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Delta Blues Calendar Listing

March 22, 2016


CELEBRATE "MUDDY WATERS MONTH"

AT DELTA BLUES MUSEUM

CLARKSDALE, MISSISSIPPI

Special museum events and exhibits running throughout the month of April





MONDAY,
APRIL 04:

MUDDY WATERS BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION

Open to the public at Delta Blues Museum; cupcakes free while supplies last.

   

FRIDAY,
APRIL 15:

2016 JUKE JOINT FESTIVAL PROGRAMS

10:30AM & 12:30PM - CONVERSATIONS IN THE BLUES with Big Jon Short

Blues artist/educator leads the discussion.

In the Delta Blues Museum classroom; open to the public.

4:00PM - BOOKSIGNING with Don Nix, author of Memphis Man: Living High, Laying Low

Memphis blues and rock legend shares stories from his book. The Gift Shop will have copies available for purchase, as well as CDs by the artist.

In the Delta Blues Museum classroom; open to the public.

   

SATURDAY,
APRIL 16:

2016 JUKE JOINT FESTIVAL PERFORMANCES

Live music on the Delta Blues Museum Stage

    1:00PM - Delta Blues Museum Band

    2:00PM - The Griot Ensemble

    3:00PM - Christone "Kingfish" Ingram

    4:00PM - Ol' Skool Revue (Delta State University)

    5:00PM - DeltaRoX (Delta State University)

    5:30PM - B4Y2K

   
SUNDAY,
APRIL 17:

MUSEUM SPECIAL HOURS

Open to the public 12:00pm to 5:00pm.

2:00PM - Q&A WITH CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE

The Grammy award-winning musician and Delta Blues Museum Ambassador shares memories of Muddy Waters.

In the Delta Blues Museum classroom; open to the public.

   

About Muddy Waters

McKinley Morganfield - better known as Muddy Waters - is one of the most powerful forces behind American music today. Muddy was born on April 4th, 1915, 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.


About the Delta Blues Museum

Established in 1979 by the Carnegie Public Library Board of Trustees and re-organized as a stand-alone museum in 1999, the Delta Blues Museum is Mississippi's oldest music museum. A 2013 recipient of the IMLS National Medal for Museum and Library Services - the nation's highest honor for museum and library service to the community - and a 2014 recipient of the National Arts & Humanities' Youth Program Award, 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 is also recognized as a Great River Road Interpretive Center.

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, downloadable images and related materials.

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2013 IMLS Award

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Shelley Ritter, Director

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.