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Programs & Activities
Music & Dance
Eddie Burns
Detroit, Michigan
Blues
Eddie
Burns has carried the torch
of
African-American blues in Detroit since 1948. His presentation of the
early country blues styles in a contemporary band setting is unique in
Michigan. Although he has taken his blues singing, guitar playing, and
harmonica playing to Washington, D.C. and on European tours, Eddie is
one of the few pure blues musicians to live and perform continuously in
Michigan. He was honored with a Michigan Heritage Award in 1994.
Eddie grew up in the small Mississippi Delta towns of Wells and Dublin,
where he heard country blues recordings in his grandfather's juke joint
and listened to his father play blues on harmonica, guitar, and piano.
His greatest influences from country blues recordings came from Tommy
McClennan, Memphis Minnie, and Big Bill Broonzy on guitar and from John
Lee "Sonny Boy" Williamson on harmonica. The harmonica was Eddie's
first instrument as a boy. Playing "one string guitar" on the
side of the house led Eddie to playing the six-string guitar.
After teaming up with blues guitarist John T. Smith in Davenport, Iowa,
Eddie moved with John to Detroit in 1948. They played blues at house parties
and eventually began to back up John Lee Hooker in performances and on
recordings. When Hooker began touring nationally, he groomed Eddie to
fill in for him at clubs and in recording sessions. Eddie moved toward
the modern blues guitar style of T-Bone Walker by the early 1950s, and
he adapted to the R&B sounds coming out of Motown and Stax labels.
As blues gained a worldwide revival in the late 1960s, Eddie began touring
European countries, playing blues throughout the 1970s.
Eddie's album Detroit on the U.S. label Blue Suit shows his deep roots
and originality. The recording features country blues standards like "Bottle
Up and Go" and "Blue Jay (Fly Down South For Me)" performed
with fresh band arrangements. Eddie acknowledges the shared repertoire
that is the mark of country blues: "There ain't no notes that never
been played before; you just rearrange them in your own way."
At the 2004 Great Lakes Folk Festival, Eddie Burns (guitar, harmonica,
vocals) is accompanied by Gary Meisner (guitar), Roger Tapp (bass), Bernard
Dawson (drums), and David Favro (keyboard).
Links
http://www.museum.msu.edu/s-program/MH_awards/awards/1994EB.html
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