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Browsing: The Language of the Blues
In the blues, a Hambone is usually, unsurprisingly, a euphemism. Find out how it got into blues song, and who popularized it in this week’s fascinating LOTB column!
The murky origins of the fascinating “Griots”, African magic men and their parallells to blues singers.
Grinding on each other! Find out the fascinating origins of this popular blues word and phrase!
Greens are the tough-yet-nutritious leaves of collards, kale, mustard, or turnip… and since this is the blues, slang for a number of other things. Find out the whole story now!
See how grave dirt came to be used as a curse, and how the bleus tied it into our modern vocabulary!
The word goofer comes from the Bantu kufua and the Ki-Kongo kufa. Both mean “to die.” But Goofer’s dust digs deeper than that. Find out what magic Ma Rainey and the early blues masters were talking about.
Musicians say the word thousands of times, but do you really know where the word “GIG” came from? Find out! From the man that knows everything… The NITE tripper… Dr. John.
A “gate” is 1920s slang, but went on to take on a greater meaning in the Louisiana area. Find out EVERYTHING about Gatemouth in this week’s edition!
Read about the particularly FIERCE creature that Blind Lemon Jefferson sang about!
Foot track magic is a hoodoo practice, and was talked about by Robert Johnson