I Feel So Good

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A01=Bob Riesman
A23=Peter Guralnick
A32=Pete Townshend
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arkansas
Author_Bob Riesman
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behind the scenes
big bill broonzy
biography
black musicians
blues
british blues-rock
cancer
carnegie hall
Category1=Non-Fiction
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Category=AVLP
Category=BGF
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celebrity
chicago
concert halls
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eq_music
eq_nobargain
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equality
eric clapton
european tour
fame
family
folk music
jazz clubs
justice
Language_English
marginalized history
marriage
musician
nonfiction
PA=Available
pete seeger
politics
Price_€20 to €50
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race
ray davies
softlaunch
studs terkel
townshend

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226717456
  • Weight: 652g
  • Dimensions: 16 x 24mm
  • Publication Date: 15 May 2011
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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A major figure in American blues and folk music, Big Bill Broonzy (1903-58) left his Arkansas Delta home after World War I, headed north, and became the leading Chicago blues-man of the 1930s. His success came as he fused traditional rural blues with the electrified sound that was beginning to emerge in Chicago. This, however, was just one step in his remarkable journey: Big Bill was constantly reinventing himself, both in reality and in his retellings of it. Bob Riesman's groundbreaking biography tells the compelling life story of a lost figure from the annals of music history. "I Feel So Good" traces Big Bill's career from his rise as a nationally prominent blues star, including his historic 1938 appearance at Carnegie Hall, to his influential role in the post-World War II folk revival, when he sang about racial injustice alongside Pete Seeger and Studs Terkel. Riesman's account brings the reader into the jazz clubs and concert halls of Europe, as Big Bill's overseas tours in the 1950s ignited the British blues-rock explosion of the 1960s. Interviews with Eric Clapton, Pete Townshend, and Ray Davies reveal Broonzy's profound impact on the British rockers who would follow him and change the course of popular music. Along the way, Riesman details Big Bill's complicated and poignant personal saga: he was married three times and became a father at the very end of his life to a child half a world away. He also brings to light Big Bill's final years, when he lost first his voice, then his life, to cancer, just as his international reputation was reaching its peak. Featuring many rarely seen photos, "I Feel So Good" will be the definitive account of Big Bill Broonzy's life and music.
Bob Riesman is coeditor of Chicago Folk: Images of the Sixties Music Scene: The Photographs of Raeburn Flerlage. He produced and cowrote the television documentary American Roots Music: Chicago and was a contributor to Routledge's Encyclopedia of the Blues.

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