Living Blues  |  Living Blues #253
Living Blues #253 (February/March 2018) is a special look at the current North Mississippi Hill Country Blues scene. Our cover artist, Grammy nominated R.L. Boyce, is one of the elders of the current Hill Country scene who first recorded behind fife and drum band leaders Otha Turner and Napolian Strickland in 1970. The Como Mamas, whose grandfather, Miles Pratcher, recorded for Alan Lomax in 1959, are three gospel singers (two sisters and a cousin) that capture the a cappella sounds of the Baptist Churches they grew up in in Como. Garry Burnside is the youngest of R.L. Burnside’s 14 children and grew up playing in his father’s band. Robert Kimbrough is the 49-year-old son of Junior Kimbrough and Cameron “Cam” Kimbrough is Junior’s 33-year-old grandson and is the son of David Malone [Kimbrough] and Trenton Ayers is the 31-year-old son of longtime Junior Kimbrough bass player, Little Joe Ayers. This issue’s historical article focuses on Hill Country Patriarch Sid Hemphill. Hemphill, born in 1878 (or 1876), Hemphill was the grandfather of Jessie Mae Hemphill and was the leader of the first African American fife and drum band ever recorded. All of this plus Breaking Out with Hubby Jenkins, LB Talks To Ben Harper, all the latest Blues News, record reviews and the new Living Blues Radio Charts.
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Articles in this issue
Below is a selection of articles in Living Blues Living Blues #253.