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Delta Blues
Advisory
April 1, 2014
APRIL IS MUDDY WATERS MONTH AT DELTA BLUES MUSEUM
Mississippi's Oldest Music Museum to Honor the Life
and Influence
of the Delta Native with Events Throughout Month
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CLARKSDALE, MS (April 1, 2014) - The Delta Blues Museum kicks off "Muddy Waters Month" this week with a new exhibit and a special birthday celebration for the famed Delta musician who continues to influence generations of musicians worldwide:
On Thursday, April 3, 2014, the Museum
hosts author Terry Abrahamson for the opening of his photography
exhibit, In the Belly of the Blues, on display at the Museum
through July 31, 2014. From his website,"[Abrahamson]
won a Grammy writing songs for Muddy Waters, helped launch
the career of George Thorogood, created the first radio
commercial ever performed by John Lee Hooker...In the Belly
of the Blues is (Abrahamson's) book, part of the permanent
collection of the Library of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame."
Abrahamson acknowledges a special personal connection
to the Delta and offers that ,"to be invited to share my
memories of my heroes here in the shadow of the Crossroads,
in celebration of the birthday of a man I am proud to call
my collaborator and my friend, I couldn't be more satisfied."
The reception is free and open to the public from
5:00pm - 7:00pm, with music by Heavy Suga and The Sweet
Tones. The exhibit, reception and related events
are all sponsored by Wal-Mart, Barnes Pettey Financial Advisors,
Shack Up Inn, Mississippi Arts Commission, National Endowment
for the Arts and Friends of the Delta Blues Museum.
Friday, April 4, 2014, is Muddy
Waters' birthday, and the public is invited to join Museum
staff in this day-long celebration, with complimentary cupcakes
for all who visit. Terry Abrahamson will offer
a free multimedia presentation based on the "In the Belly
of the Blues" exhibit, at the Museum at 4:00pm. On
Saturday, April 5, 2014, the Museum will offer a book signing
for Abrahamson's written work, In the Belly of the Blues:
Chicago to Boston to L.A. 1969-1983. A Memoir, from 1:30pm
- 2:30pm.
During Juke Joint Festival,
Delta Blues Museum will present "Call and Response - Conversations
in the Blues" on Friday, April 11, 2014. Blues artist
and educator Big Jon Short will lead a discussion with native
Mississippi blues artists who talk about their influences
and experiences growing up around the Delta, living and
playing the Blues. Through stories, songs and discussion,
the artists will share with the audience some insight into
where they first heard, how they learned and what it's like
to live the Delta Blues.
On Saturday, April 12, 2014,
the Museum hosts musician and scholar Stephen Wade in a
conversation on "The Beautiful Music All Around Us,"
based on his work of the same name. The presentation will
include a discussion of the life and music Bozie Sturdivant
and documented by John Work and Alan Lomax and is free and
open to the public at the Museum, at 10:30am. A
book signing will follow the presentation, and the Delta
Blues Museum Band will perform on the Museum Main Stage
at 2:00pm.
About Muddy Waters
McKinley Morganfield--better
known as Muddy
Waters--is one of the most powerful forces behind
American music today. Muddy was born in the Delta
near Rolling Fork, Mississippi, and later moved to Clarksdale,
where he worked and lived on Stovall Plantation. The son
of a talented bluesman, Muddy taught himself to play bottleneck
slide guitar as a teen; a chance recording with Alan
Lomax inspired Muddy to become a full-time musician.
Playing with Son
Sims around the Mississippi Delta, in Memphis
and in St. Louis, Muddy eventually found his musical home
in Chicago, where he signed with Chess Records and changed
the game by electrifying the blues. He scored 15 hits in
the 1950s alone, effectively creating the sound known as
"Chicago blues," a sound that immediately resonated with
aspiring young musicians like Paul Butterfield and Johnny
Winter. Muddy took his amplified sound overseas
to Europe, where his musical shockwaves started a revolution
that continues today, through the artists he influenced-most
notably Eric
Clapton, Jimmy Page and The Rolling Stones, who
took their name from a Muddy Waters song.
Only at the Delta Blues Museum
can visitors "Follow
Muddy" and learn more about Muddy Waters' musical
journey through an interactive educational feature available
online, and only at the Delta Blues Museum can
guests see Muddy's actual cabin from Stovall Plantation-the
remains of which have been preserved and housed in the Delta
Blues Museum's Muddy Waters Addition.
More about Delta Blues Museum
A 2013 recipient of the National Medal for Museum and Library Services--the nation's highest honor for museum and library service to the community--the Delta Blues Museum is dedicated to creating a welcoming place where visitors find meaning, value and perspective by exploring the history and heritage of the unique American musical art form, the Blues.
The museum seeks $1.2 million for new and enhanced
exhibits for Phase II of the Museum's expansion--which
includes the new Muddy Waters Addition--enabling the cultural
organization to better preserve and display the history
and work of Blues artists from the Mississippi Delta, and
advancing the Museum's ability to "tell" stories that inspire
and educate future generations about this important American
art form.
For online donations or for
more information on events or programs, please call (662)
627-6820, or visit the Museum web site at www.deltabluesmuseum.org.
Members of the press may
register in the PRESS
ROOM on the Museum's website to access further information,
images and materials.
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This newsletter is supported in part
by funding from the Mississippi Arts Commission, a state
agency, and,
in part, from the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal
agency.
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