Noticeably absent from the following list of pre-war blues players is Robert Johnson. He’s getting a brief mention here simply as a result of being one of the most important exponents of the style that was popularized in various, disparate southern locales between the aughties and the thirties, just prior to the (first) great crash. His playing certainly set the bar for future blues peformers much in the same way his lyrics, rife with religious double speak and meandering tales of woe and damnation, would change not just the blues, but rock music in the following decades.
While Johnson might still be – and will remain – the most celebrated bluesmen, the folks below aren’t slouches in any sense. Well, Skip James wasn’t all that great at guitar, but it can be forgiven. Regardless, each of the players represented herein affected not only the way in which a guitar would be wielded by rock and blues musicians, but also the American song book. Understanding the genre, after Robert Johnson, begins here.
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