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  1. 21 de feb. de 2015 · Provided to YouTube by The Orchard EnterprisesMr Scrapper's Blues · Scrapper BlackwellScrapper Blackwell Vol. 1 (1928-1932)℗ 1992 Document RecordsReleased on...

  2. Francis "Scrapper" Blackwell (1903-1962) ranks as one of the major players in the history of blues guitar. Through his work with singer-pianist Leroy Carr–particularly on the massive 1928 hit "How Long, How Long Blues"–Blackwell helped fashion a new sound for the blues suited to rural-to-urban move of much of the music’s African-American constituency. T-Bone Walker, who continued this ...

  3. Down South Blues. The Virtuoso Guitar of Scrapper Blackwell · 1991. Penal Farm Blues. Mr. Scrapper's Blues · 1962. Gambler's Blues. Leroy Carr & Scrapper Blackwell · 2017. No Good Woman Blues. Scrapper Blackwell 1959-1960 · 1994. Little Boy Blue.

  4. 24 de jun. de 2013 · Scrapper Blackwell is an important link to modern Urban Blues. He recorded throughout the late 1920s and '30s, most often with pianist Leroy Carr. The guitar style he developed based around sophisticated single string-soloing, pointed the way for the guitar heroics that became a big part of most Electric Blues in the '40s and '50s, whose major proponent was T-Bone Walker.

  5. The crime was never solved. Scrapper Blackwell was one of the most important guitar players of the '20s and early '30s, with a clean, dazzlingly articulate style that anticipated the kind of prominent solo work that would emerge in Chicago as electric blues in the '40s and '50s, in the persons of Robert Nighthawk and the young Muddy Waters.

  6. Scrapper Blackwell, born Francis Hillman Blackwell, left an indelible mark on the blues scene as a virtuoso guitarist and collaborator with Blues Hall of Famer Leroy Carr. Though widely recognized for his role in the iconic Carr-Blackwell duo during their recording zenith from 1928 to 1935, Blackwell’s musical prowess extended far beyond accompaniment.

  7. 8. 'E' Blues - 3:52 9. Shady Lane - 5:52 10. Penal Farm Blues - 4:32 Personnel: Francis 'Scrapper' Blackwell - Vocals, Guitar, Piano (on tr.9 only) Blackwell, it's not always remembered, was rediscovered in the late 1950s, though he didn't have much chance to make a new career out of the blues revival before his death a few years later.