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  1. www.thecountryblues.com › dr-barry-lee-pearson › etta-bakerEtta Baker - The Country Blues

    Etta Baker (1913-2006) was born in Collettesville, North Carolina, but moved to Chase City, Virginia, where she was raised from age three to her teenage years when the family returned to Collettesville. ... “One Dime Blues” I learned from a friend of mine who lived in Lenoir.

  2. 10 de feb. de 2007 · etta baker, 1913 geboren, wuchs mit dem blues auf: ihr großvater spielte banjo, ihr vater gitarre, ihre mutter piano. ihr fingerpicking-stil erinnert an reverend gary davis, blind boy fuller oder elizabeth cotton - kommt aber präziser und mit mehr melodie-anteilen daher - was auch an dem späten aufnahme-datum und der somit weiter-entwickelten studiotechnik liegen dürfte: die aufzeichnung ...

  3. One Dime Blues” was featured on the album Instrumental Music from the Southern Appalachians on Tradition Records. Baker quit playing, due to the passing of her husband and son, but returned to her music because the blues offered her consolation. Etta Baker and her music were influential with folk performers of the Urban Folk era of the ...

  4. 13 de jul. de 2013 · One Dime Blues

  5. One Dime Blues - Etta teaches “One Dime Blues” on the The Fingerpicking Blues of Etta Baker instructional video on Homespun Tapes. Tab for “One Dimes Blues” is included with the video. Etta’s version of “One Dime Blues” is based on the Blind Lemon Jefferson’s “One Dime Blues”. Also visit the 52 Weeks of the Blues website for ...

  6. 内容紹介. Etta Baker is a virtuoso performer in a style heard infrequently these days--the finger-picked guitar tradition known as the Piedmont blues. Using a two- and three-fingered technique similar to that of other North Carolina guitarists such as Elizabeth Cotten, Rev. Gary Davis, and Blind Boy Fuller, Etta creates music that is ...

  7. Finally, while in her sixties -- at an age at which most performers consider retirement -- Baker finally began pursuing music professionally, hitting the folk and blues festival circuit. In 1991 -- 35 years after her debut recording -- she issued the album One-Dime Blues and continued performing live throughout the decade to follow, returning in 1999 with Railroad Bill.