Blues Moments in Time - January 14: Segregation Forever, Jams Forever, and the Blues Beneath It
Автор: The Blues Hotel Collective.
Загружено: 2026-01-15
Просмотров: 46
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In this episode of Blues Moments in Time, January 14 becomes a study in how the blues can be everywhere and almost nowhere at the same time—rarely named, but always humming underneath. We stand in Golden Gate Park in 1967 at the Human Be-In, where long jams, electric drones, and extended solos helped launch the counterculture. The music is billed as psychedelic rock, but its bones are pure blues: stretched time, bent notes, and improvisation as a way of searching for freedom in public.
Then we move to Montgomery, Alabama, in 1963, where Governor George Wallace declares “segregation now, segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever.” His words try to freeze inequality in place, codifying the very systems the blues had been lamenting for decades. In the wake of that speech, the music shifts—from private laments in juke joints to public witness in freedom songs, folk blues, and soul that names injustice out loud.
January 14 is also a birthday roll call for architects of sound: Clarence Carter, who smuggled deep blues feeling into Southern soul hits like “Slip Away” and “Patches,” and Allen Toussaint, the quiet New Orleans genius whose piano, arrangements, and productions carried blues spirit into R&B, funk, and rock. Even without a marquee “blues” recording on this date, January 14 shows how the music lives as subtext—inside counterculture jams, political backlash, and the grooves crafted by behind-the-scenes masters who made the blues part of the American bloodstream.Hosted by: Kelvin Huggins
Presented by: The Blues Hotel Collective
Keep the blues alive.
© 2026 The Blues Hotel Collective.
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