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  1. 29 de jul. de 2012 · J.B. Lenoir - Eisenhower Blues ... thanks to his guitar-wielding dad. Lightnin' Hopkins and Arthur Crudup were also cited as early influences. Lenoir spent time in New Orleans before arriving in Chicago in the late '40s. ... Lenoir's 1954-1955 Parrot output and 1955-1958 Checker catalog contained a raft of terrific performances, ...

  2. J.B. Lenoir: 1951 / 1958 - Mama What About Your Daughter - We Can't Go On This Way - Give Me One More Shot - Everybody Wants To Know - J.B.'s Rock ... New Rose CD 5117: 62: 1992: J.B. Lenoir: The Topical Bluesman: From Korea To Vietnam [common misconception: "The Tropical Bluesman"] - Natural Man - When I'm Drinking - Back Door

  3. 本名: J.B. Lenoir. プロフィール: American blues guitarist and singer-songwriter, active on the Chicago blues scene of the 1950s and 1960s. Born 5 March 1929 in Monticello, Mississippi; died 29 April 1967 in Champaign, Illinois, of internal bleeding (and/or a heart attack) from injuries he had suffered in a car crash three weeks earlier ...

  4. 8 de mar. de 2023 · The amazing JB Lenoir filmed back in September 1965 at the Südwestfunk studio in Germany as part of the American Folk Blues Festival. Lenoir sadly died less ...

  5. Lenoir waxed his most enduring piece, the infectious (and often-covered) "Mama Talk to Your Daughter," in 1954 for Al Benson's Parrot label. Lenoir's 1954-1955 Parrot output and 1955-1958 Checker catalog contained a raft of terrific performances, including a humorously defiant "Don't Touch My Head" (detailing his brand-new process hairdo) and "Natural Man." Lenoir's sound was unique: saxes ...

  6. Alabama Blues. (original) I never will go back to Alabama, that is not the place for me. I never will go back to Alabama, that is not the place for me. You know they killed my sister and my brother. And the whole world let them peoples go down there free. I never will love Alabama, Alabama seem to never have love for me.

  7. J.B. Lenoir - Monticello. Monticello area native J. B. Lenoir (1929-1967) was best known during his lifetime for his 1955 hit “Mama, Talk to Your Daughter,” but he also played an important role in blues history because of his political engagement. In the 1960s Lenoir recorded a body of topical songs in Chicago that addressed discrimination ...