The Blues Highway: New Orleans to Chicago - A Travel and Music Guide

The Blues Highway: New Orleans to Chicago - A Travel and Music Guide

by RichardKnight (Author)

Synopsis

Never before has there been such a comprehensive guide to the great music corridor of the South to the Midwest. Award-winning travel writer Richard Knight has written the definitive travel guide exploring the roots of jazz and blues in the US by following Highway 61 and the Mississippi River from Congo Square in New Orleans and the Delta blues joints, through Memphis, Nashville, St. Louis, and the South Side of Chicago.

The Blues Highway looks at the music history of this famous stretch that many black musicians took from the cotton fields of Mississippi to Chicago in search of work which led to the spread of jazz and blues across the country.

New and exclusive interviews with such ground-breaking legends as Sam Phillips, founder of Sun Records in Memphis; R&B great Wilson Pickett; legendary performer Ike Turner; the great Sax artist, Little Milton Campbell; blues great Rufus Thomas, who is still going strong in his eighties, and more are featured.

In addition, this is also a terrific travel guide, too, featuring detailed city guides, extensive listings on where to stay and where to eat, where to find the best music clubs and bars, and historic landmarks.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Edition: 1
Publisher: Trailblazer Publications
Published: 17 Aug 2001

ISBN 10: 1873756437
ISBN 13: 9781873756430

Media Reviews
'This book is vital' Sam Phillips, founder of Sun Records
Author Bio
Richard Knight is an award-winning travel writer: a former Young Travel Writer of the Year. He is the author of The Millennium Guide and Trekking in the Moroccan Atlas (both also from Trailblazer) and has contributed to several other guidebooks. He has written for the Daily and Sunday Telegraph, the Times, the Financial Times, the Guardian, the Observer, the Daily Mail, the Independent and many other publications in Britain and abroad. Currently editor of the Gap Year Magazine, he is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.