From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cecil Augusta (born 1920) was an American Delta blues singer and guitarist. He recorded a single track, "Stop All the Buses", for Alan Lomax in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1959, which was ignored until it was released on the album Blues Songbook, a selection of Lomax's field recordings, in 2003. [1] The musicologist David Evans described Augusta as "the perfect example of an artist who shows up at a field recording session and leaves before anyone realizes how good he was" and noted his unique acoustic guitar technique, elements of which later became integral to electric blues playing. [2]

References

  1. ^ "FAME Review: Various Artists – Alan Lomax: Blues Songbook". Acousticmusic.com. n.d. Retrieved August 28, 2010.
  2. ^ Evans, David (2003). The Blues Songbook (Media notes). Alan Lomax. Smithsonian Folkways.

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cecil Augusta (born 1920) was an American Delta blues singer and guitarist. He recorded a single track, "Stop All the Buses", for Alan Lomax in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1959, which was ignored until it was released on the album Blues Songbook, a selection of Lomax's field recordings, in 2003. [1] The musicologist David Evans described Augusta as "the perfect example of an artist who shows up at a field recording session and leaves before anyone realizes how good he was" and noted his unique acoustic guitar technique, elements of which later became integral to electric blues playing. [2]

References

  1. ^ "FAME Review: Various Artists – Alan Lomax: Blues Songbook". Acousticmusic.com. n.d. Retrieved August 28, 2010.
  2. ^ Evans, David (2003). The Blues Songbook (Media notes). Alan Lomax. Smithsonian Folkways.

External links


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