Where Blues Crosses Over


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Blues Guitar Women
1: Can't Quit The Blues - Lara Price Band feat. Laura Chavez
2: Takin' It All To Vegas - Debbie Davies
3: The Man's So Good - Alice Stuart
4: Mediterranean Breakfast - Sue Foley
5: The River Wild - Deborah Coleman
6: Living On The Road - Joanna Connor
7: Navajo Moon - Ana Popovic
8: Judgement Day Blues - Carolyn Wonderland
9: Lonely Lonely Nights - Eve Monsees
10: It's A Blessing - Maria Muldaur & Bonnie Raitt
11: Dreamland Blues - Erja Lyytinen
12: Lynn's Blues - Barbara Lynn
13: Goin' Down - Tracy Conover
14: Baghdad Blues - Beverly "Guitar" Watkins
15: Woke Up This Mornin' - Ruthie Foster
16: Fool Me Good - Precious Bryant
17: Going Down This Road - Algia Mae Hinton
18: Doggie Treats - Sue Foley
19: Fixin' To Die - Rory Block
20: Dead End Street - Ellen McIlwaine
21: Rather Be The Devil - Alice Stuart
22: Streamline Train - Jessie Mae Hemphill
23: Nothing's Changed - Gaye Adegbalola
24: One Dime Blues - Etta Baker
25: Ain't Nothing In Ramblin' - JoAnn Kelly
26: Down The Big Road Blues - Mattie Delaney
27: Motherless Child Blues - Elvie Thomas
28: Skinny Legs Blues - Geeshie Wiley
29: In My Girlish Days - Memphis Minnie
 
"When a woman gets the blues, she hangs her head and cries.
When a man gets the blues, he catches a train and rides."
(Traditional blues verse, author unknown)

Those words reflect the reality of women in the deep south of the United States in the 19th century and they continue to ring true for many women today. However, there are exceptions to the rule and many of them are contained right here in this compilation.
The Blues Woman and more specifically the Blues Guitar Woman has blazed her own trail from the start. The guitar is the most versatile and popular instrument of our time. It is the weapon of choice for all modern troubadours and ramblers. Today, it seems more and more females are putting their hands to this instrument and bearing down on it because it offers them a means for powerful self-expression and the freedom to move, a kind of liberation not based on any preordained groups or labels.
Women like Memphis Minnie were light years ahead of the women's movement of the 1960's and '70's. From the 1930's until the end of her career, she was one of the most popular blues artists of the time, known to go head to head with any guitar player and outplay them. She was rough and tough and wild. Memphis Minnie was not one to be confined to the social conventions restraining women in her day. She left home at a young age, refusing to stay on the farm and work, traveled around America in the barren landscape of the depression, writing her own songs, more than 200 of them, many now blues standards and playing the hell out of her guitar while using a series of husbands as her backup musicians.
This CD compilation is populated by women like Memphis Minnie who possess that same kind of spirit, that same desire and drive to follow their own paths and write their own rules.

We've taken a slightly different approach with this compilation, deciding to begin with the present and work our way back, breaking it up into two CDs, one featuring contemporary women blues guitarists and the second, the traditional players. You'll find the odd artist who is represented on each CD. Some of these women are just as adept at playing modern electric blues as they are carrying the torch for old time country and acoustic blues-- Alice Stuart's contrasting versions of "Rather Be the Devil" from the traditional CD and "The Man is So Good" on the contemporary being a prime example.
The themes range from the traditional blues subjects of love and rambling to social consciousness and demands for change. Independence is also a running theme as women today are forced to be more independent than ever, and women who get into vans and drive thousands of miles with groups of guys are a pretty sturdy lot. The life of the blues is no picnic, not even for the men, but it seems they have always had that solidarity and we women are often on the outside looking in.
Here on these two CDs, we finally get together to share our stories and talents with each other. How else would we find the time to catch up? The demands of modern life and career building and looking after our households take all our time, not to mention the chaos of the road and the constant need for balance and order.


The fact that there is enough material to fill two CDs is quite alarming for even I didn't realize how many there were and are out there. But it seems the scene for women guitar players is vibrant and growing stronger all the time.
There may be more women guitar players in blues than any genre and the styles within the blues are incredibly diverse from the modern rock/blues of Joanna Connor and Ana Popovic to the beautiful simplicity of Etta Baker and Precious Bryant. The lives and backgrounds of these women are as unique as their music. From the hill country of Mississippi, through all corners of the US, Canada, Eastern Europe and beyond, it would seem that no place is safe from the power of the guitar heroine.
Putting the Blues Guitar Women compilation together was a pleasure for me. I enjoyed every discovery from the old wise blues women to the emerging young talent of today. I am really proud to be in such strong and inspiring company.

Sue Foley

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