Fuck Yeah Harmonicas

Submit   For the love of all harmonicas that are holy.

Maintained by the Mizell Bros.

Not these Mizell Bros, this one and this one.

Adam Gussow.

His videos got me started on harmonica, and then listening to a lot of Junior Wells, Little Walter, James Cotton, and Paul Butterfield, have been teaching me more ever since.

— 8 months ago
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

flip-sides:

Little Walter : Boom Boom

— 8 months ago with 16 notes
Little Walter

Little Walter

— 1 year ago
Kim Wilson

Kim Wilson

— 1 year ago
Slim Harpo

Slim Harpo

— 1 year ago
Sonny Boy Williamson, Jimmy Rogers, Muddy Waters
(via mfs:mygang)

Sonny Boy Williamson, Jimmy Rogers, Muddy Waters

(via mfs:mygang)

— 1 year ago with 22 notes
mfs:

(via paulasparks)
Music spoken here.

mfs:

(via paulasparks)

Music spoken here.

— 1 year ago
Back to basics and the blues.
The second harmonica player to call himself Sonny Boy Williamson was born Dec. 5, 1899 (d. 1965), or thereabouts… Born Aleck Miller, he quickly became a show-boating stylist, honing his skills playing for tips in the street.
In 1941 Miller was hired to play the King Biscuit Time show, advertising the King Biscuit brand of baking flour on radio station KFFA in Helena, Arkansas with Lockwood. It was at this point that the radio program’s sponsor, Max Moore, began billing Miller as Sonny Boy Williamson, apparently in an attempt to capitalize on the fame of the well known Chicago-based harmonica player and singer John Lee Williamson. Although John Lee Williamson was a major blues star who had already released dozens of successful and widely influential records under the name “Sonny Boy Williamson” from 1937 onward, Aleck Miller would later claim to have been the first to use the name, and some blues scholars believe that Miller’s assertion he was born in 1899 was a ruse to convince audiences he was old enough to have used the name before John Lee Williamson, who was born in 1914. (Wiki)
(via i12bent)

Back to basics and the blues.

The second harmonica player to call himself Sonny Boy Williamson was born Dec. 5, 1899 (d. 1965), or thereabouts… Born Aleck Miller, he quickly became a show-boating stylist, honing his skills playing for tips in the street.

In 1941 Miller was hired to play the King Biscuit Time show, advertising the King Biscuit brand of baking flour on radio station KFFA in Helena, Arkansas with Lockwood. It was at this point that the radio program’s sponsor, Max Moore, began billing Miller as Sonny Boy Williamson, apparently in an attempt to capitalize on the fame of the well known Chicago-based harmonica player and singer John Lee Williamson. Although John Lee Williamson was a major blues star who had already released dozens of successful and widely influential records under the name “Sonny Boy Williamson” from 1937 onward, Aleck Miller would later claim to have been the first to use the name, and some blues scholars believe that Miller’s assertion he was born in 1899 was a ruse to convince audiences he was old enough to have used the name before John Lee Williamson, who was born in 1914. (Wiki)

(via i12bent)

— 2 years ago with 5 notes