Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. ChordU Notes are transposable to any key & you can control tempo of the notes playback. [G C Em D Gm] Chords for Mike Bloomfield "BLUES ON THE WESTSIDE" Live PART 1 with Key, BPM, and easy-to-follow letter notes in sheet. Play with guitar, piano, ukulele, mandolin or banjo.

  2. www.mandolincafe.com › forum › groupBlues Mando Recordings

    Sleepy John Estes and Yank Rachell Jg Busters Mandolin Blues: Delmark, prod. Mike Bloomfield. Johnny Young: Chicago Blues. Johnny Young: I Can't Keep My Feet From Jumpin'. Johnny Young: Fat Mandolin. Johnny Young and His Friends. Gerry Hundt: Since Way Back. Rich Delgrosso: Git Your Noze Out of My Bizness.

  3. It's Not Killing Me is the debut solo album by American blues guitarist Mike Bloomfield. It was released in 1969 through Columbia Records. Following his success with the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, The Electric Flag, and in the Super Session recordings with Al Kooper, Bloomfield teamed up with former colleagues to record this largely self-written album.

  4. For many, Mike Bloomfield was the first great white American blues guitarist. He’s often forgotten because he died young, but for a time in the 60’s and 70’s he was the best we had as far as white blues guitarists go.But this is not about white versus black, it’s about how a middle class white boy became enthralled with a black musical ...

  5. 2 de abr. de 2014 · Clapton himself observed, “Mike Bloomfield is music on two legs.”Bloomfield was 22 when he arrived on the music scene, blazing a path for guitarists that burned through the strata of multiple elements—jazz, country, world music, atonality—while staying faithful to his beloved blues. And while the legacy of Bloomfield’s artistry is ...

  6. 21 de jul. de 2021 · This was an extraordinary situation that can never be repeated, and it helps to explain Mike Bloomfield’s mastery of the blues guitar.’ He was also traveling across America with Big Joe Williams. Big Joe had been a notable artist in the Thirties and Forties and wrote the classic ‘Baby, Please Don’t Go’ (covered by the Doors and Van Morrison).