958 Minnie and third  husband <span style="color: #800000;"><strong>Little Son Joe</strong></span> returned to Memphis, and lived in poverty. Aside  from an occasional live radio spot, Minnie was no longer performing; her  last performance was at a memorial for her friend and fellow musician, <span style="color: #800000;"><strong> Bill Broonzy</strong></span>, in 1959. She had a stroke in 1960, Joe died in 1961, and  shortly thereafter Minnie suffered another debilitating stroke which  left her confined to a wheelchair for the last thirteen years of her life. Her sister, Daisy, cared for Minnie during her remaining years.</p><br /><p><strong>She died on August 6,  1973 and is buried in Memphis, Tennessee.</strong></p>]]></description>
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            <pubDate>Wed, 23 Jan 2013 17:01:07 -0800</pubDate>
            <source url="http://culturalheritagechoir.com/blog.html">Preserving The Legacy - Linda Tillery and the Cultural Heritage Choir - Blog</source>
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