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  1. Bricks in My Pillow · 1977. Six Three O. Prowling With the Nighthawk · 2004. Feel so Bad. Bricks in My Pillow · 1977. Take It Easy Baby (Live At The Corner Of 14th And Peoria, Chicago, IL / September 1964) Live On Maxwell Street: 1964 · 1964. Juke Medley (Live) Live On Maxwell Street 1964 · 1964.

  2. 30 de nov. de 2011 · Robert Nighthawk died November 5, 1967, and is buried in an unmarked grave in Helena's Magnolia Cemetery. Nighthawk was the archetypal bluesman, crisscrossing the Southern states throughout his life, never staying in one place long enough to secure or ruin his reputation. Nighthawk's ability to render country blues with an urban feel made him a ...

  3. 16 de jun. de 2023 · Robert Nighthawk (1909–1967) aka: Robert Lee McCollum. Robert Nighthawk was among the most remarkable slide guitarists in blues history, widely admired among his peers and the southern audiences he spent his life entertaining. Nighthawk influenced a generation of bluesmen such as Muddy Waters, B. B. King, Earl Hooker, and supposedly Elmore James.

  4. Robert Nighthawk on the excellent 'And This is Free' 1965 Mike Shea documentary about Maxwell Street in Chicago. Big thanks to the lazy poker channel https:/...

  5. Robert Lee McCoy’s initial recordings in 1937 were released under his own name on the Bluebird label, while later on, he adopted various monikers such as Rambling Bob, Peetie’s Boy (as a tribute to Peetie Wheatstraw), the Nighthawks, and eventually, by the early 1950s, he settled on Robert Nighthawk.

  6. 23 de jun. de 2022 · Classic blues from Robert Nighthawk & band live in Chicago's south side 1964.https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCb9bioVsB0lPBkMOWTKzHFw?sub_confirmation=1

  7. Robert Nighthawk was an important figure in the transitional development of Blues from its Mississippi roots to its new home in the city. His slide-guitar work, with its combination of rhythmic drive and subtle one-string runs, was learned in the Delta juke-joints but its effects were heard many years later in the clubs and bars of Chicago in the post WWII era.