Sam Myers: The Blues Is My Story (American Made Music Series)  FREE DOWNLOAD
 
- Series: American Made Music Series
 - Paperback: 172 pages
 - Publisher: University Press of Mississippi; First Edition edition (September 11, 2006)
 - Language: English
 - ISBN-10: 1578068967
 - ISBN-13: 978-1578068968
 
Sam Myers: The Blues Is My Story 
recounts the life of bluesman Sam Myers (1936-2006), as told in his own 
words to author Jeff Horton. Myers grew up visually handicapped in the 
Jim Crow South and left home to attend the state school for the blind at
 Piney Woods. Myers's intense desire to become a musician and a 
scholarship from the American Conservatory School of Music called him to
 Chicago. There in 1952 he joined Elmore James's band as a drummer and 
was featured on some of James's best-known recordings. Following the 
elder bluesman's death in 1963, Myers fronted bands of his own and 
recorded many well-received singles and albums. In 1986, Myers became 
the W. C. Handy Award-winning front man, vocalist, and harmonica player 
for Anson Funderburgh and the Rockets. 
Throughout the book, Myers provides a historical context to a bygone era of the blues and reveals his own thoughts and feelings about the musicians with whom he played. And they are a list of who's who in the blues-Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Little Walter, Hound Dog Taylor, and Robert Lockwood Junior in addition to Elmore James. In one chapter Myers describes a personalized deeper meaning to the blues. And in another he relates a series of anecdotes about the lighter side of life on the road.
Contributions from Myers's father and stories from a boyhood friend round out the narrative. Dallas musician Brian "Hash Brown" Calway dissects the more technical aspects of Myers's harmonica style. Long-time friend and bandmate, Anson Funderburgh, weighs in with a chapter about their songwriting methods and offers some of his own recollections on their twenty years together.
An award-winning and prolific musician and singer Sam Myers wrote and recorded what was to be his most famous single, "Sleeping in the Ground," in 1956. He toured all over the U.S. and around the world with Anson Funderburgh and the Rockets. Jeff Horton is a blues musician and journalist active in the Texas blues scene. His work has been published in Southwest Blues magazine.
Throughout the book, Myers provides a historical context to a bygone era of the blues and reveals his own thoughts and feelings about the musicians with whom he played. And they are a list of who's who in the blues-Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Little Walter, Hound Dog Taylor, and Robert Lockwood Junior in addition to Elmore James. In one chapter Myers describes a personalized deeper meaning to the blues. And in another he relates a series of anecdotes about the lighter side of life on the road.
Contributions from Myers's father and stories from a boyhood friend round out the narrative. Dallas musician Brian "Hash Brown" Calway dissects the more technical aspects of Myers's harmonica style. Long-time friend and bandmate, Anson Funderburgh, weighs in with a chapter about their songwriting methods and offers some of his own recollections on their twenty years together.
An award-winning and prolific musician and singer Sam Myers wrote and recorded what was to be his most famous single, "Sleeping in the Ground," in 1956. He toured all over the U.S. and around the world with Anson Funderburgh and the Rockets. Jeff Horton is a blues musician and journalist active in the Texas blues scene. His work has been published in Southwest Blues magazine.

 



