Return to the home page for KJZZ 91.5 FM Skip Navigation | Site Map | Search | Contact KJZZ | Pledge | 
What's On Now:
[refresh]
National Public Radio 
 
  Programs | News | Music | Arts & Culture | Events | Inside KJZZ | Support KJZZ | 
 /  Home  /  News

 DISCUSSION AND DOCUMENTARIES
Riverwalk
Jazz Legends Play The Blues: A Tribute to America's Roots Music
Kansas City blues legend, Jay McShann
Photo Clemson University, Billy Vera Collection


"Jumpin' Blues" performed by The Jim Cullum Jazz Band with special guest Kansas City bluesman Jay McShann
Segment feature courtesy Riverwalk Jazz, a non-profit project dedicated to preserving classic American jazz


Jazz Legends Play The Blues: A Tribute to America's Roots Music
Jazz icons celebrate the Blues with The Jim Cullum Jazz Band. Kansas City bluesman Jay McShann, blues shouter Joe Williams, trumpeter Clark Terry, pianist Dick Hyman, and reedman Bob Wilber join The Band to honor America's original roots music—The Blues.

Listen Full 1 Hour Show
Listen Excerpt

W.C. Handy is widely recognized as the first to introduce the Blues to mainstream audiences in America. William Warfield, a legend of American theater known for his stage portrayal of Porgy in George Gershwin's folk opera, is heard reading W.C. Handy's description of the Blues in an encore performance on Riverwalk Jazz this week.

"The Blues is a thing deeper than what you'd call a mood today. Like the spirituals, it began with the Negro. It involves our history, where we came from, what we experienced. The Blues came from the man farthest down. The Blues came from nothingness, from want, from desire, and when a man sang or played the Blues, a small part of that need was satisfied from the music. The Blues goes back to slavery, to longing."

It was 1903 when W.C. Handy heard the Blues for the first time. He was making his living as a municipal bandleader, traveling through the South, teaching local musicians how to play Sousa marches and Strauss waltzes for Sunday afternoon performances in small town parks.

Waiting for a train in Tutweiler, Mississippi, as his famous story goes, Handy happened to hear a black guitar player sitting by the train tracks, singing a song about the Yazoo-Delta railroad lines. Handy thought it was the 'weirdest' music he'd ever heard, but it captured his imagination and set him off in a new direction in music that resulted in his composition, "Yellow Dog Blues."

W.C. Handy went on to collect, compose, arrange, and publish hundreds of Blues compositions. His work legitimized and commercialized the Blues, which up until then, had been folk music enjoyed mainly by rural black populations.

This week on Riverwalk Jazz
The Jim Cullum Jazz Band celebrates the Blues with performances by jazz icons who have graced the stage of The Landing over the years. Kansas City bluesman Jay McShann, blues shouter Joe Williams, trumpeter Clark Terry, pianist Dick Hyman, and reedman Bob Wilber join The Band to honor America's original roots music—The Blues. And William Warfield presents passages from W.C. Handy's autobiography, The Father of the Blues.

"My father, who was a preacher, used to cry every time he heard someone sing the old spiritual 'March on, I'll See You on Judgment Day.' When I asked him why, he said, 'That was the song they sang when your uncle was sold into slavery in Arkansas.'"

Text based on script by Margaret Pick
Copyright 2008 Riverwalk Jazz

Mission Pharmacal
Riverwalk is sponsored by Mission Pharmacal

Download the free Real Audio Player.

email article

print article

rss feed

tag this article




Search Arts
email this story to a friend
 RELATED LINKS
 ARTS HEADLINES
 ON RADIO
bucket linkwith Michael Feldman
Geo Quiz
Etown
Echoes
To The Best Of Our Knowledge
Fair Game
 FEATURES
bucket link
bucket link
bucket link
bucket link