23. MUDDY WATERS - You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had
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Early post-war Blues :
After World War II and in the 1950s, new styles of electric blues music became popular in cities such as Chicago, Detroit and St. Louis. Electric blues used amplified electric guitars, electric bass, drums, and harmonica played through a microphone. Chicago became a center for electric blues in the early 1950s. Chicago blues is influenced to a large extent by the Mississippi blues style, because many performers had migrated from the Mississippi region. Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, Willie Dixon, and Jimmy Reed were all born in Mississippi and moved to Chicago during the Great Migration.
17. BIG BILL BROONZY - Hey Hey (1952)
18. BIG BILL BROONZY - How You Want It Done (1952)
19. BIG BILL BROONZY - Worried Man Blues (1952)
20. THE HOWLIN' WOLF (Chester Arthur Burnett) - Smokestack Lightnin' (1956)
21. SKIP JAMES - All night long
22. DR.ISAIAH ROSS - Feel so good
23. MUDDY WATERS - You Can't Lose What You Ain't Never Had
24. BIG JOE WILLIAMS (Joseph Lee Williams)- Baby please don't go (1963)
25. MUDDY WATERS (McKinley Morganfield)- Got My Mojo Working (1963)
26. MISSISSIPPI JOHN HURT - Lonesome Valley (1965)
27. MISSISSIPPI JOHN HURT (John Smith Hurt)- Spike driver Blues (1963)
28. J.B.LENOIR - I feel so good (1964)
29. J.B.LENOIR - Slow down (1965)
30. THE HOWLIN' WOLF - Shake it for me (1964)
31. THE HOWLIN' WOLF - How many more years (1966)
32. THE HOWLIN' WOLF - Dust my Broom (1966)
33. JOHN LEE HOOKER - I'm Leaving (1964)
34. REVEREND GARY DAVIS - Death Don't Have No Mercy
35. REVEREND GARY DAVIS - Children Of Zion
36. "Willie" Dixon (William James)- Weak Brain and Narrow Mind (1964)
37. BUDDY GUY (George "Buddy" Guy) - Hoochie Coochie Man (1969)
38. MUDDY WATERS - Hoochie Coochie Man (1972)
39. DAVID HONEYBOY EDWARDS - Gamblin' man