Blues
Background: First fifty years, Blues was primarily black popular music. Come from poor backgrounds. In the 1960s, the Blues changed to the world of whites an international listeners, and the last forty years, the style was played for a white audience.
The World That Johnson Knew: Blues came from the property and oppression. Twelve-bar blues is the common way songs are composed. He explains that he writes this book is to try to look at the blues scene from the inside, as it evolved. For almost fifty years, blues history has been filtered through the prism of rock 'n' roll. Many of its fruitful branches had roots that came from Chicago and New York, and later in Los Angeles. This reading is very opinionated and he really believes in what he is saying. He listened to a lot of blues and read a lot of stuff to back up what he has to say.
Deep Blue: This book may be too scholarly but he provides an oral history of the blues by those who created blues. Palmer tells the story of the Delta blues through the lives of the artists. He gets into the who, what, when, where, and why the blues, but most importantly, the human story behind the music. He follows what Johnson knew by saying that the blues is the sound of poverty, oppression, and heartache. Palmer referred to it as music created by not just black people but by the poorest most marginal black people. The people who couldn't read and write.


