Difference between revisions of "J.B. Lenoir"
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− | [[J.B. Lenoir]] (March 5, 1929 – April 29, 1967) was an American blues singer and guitarist. | + | [[File:J.B. Lenoir.jpg|350px|thumb|right|J.B. Lenoir.]] |
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+ | '''J.B. Lenoir''' (March 5, 1929 – April 29, 1967) was an American blues singer and guitarist. He is best known for his songs ''Korea Blues'' (1951), ''Eisenhower Blues'' (1952) and ''Mamma, Talk To Your Daughter'' (1954). Lenoir's songs are notable for their outspoken commentary on racism, the Korean and the Vietnam War. He died in 1967 at age 38 from internal bleeding after a car crash. | ||
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+ | In 2011 he was inducted in the Blues Hall of Fame. | ||
==Zappa and Lenoir== | ==Zappa and Lenoir== | ||
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Zappa about ''[[Trouble Every Day]]'': ''"One of the things that it derives from is there has been a tradition in blues lyrics to tell social stories. A lot of people in the pop music world are unfamiliar with the world of folk music or the world of blues lyrics. I had grown up listening to blues records, so that kind of form wasn't unfamiliar [to me]. But the things that were being spoken about in the folk songs and the blues records were not generally major news stories. There was a guy named J.B. Lenoir who had a couple of songs, "The Eisenhower Blues" and "I Am In Korea." If you can ever find those records and listen to those things they were made in the early 50's. That would be some of the roots the Watts riots songs would come from. Maybe it was unique for a white person's rock and roll to stick something like that in it, but in other musical forms that kind of style had existed to a degree." '' | Zappa about ''[[Trouble Every Day]]'': ''"One of the things that it derives from is there has been a tradition in blues lyrics to tell social stories. A lot of people in the pop music world are unfamiliar with the world of folk music or the world of blues lyrics. I had grown up listening to blues records, so that kind of form wasn't unfamiliar [to me]. But the things that were being spoken about in the folk songs and the blues records were not generally major news stories. There was a guy named J.B. Lenoir who had a couple of songs, "The Eisenhower Blues" and "I Am In Korea." If you can ever find those records and listen to those things they were made in the early 50's. That would be some of the roots the Watts riots songs would come from. Maybe it was unique for a white person's rock and roll to stick something like that in it, but in other musical forms that kind of style had existed to a degree." '' | ||
− | + | - Quoted from an interview by Tom Graves, <ref>http://tomgraves.blogspot.com/2005/01/my-long-ass-interview-with-frank-zappa.html </ref>) | |
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+ | ==Sources== | ||
+ | <references/> | ||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
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[[Category:Blues singers|Lenoir, J.B.]] | [[Category:Blues singers|Lenoir, J.B.]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Influences|Lenoir, J.B.]] | ||
[[Category:Favorite Artists|Lenoir, J.B.]] | [[Category:Favorite Artists|Lenoir, J.B.]] |
Revision as of 02:14, 7 September 2020
J.B. Lenoir (March 5, 1929 – April 29, 1967) was an American blues singer and guitarist. He is best known for his songs Korea Blues (1951), Eisenhower Blues (1952) and Mamma, Talk To Your Daughter (1954). Lenoir's songs are notable for their outspoken commentary on racism, the Korean and the Vietnam War. He died in 1967 at age 38 from internal bleeding after a car crash.
In 2011 he was inducted in the Blues Hall of Fame.
Zappa and Lenoir
During the KPPC, Pasadena radio show, when Zappa was guest DJ, he played four songs by Lenoir: "Mama, Talk To Your Daughter", "The Eisenhower Blues", "Mama, Your Daughter Is Gonna Miss Me" and "I'm In Korea".
Zappa about Trouble Every Day: "One of the things that it derives from is there has been a tradition in blues lyrics to tell social stories. A lot of people in the pop music world are unfamiliar with the world of folk music or the world of blues lyrics. I had grown up listening to blues records, so that kind of form wasn't unfamiliar [to me]. But the things that were being spoken about in the folk songs and the blues records were not generally major news stories. There was a guy named J.B. Lenoir who had a couple of songs, "The Eisenhower Blues" and "I Am In Korea." If you can ever find those records and listen to those things they were made in the early 50's. That would be some of the roots the Watts riots songs would come from. Maybe it was unique for a white person's rock and roll to stick something like that in it, but in other musical forms that kind of style had existed to a degree."
- Quoted from an interview by Tom Graves, [1])