History of British Blues

Further Research into British Blues

Here are a series of Articles/eBooks/eJournals relating to the History of British Blues. To access the material the reader is refered to the appropriate source organisation where abstracts and/or the full article may be obtained. The organisations currently referenced are:

JSTOR

An on-line library where scholars, students, and the public can access thousands of journals, books, images, and other content as well as tools that promote research, teaching, sharing, and contribution. JSTOR includes content from over 1,000 publishers and serves 6 million unique monthly visitors and 10,000+ universities, schools, and institutions.

https://www.jstor.org/

PORTICO

The Portico digital preservation service is part of ITHAKA, a not-for-profit organization helping the academic community use digital technologies to preserve the scholarly record and to advance research and teaching in sustainable ways. Portico has some 89 million preserved items.

https://www.portico.org

_________________________________

‘Feelin Bad This Morning: Why the British Blues’ by Dave Allen

Popular Music Vol. 26, No. 1,
Special Issue on the Blues in Honour of Paul Oliver (Jan., 2007), pp. 141-156
Published by: Cambridge University Press
Source: JSTOR

‘”I’m a Monkey”: The Influence of the Black American Blues Argot on the Rolling Stones ‘ by John M. Hellmann, Jr.

The Journal of American Folklore
Vol. 86, No. 342 (Oct. – Dec., 1973), pp. 367-373
Published by: American Folklore Society
Source: JSTOR

‘Introduction: Not Necessarily “English Music”: Britain’s Second “Golden Age”‘ by Nicolas Collins

Leonardo Music Journal
Vol. 11, Not Necessarily “English Music”: Britain’s Second Golden Age (2001), pp. 1-3
Published by: The MIT Press
Source: JSTOR

_________________________________

more soon …