Performance

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Four Classic Albums (Jazz, Folk Songs,...

235.7K streams

235,716

Blues Legend

177.2K streams

177,210

From New York to London

177.2K streams

177,210

The Real Folk Blues

176K streams

175,989

50 Blues Ballads

169.7K streams

169,725

Hard Times Blues

79.2K streams

79,203

Josh White: American Folk Hero

79.2K streams

79,203

Josh White

73.2K streams

73,160

The Blues Collective - Josh White

55.3K streams

55,302

Wanderings

55.3K streams

55,302

Biography

To many blues enthusiasts, Josh White was a folk revival artist. It's true that the second half of his music career found him based in New York playing to the coffeehouse and cabaret set and hanging out with Burl Ives, Woody Guthrie, and fellow transplanted blues artists Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee. In Chicago during the 1960s, his shirt was unbuttoned to the waist à la Harry Belafonte and his repertoire consisted of folk revival standards such as "Scarlet Ribbons." He was a show business personality -- a star renowned for his sexual magnetism and his dramatic vocal presentations. Many listeners were unaware of White's status as a major figure in the Piedmont blues tradition. The first part of his career saw him as apprentice to some of the greatest blues and religious artists ever, including Willie Walker, Blind Blake, Blind Joe Taggart (with whom he recorded), and allegedly even Blind Lemon Jefferson. On his own, he recorded both blues and religious songs, including a classic version of "Blood Red River." A fine guitar technician with an appealing voice, he became progressively more sophisticated in his presentation. Like many other Carolinians and Virginians who moved north to urban areas, he took up city ways, remaining a fine musician if no longer a down-home artist. Like several other canny blues players, he used his roots music to broaden and enhance his life experience, and his talent was such that he could choose the musical idiom that was most lucrative at the time. ~ Barry Lee Pearson, Rovi