Charley Patton
1891 – 1934 (43)

Charley Patton was the first voice of the Delta blues. Before Robert Johnson, before Muddy Waters, before anyone plugged in -- there was Patton, a small man with a huge voice, playing guitar behind his head and between his legs, singing the Mississippi Delta into existence on 78rpm records. Pony Blues was the first great Delta recording.

He was a showman before showmanship was a concept in the blues -- playing the guitar upside down, beating it like a drum, hollering lyrics that could be heard over the noise of a juke joint without amplification. He recorded for Paramount, traveled the Delta playing fish fries and barrelhouses, and taught a generation of younger musicians -- Son House, Willie Brown, a young Howlin' Wolf -- what the blues could be.

He recorded about 60 sides between 1929 and 1934, and by the time he died of heart failure at 43 -- or 40, depending on who's telling the story -- he'd established the vocabulary of the Delta blues: the driving rhythms, the impassioned vocals, the slide guitar that would define the genre's next half-century. Everything that came after owes him.

Charley Patton was the first voice of the Delta blues. Small man, huge presence, played behind his head before it was a gimmick. Pony Blues is where the Delta blues begins. Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf -- they all started by listening to him.

Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

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Charley Patton

1891 – 1934 (43)

Charley Patton was the first voice of the Delta blues. Before Robert Johnson, before Muddy Waters, before anyone plugged in -- there was Patton, a small man with a huge voice, playing guitar behind his head and between his legs, singing the Mississippi Delta into existence on 78rpm records. Pony Blues was the first great Delta recording.

He was a showman before showmanship was a concept in the blues -- playing the guitar upside down, beating it like a drum, hollering lyrics that could be heard over the noise of a juke joint without amplification. He recorded for Paramount, traveled the Delta playing fish fries and barrelhouses, and taught a generation of younger musicians -- Son House, Willie Brown, a young Howlin' Wolf -- what the blues could be.

He recorded about 60 sides between 1929 and 1934, and by the time he died of heart failure at 43 -- or 40, depending on who's telling the story -- he'd established the vocabulary of the Delta blues: the driving rhythms, the impassioned vocals, the slide guitar that would define the genre's next half-century. Everything that came after owes him.

Charley Patton was the first voice of the Delta blues. Small man, huge presence, played behind his head before it was a gimmick. Pony Blues is where the Delta blues begins. Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf -- they all started by listening to him.

Founder Of The Delta Blues 2010 Remasters (1971) Founder Of The Delta Blues 2010 Remasters (1971)
King Of The Delta Blues (1991) King Of The Delta Blues (1991)
Charley Patton Complete Recordings (2004) Charley Patton Complete Recordings (2004)
Founder Of The Delta Blues 2010 Remasters (1971)
King Of The Delta Blues (1991)
Charley Patton Complete Recordings (2004)
bluesdelta blues
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Image Credits

1,414 artist portraits across 5 genres (Rock, Jazz, Soul, Blues, Folk). 1,363 sourced from Wikipedia (Creative Commons / Public Domain), 50 from Deezer (promotional artwork).

Full attribution breakdown →

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