Entrant Company
Terry Blade Music
Medium Type
Use of Music
Medium
Use of Music Innovation
Category
Use of Music Innovation
"Chicago Kinfolk: The Juke Joint Blues" is an ethnographic blues music album by Chicago-based singer-songwriter Terry Blade. The album aims to honor the trailblazers and pioneers of Chicago blues music, including Theresa Needham (The Godmother of Chicago Blues), Muddy Waters Jr., Jimmy Walker, Lefty Dizz, and Willie Monroe.
The album features original blues songs written, performed and recorded by Blade; Blade's rendition of a song Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup recorded in Chicago in 1946; and excerpts from interviews with well known Chicago blues musicians in May 1977. The audio recordings of these interviews are in the public domain, and were curated through Blade's research of the Chicago Ethnic Arts Project Collection of the American Folklife Center at the U.S. Library of Congress.
Chicago Kinfolk's act of revitalizing Chicago Blues through direct integration of primary sources is a significant contribution to cultural preservation and education, offering a new model for how artists can interact with, advertise, market, and disseminate historical materials. The fundamental purpose of this integration is to create a dialogue and an ethnographic record. By bringing the archive directly into the listener's home, Chicago Kinfolk bypasses traditional academic gatekeepers and makes historical voices directly accessible, thereby democratizing access to cultural heritage. This active engagement creates a new pathway for audiences to connect with the past, demonstrating a novel form of artistic stewardship.