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Until
his death in 1997, guitarist and harmonica player/folk artist David Johnson
played Delta-style slide guitar at his home in Elba, AL on an old Stella
guitar. Slide guitar technique is thought to have developed from a rudimentary
single string African instrument played by sliding a bone or rock the length
of the string. In the American South, a similar child's toy called a "diddley
bow" often served as the first musical instrument for aspiring young
blues players in the Delta. Mississippi blues artists used the slide as
a way to mimic the human voice and have their instrument "talk"
back to them in a call-and-response style often associated with the black
church. It's use spread throughout the country with players using everything
from broken bottle necks to knives to produce the distinctive, ethereal
sound of genuine Delta blues. |
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