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Roosevelt Sykes |
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°ê§O¡GUnited States of America ¬ü§Q°í¦X²³°ê |
©ÒÄݮɴÁ¡GThe 20th Century -- First Half ¤G¤Q¥@¬ö -- «e¥b |
¸ê®Æ´£¨ÑªÌ¡GPhoto credit - English Department of FJU |
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Roosevelt_Sykes
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Roosevelt
Sykes
1906-1983 |
Next time someone voices the goofball opinion
that blues is simply
too depressing to embrace, sit 'em down and expose 'em to a heady dose
of Roosevelt Sykes. If he doesn't change their minds, nothing
will.
There was absolutely nothing downbeat about
this roly-poly, effervescent
pianist (nicknamed "Honeydripper" for his youthful prowess around the
girls),
whose lengthy career spanned the pre-war and postwar eras with no
interruption
whatsoever. Sykes's romping boogies and hilariously risqué lyrics
(his double-entendre gems included "Dirty Mother for You," "Ice Cream
Freezer,"
and "Peeping Tom") characterize his monumental contributions to the
blues
idiom -- he was a pioneering piano-pounder responsible for the seminal
pieces "44 Blues," "Driving Wheel," and "Night Time Is the Right
Time."
--It is from All-Media
Guide.
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Sykes career as a Blues pianist started in the
lumber and turpentine
camps of the rural South in the late 1920s and stretched through three
major schools of Blues, with extended stays in St.Louis and Chicago,
before
settling for good in the city of New Orleans. His recording career
started
in 1929 and lasted until his death in 1983. During this time he
recorded
over 200 sides on 78rpm and dozens of LPs during the microgroove era.
He
was responsible for composing such Blues classics as 44 Blues, Highway
61, Big Leg Ida Blues, Night Time Is The Right Time, Mistake In Life,
Hospital-Heaven
or Hell, West Helena Blues, 47th St Jive Bobby Sox Blues, and Sunny
Road.
--It is from Blues
Before Sunrise.
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