Originally posted by Possum
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The reason I like Portland is its one the remaining places where west coast blues is still played, there's a whole seperate blues guitar language for that stuff that came straight from Charlie Christian and others. Its sometimes called jump blues or swing and its not easy to play. Its more reminiscent of when blues guitar and jazz were still real close to each other. I had to learn how to play over II-V changes when I moved to Portland and get beyond the mindless boring pentatonic junk everyone plays badly, but finding this stuff was exactly what I needed as I was really bored with pentatonic simpliicities. Think Charlie Baty, Junior Watson, Duke Robillard, if you can stand on the same stage as those guys and not get yer head cut off I'd be surprised ;-) You wouldn't catch me trying that ;-)
The first time I saw SRV was in Los Angeles and they booed him for being another Hendrix clone. It was all he played that night and they hated it, pretty sad because his first album had come out and he didn't have the confidence to play his own stuff, so flopped badly.
I'd rather listen to Shawn Lane. None of those guys you mentioned can touch that.
I hear alot of guys tell me oh blues is easy and boring to play its too simple blah blah. and I used to think that when I was younger. Now I realize that to play it as good as the originators of the music is incredibly difficult. Take a look at Albert Collins, that guy could play one note and have a whole crowd on its feet jumping for joy. Hubert Sumlin, Clapton and others have tried to pull off his simple licks and they never have the same soul or feel. Freddie King, holy crap, look at the ton of great songs he wrote, what a fiery guitar. Those guys invented electric blues, people try to copy it but guys like Joe Bonamassa will be long forgotten compared to Freddie, Buddy Guy, Muddy Waters, Lonnie Johnson, Robert Johnson.
I got to see Freddie King live back in the 70s. He was good, but it was nothing special.
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