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We used to go to different people's houses, you know. In those days I mean they could hear music and - if somebody could play an instrument, man, they would get up at night, from one o'clock; and they'd fix food and they'd have drinks and they'd stay up till five, six o'clock in the morning and give you money. It wasn't a dance but a serenade; we'd go from house to house. In those days there wasn't too much things like juke boxes, high fidelity sound, wasn't nothing like that then; and whenever somebody could play and could play well, he was considered as somebody; he could go anywhere and he had it made, you know? - Baby Doo Caston, on playing music in Natchez in the 1920s, interview with Jeff Todd Titon

Author Topic: RIP Danny Kalb  (Read 234 times)

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Offline lindy

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RIP Danny Kalb
« on: November 21, 2022, 06:29:36 PM »
The Blues Project was active long before I discovered blues music, so reading this obituary was educational for me. I recognize many names, 2-3 that I strongly associate with acoustic/country blues, but obviously they had some electric folk-blues connections before they entered my radar space.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/20/arts/music/danny-kalb-dead.html?action=click&module=Well&pgtype=Homepage&section=Obituaries

Offline jed

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Re: RIP Danny Kalb
« Reply #1 on: November 21, 2022, 07:42:36 PM »
Thanks for sharing this.  The Blues Project was in my experience but outside my day-to-day doings during my Chicago years.  Butterfield was probably as off-center as my acceptance went (though anything Luther Allison did was fine with me).

That's a great obit.
ok then:  http://jed.net

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