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・ Blues Maggots
・ Blues Magoos
・ Blues March
・ Blues Masters at the Crossroads
・ Blues Matters!
・ Blues metropolitano
・ Blues Music Award
・ Blues My Name
・ Blues News
・ Blues Old Stand, Alabama
・ Blues on Bach
・ Blues on Broadway
・ Blues on Purpose
・ Blues on the Bayou
・ Blues on Top of Blues
Blues People
・ Blues Pills
・ Blues Pills (album)
・ Blues Point
・ Blues Point Tower
・ Blues Power
・ Blues Preacher
・ Blues Project
・ Blues rock
・ Blues Run the Game
・ Blues Saraceno
・ Blues scale
・ Blues Section
・ Blues Shout
・ Blues shouter


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Blues People : ウィキペディア英語版
Blues People

''Blues People (Negro Music in White America)'' is a seminal study of Afro-American music (and culture generally) by Amiri Baraka, who published it as LeRoi Jones in 1963.〔New York: William Morrow & Company, 1963. ISBN 0-688-18474-X〕 In ''Blues People'' Baraka explores the possibility that the history of black Americans can be traced through the evolution of their music. It is considered a classic work on jazz and blues music in American culture. This book documents the effects jazz and blues had on America on an economic, musical, and social level. It chronicles the types of music dating back to the slaves up until the 1960s. ''Blues People'' argues that "negro music"—as Amiri Baraka calls it—appealed to and influenced new America. According to Baraka, music and melody is not the only way the gap between American culture and African-American culture was bridged. Music also helped spread values and customs through its media exposure. ''Blues People'' demonstrates the influence of African Americans and their culture on American culture and history. The book examines blues music as performance, as cultural expression, even in the face of its commodification.
To Baraka, ''Blues People'' represented "everything () had carried for years, what () had to say, and ()". The book is deeply personal and chronicles what brought him to believe that blues was a personal history of his people in the United States. The resonance and desperation within this type of music is what compelled Baraka to learn about the history of blues music. He learned through his studies that the "Africanisms" is directly related to American culture, rather than being solely related to Black people. Baraka dedicates the book ''to my parents ... the first Negroes I ever met''.
==Content==
The 1999 reprint begins with a reminiscence by the author, then aged 65, titled "''Blues People'': Looking Both Ways", in which he credits poet and English teacher Sterling Brown with having inspired both him and his contemporary A. B. Spellman. Baraka does not here discuss the impact his book has had.
The original text is divided into twelve sections, thus:

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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