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W.C. Handy - Memphis Blues [old]

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Uploaded by on Dec 22, 2008

For better audio, look here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7z0Jh5cdPsE

QRS 491, played by Pete Wendling.

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Music

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Uploader Comments (wuloki)

  • Pete Wendling was a great pianist. If you added the words Pete Wendling to the tags, a lot more people would be able to find it. Thanks for posting this!

  • Thanks for the advice. If I remember right Pete Wendling also made a roll of Crazy Blues in 1919, two years before Eubie Blake did. - And you are right: This is indeed a midi file. The computer sends it to a midi driven Vorsetzer/keytop player (which was *not* constructed by me). In technical terms it is similar to a Yamaha Disklavier, but not as impressive to watch, because you don't see the keys moving.

Top Comments

  • He was born in 1873. NOT 1973!!!!!!

  • Shame he's not in the Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame

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All Comments (23)

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  • People think they know everything about the blues and what its "supposed" to sound like. If you really delve into the very early history of it (pre 1920s), the original blues music was mostly freeform - the 12 bar blues standard was invented by urban songwriters a little later. Blues singers bridged different realms of black music, bringing together the styles and practices of the minstrel shows, the vaudeville theaters, ragtime and their native rural environments. (I copied the last sentence)

  • Would be awesome if someone played this on guitar... Someone like Chuck Berry, Eric Clapton or BB King maybe? That would be awesome.

  • @pnoplyr14

    maybe he didn't pass rooles to become a member of Hall of Fame, cos, you must be 25 years active since first realised record and also you must sell a lot of copies duno how much but over million... so at that time population and industry wasn't so advanced to do that..

    its sarcasm, but who knows the true.

  • Of course its blues! learn something about music before you type.

  • @hofnerman1 lolol, damnn what a fail

  • @heyeyefloater what! the "father of blues' is not in the rock n' roll hall of fame. that makes no sense to me.

  • @boru1982

    Primarily it is, I agree, certainly at first, but a Bluesey element creeps in.

  • This tune by W.C. Handy is historically considered as one of the very first recorded tunes to show up with the word "blues" in the title. The blues elements began showing up in ragtime, which was present in the same era. Handy was a ragtime pianist, but incorporated elements like "blue notes" as tommymacdonald pointed out. Sources: African American Music by Burnim and Maultsby, pg. 90, paragraph II.

  • blues? ragtime?

    how about a hybrid version? One could hear both styles.

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