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THE BLUES TRAIL REVISITED PODCAST
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THE BLUES TRAIL REVISITED PODCAST

Author: Ted Reed

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Following the trail he explored in search of the roots of the Blues back in 1971, film producer/director Ted Reed revisited those places today and found where the Blues is alive, now more than ever. His new film, "The Blues Trail Revisited," is the foundation for this podcast, and in partnership with Clarksdale, MS tourism office "Visit Clarksdale," uses Mississippi's Delta region as the jumping off point for shows about the home of the Blues. Showcasing the music and the people who make the blues eternally alive, each episode brings Ted's road of discovery to music and history fans everywhere.
33 Episodes
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Following the route of the Great Migration, we travel from Mississippi to Chicago to the Chicago Blues Festival and talk with Clarksdale's Lucious Spiller and Visit Clarksdale director Bubba O'Keefe. Music by Keith Johnson and the Big Muddy Band and Lucious Spiller. 
30. GA-20

30. GA-20

2022-05-0617:09

Nominated for a Blues Music Award for Best Emerging Artist Album, blues band GA-20 have tapped into the raw, gutsy sound of the original electric blues greats. They have perfected the stripped down sound of a trio with a message. Their origins are in the Boston area, but their roots are in the Delta. Initially hitting the road opening for Kingfish Ingram, they’ve established their own loyal fan base and are taking their brand of blues to Europe during their recent tour.
29. Tommy Castro

29. Tommy Castro

2022-05-0524:17

Blues guitarist Tommy Castro has been nominated for countless awards and this year he’s been nominated for no less than six Blues Music Awards including his 4th nomination for Entertainer of the Year. With around 20 albums under his belt, he always looks for a way to keep his blues playing fresh, the latest example being his album A Bluesman Came to Town, also up for album of the year and best contemporary blues album at this year’s BMAs.
28. Keb’ Mo’

28. Keb’ Mo’

2022-05-0419:00

Kevin Roosevelt Moore was born in 1951 in Los Angeles, but changed his name to Keb’ Mo’ when he started playing the blues. He’s played with papa John Creach, Jackson Browne, Bonnie Raitt, Lyle Lovett and Kermit the Frog. But it’s his partnering with Taj Mahal that earned him his most recent Grammy Award, and this year he’s up for Best Acoustic Artist at the Blues Music Awards.
This year the Blues Foundation appointed a new president and CEO, Judith Black. I talked with her just before the 2022 Blues Music Awards. Music by Mr. Sipp, Sue Foley, Chris Cain and Veronica Lewis.
Everyone is talking about the Juke Joint Festival in Clarksdale, Mississippi, which is almost sold out! Sean "Bad" Apple, the unofficial master of ceremonies is pumped for this weekends events, and Ryan Lee Crosby will be playing music from his new album "Winter Hill Blues" which is coming out in June.  Music from Sean "Bad" Apple and Ryan Lee Crosby
One of Clarksdale’s best-known resident musicians is legendary harmonica player Charlie Musselwhite. He learned at the feet of Chicago bluesmen such as Muddy Waters, Howlin Wolf, Sonny Boy Williamson and Little Walter. In addition to his own recordings, Musselwhite has guested on numerous recordings. He was inducted into the Blues Foundation’s Blues Hall Of Fame in 2010, has been nominated for eleven Grammy Awards (winning one) and has won several Living Blues Awards and Blues Music Awards. I talked with him just before the 2022 Grammy Awards. Music by Charlie Musselwhite
24. Peter Guralnick

24. Peter Guralnick

2022-03-2935:08

In 1973, I read Feel Like Going Home by Rolling Stone writer Peter Guralnick where he described his journey though the south in the late 60s to interview the last living blues artists. He visited and talked to several of the same musicians I had filmed in 1971. 50 years later, I finally had the chance to talk with Peter about his journey, his career, and what the music meant to him. Musicians include Johnny Shines, Muddy Waters, Robert Pete Williams and Howlin' Wolf.
If you're heading to downtown Jackson, Mississippi, make sure you stop by Hal and Mal's, and introduce yourself to co-founder, Malcolm White. Have lunch and listen to some great local and national blues artists. Malcolm is also the executive director of the Mississippi Arts Commission - one of the original forces behind the creation of the Mississippi Blues Trail. Music clips from King Edward and JJ Thames.
22.Jimmy Duck Holmes

22.Jimmy Duck Holmes

2022-02-0730:01

Grammy Award Nominee in 2021 for Best Traditional Blues Album, we talk with Jimmy Duck Holmes about Bentonia style Blues and the Blue Front Cafe, the original and oldest surviving Juke Joint in Mississippi.
21. Guy Davis

21. Guy Davis

2022-01-2915:50

The multi-talented -- and now Grammy-nominated bluesman, Guy Davis, is featured in this episode. I met Guy in Clarksdale, MS at his first "official" Juke Joint Festival, and learned that Guy is also an author, a teacher, a Broadway and film and television actor, who portrayed Robert Johnson in "Robert Johnson: Trick the Devil", winning the Blues Foundation Keeping the Blues Alive (KBA) award.
20. Dick Waterman

20. Dick Waterman

2021-12-3035:11

Meet Massachusetts-born and resident of Oxford, Mississippi, writer Dick Waterman. Dick was instrumental in guiding Tim and I back in 1971 in finding some of the last surviving blues legends, some of which appear in my film. Listen to Dick talk about his eye-opening experiences with the blues back then and his sentiments about the blues now. Music from Mississippi Fred McDowell, Son House, Bukka White, and Skip James.
This episode features blues veteran Bill “Howl’n Madd” Perry, the first time he walked on stage with Christone Ingram -- how and why he gave him his stage name, Kingfish. Enjoy snippets of Bill’s song, “Real Blues” and music from Kingfish, himself.
Just a 10 minute drive from Clarksdale is the world-famous "Bed & Beer" Shack Up Inn. Meet Bill Talbot, one of the owners, as he talks about the history of how the Shack Up Inn came to be. Enjoy music from Pinetop Perkins, Super Chikan, Charlie Musselwhite, Libby Rae and GA-20.
17. La La Craig

17. La La Craig

2021-11-1130:03

Clarksdale songwriter/singer/musician La La Craig started her musical career as a child in her family's country music band, trained as a classical pianist and followed her ears to Clarksdale MS and became part of Super Chikan's band.
Photographer, filmmaker, author and historian Will Ferris started documenting black southern culture in the 1960s and has over 15 films and a dozen books to his name, along with a Mississippi Blues Trail marker and was Chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities under the Clinton administration. Our paths crossed but we never met when I was making my student film in 1971, so this was my chance to at long last meet this remarkable individual.
Whether by land or by river, Clarksdale's environs always hold new surprises for the the first timer or the seasoned visitor. In this episode we talked with Clarksdale historian Robert Birdsong who bases his operations out of the Hopson Commissary, and John Ruskey, founder of the Quapaw Canoe Company on the banks of the Sunflower River.
This episode we're celebrating one of the greatest blues solo instruments of all time--the harmonica, AKA the harp and the Mississippi Saxophone. A long history of harp players hail from Clarksdale, MS, and we're visiting with resident harmonica players Deak Harp and Watermelon Slim.
Taking a break up north in Gloucester Massachusetts for the Gloucester Blues Festival and a chance to catch up with Blues Music Award winner King Solomon Hicks talking about his upcoming follow-up album. Then, an interview with Boston's WUMB radio host Holly Harris about her first trip to Clarksdale in 1989.
11. Bluesberry Cafe

11. Bluesberry Cafe

2021-08-0122:12

One of the most popular music venues in Clarksdale is also a restaurant, and owners Carol and Arthur Crivaro started it years ago with the idea of opening a health food store--we learned about how that went, along with getting to know who comes there. Then it's this episode's edition of the Blues Trail Music Report. Music from Watermelon Slim, Mississippi Marshall, La la Craig and Kingfish Ingram.
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