GITS!!! - here am I typing my thesis... and you lot are wheeling out "woke up this morning jokes"!!! :lol:
This actually started as a reply to MDV's, er, post in a different mood some time back... but I'm @rsed if I'm gonna delete this all now I've writ it!! :lol:
Sorry MDV - I kept adding to my post while you was doin yours...
Thing is, blues did evolve into something else... (see 60s pop waffle I added to my previous post)
And "The Blues", a la Robert Johnson etc, wasn't about being "blue". The lyrical content might be, but "the blues", even the accoustic stuff, was about dancing, having a good time, getting laid (and shot for laying the wrong person :lol:), etc...
And the "louder and faster" bit - it was the "old blues guys" doing it just as much as the white guys in the UK. The Delta guys electrified because they couldn't be heard above the dancin/whoopin/etc. And they did it some time before they heard anything from the UK. When they started making records (the ones the white boys in the UK heard and loved) they found they needed drums and stuff to make dance records to compete with this US-white-boy invention of "rock and roll" that was getting aimed at their market.
In the main, it was the UK-white-boys buying into "the blues" that sold the rougher stuff to the white US. The moment the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Creedence Clearwater Revival, etc, who ever you want, understood what the Delta/Chicago boys were doing and started making more of it themselves, "blues" was no longer a black-only thing. The white-boys can't play blues properly thing was a social and political thing, hidden under street-cred and peer pressure.
I do actually pretty much agree with you - but my main thing is that I feel you could draw the line(s) anywhere, it was actually one continually evolving thing, and we've ended up with whatever we see/hear coming out of the speakers now... we can have all stages of the evolution (and whatever else happens) if we want. There's a bloke called Ian Siegal, I haven't seen him for years, but he is the very embodiment of blues (far more than some famous f*ckers), but he ain't gonna get very famous (mind you, he was on the Today program on Radio 4 last week, sounded like Sarah Montague got a bit, er, flustered with him sat across the room singing his bad-boy stuff at her :lol:) - he ain't gonna get very famous cos he's old school Delta and Chicago. He's branching out a bit, but I'll be real surprised if he makes a big career - like me, he likes the stuff that's already happened and he wants some more of it...
But I do know exactly what Lew means - I think! - I don't find some folk's recordings (eg Mayer) terribly inspiring. But I don't necesarilly think it's their fault. The Mayer stuff I've heard and who's that other bloke, I've got some of his CDs, can't remember his name - their recordings seem to lack balls and emotion. Stunning guitarists, but hey, so am I, I can do that... and on top of that I've already got a wall of CDs by blokes and girls who managed to capture something entirely different that I can't do, and they still inspire me 30-odd years on... so Mayer and Bonamassa - that's his name!! - stunning guitarists that they are, don't find their way into my earphones very often. I'd rather listen to other stuff...
And I'm gonna be a bit sacriligous here... SRV... Texas Flood is utterly stunning and amazing. Couldn't Stand the Weather is OK but I was really disappointed when it came out. Each album becomes increasingly watered down and sanitised in an effort to get commercial and to "evolve"... Why??!!
I would be so much happier if he'd done 4 Texas Floods... but that's just me being greedy...
However, while he was doing the sanitised sh1t, he was still playing live - and he still made the room stand on its head.
He was a stunning performer, very hung up on Howlin Wolf (and others) and Jimi Hendrix, it was so-o obvious watching him... and now everyone says "you're trying to copy SRV, you shouldn't do that..." to someone else who's gone back to the roots and tried to do their own thing. Anyone who picks up a strat and wants to play "blues" and is influenced by Howlin Wolf and Jimi Hendrix, and is any good, will end up sounding like SRV even if they've never heard him!!
Don't be worried if you don't like blues. Don't be worried if you did like it and gone off it. Maybe one day you'll end up in some club and see someone who makes you go "WOW! that's what blues is about..." Maybe you won't. For me, it was this Ian Siegal bloke over 10 years ago in "Crawley Blues Club", with his own bassist and a pick-up drummer. I have never seen anything so stunning blues-wise as that night - and I saw Rory 5 or 6 times, and SRV a couple. Rory and SRV, in their heyday, better guitarists, but only half the bluesman that Ian Siegal was that night (and several nights I've seen him since).