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When Alan posed the question "What are the blues? What do they mean to you?" the answers were in part something he sought for himself, to understand this musical form that may have been as ancient as the griots in West Africa, or perhaps as recent as the automobile, the airplane, and the phonograph (all of which made guest appearances in the blues). The blues had become a craze, like ragtime, which grew up alongside it, and it leaped from the bottom of the social order to the Astors and the Vanderbilts, who staged blues contests for their own amusement well before the rest of white America came to know them - from Alan Lomax, The Man Who Recorded the World, by John Szwed

Author Topic: Mary Flower at Kenyon Hall, February 4  (Read 474 times)

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Offline Stuart

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  • "The Voice of Almiqui"
Mary Flower at Kenyon Hall, February 4
« on: January 31, 2018, 09:03:47 AM »
Mary Flower will be at Kenyon Hall in West Seattle the evening of Sunday, February 4:

http://www.kenyonhall.org/


Offline Stuart

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  • "The Voice of Almiqui"
Re: Mary Flower at Kenyon Hall, February 4
« Reply #1 on: February 05, 2018, 12:07:46 PM »
Great show last night. Mary played the first set solo and during her second set she was joined by Orville Johnson, Steve James and Cyd Smith. And during the encore/finale--"Goodnight Irene"--, Lou Magor, who is the host and emcee at Kenyon Hall, joined in on the Wurlitzer. It was a stellar night of music.

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