On learn to play the blues: Bottleneck Slide Guitar And The History Of The BluesBy Tony Gee The moody, haunting sound of slide or bottleneck has become ever more popular in film soundtracks, television advertising and TV programmes. Think of the film Paris Texas and you will recall the eerie, plaintive sound of Ry Cooder's famous accompanying soundtrack. The origins of the slide style of playing can be traced to a one-stringed instrument that originates from West Africa. This ultra-basic musical instrument developed, in America, into what is called a diddley-bow. This is a single-stringed instrument, usually home made, consisting of a wire stretched between two screws or pegs along a length of wood. The string is plucked while the pitch is established using a piece of bone, metal or glass. Some diddley-bows were made by attaching the single-string to the wall of a shack or house. Lonnie Pitchford, a Mississippi bluesman, was well known for demonstrating his diddley-bow which used two nails hammered into a beam that formed part of his front porch. The headstone of his grave is designed with a playable diddley-bow on its side. It was in the Mississippi Delta region that the African influences on American music really took hold. Many emancipated slaves moved to the area after the American civil war bringing with them their love for rhythm, dance and accessible musical instruments, one of which was the diddley-bow. Many have speculated that the Mississippi Delta is the birthplace of the blues. The first documented blues tune was heard by WC Handy in either 1895 or1903 while at the train station in the town of Tutwiler, Mississippi. He is reported to have witnessed a poor black man in ragged clothes and worn out shoes playing a by pressing a knife against the strings to vary the pitch, very much like Hawaiin guitarists would use steel bars. The tune the man played was a haunting and melancholy melody that made quite an impression upon WC Handy. It was during the 1890s that some well known American folk-blues tunes are thought to have originated including "Joe Turner Blues" and "Frankie and Johnnie". One well known exponent of the style who originated at this time was Charley Patton. His precise birth date is unknown but thought to have been between ______continued. Interesting article on learn to play the blues: Article 3 –blues Guitar Tips For Playing Better continued______
1885 and 1892. He learned his musical skills from the people around him including one Henry Sloan who was a fellow resident of the Dockery plantation in Ruleville, Mississippi. Some say that Henry Sloan is actually the mysterious black slide player who'd been heard at the train station in Tutwiler by WC Handy.
Another decent article on learn to play the blues: Blues Soloing On Guitar Off-site
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