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Texas Blues: Barrooms, Borders, and Firebrands (The Blues Atlas: A History in Sound and Shadow) Paperback – July 13, 2025

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Management number 220486485 Release Date 2026/05/03 List Price $8.00 Model Number 220486485
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Texas Blues: Barrooms, Borders, and Firebrands is an unflinching, deeply textured journey into the heart of Lone Star blues. From the piney woods of East Texas to the neon stages of Austin, this volume traces the electrified sound, regional identities, and improvisational genius that defined the Texas Blues tradition. Guitar tone, juke joint culture, oil-town economies, and borderland hybridity all converge in a sound too wide to be contained by genre—and too raw to be forgotten.The sixth volume in The Blues Atlas Series: A History in Sound and Shadow, this book refuses nostalgia. It listens instead for the tone, phrasing, silence, and circuitry that made Texas Blues not a subgenre, but a stance. Here, Blind Lemon Jefferson slows time on East Texas porches, Lightnin’ Hopkins phrases like he’s talking through the amp, and T-Bone Walker lifts the blues upright into swingtime elegance. Across seventeen chapters and a haunting epilogue, Bill Johns maps the long conversation between tradition and transgression—from Mance Lipscomb to Freddie King, from Big Mama Thornton to Stevie Ray Vaughan, from Gatemouth Brown to Barbara Lynn, from Johnny Winter’s slide ferocity to the export myth of ZZ Top.Texas Blues was never about conformity. It bent phrasing like it bent rules—open tunings, dropped bars, and guitar tones tuned to sting. This book follows the music through barrooms, church socials, roadhouses, and oil-field jukes. It traces how blues players survived circuits of segregation, how Antone’s became a workshop rather than a museum, and how young firebrands today still carry that sound across digital landscapes and festival stages without forgetting where it came from.This isn’t a curated playlist of greatest hits. It’s a regional excavation of sound and struggle—one rooted in working-class memory, cultural hybridity, and the lived conditions of Texas musicians who didn’t wait for labels to call. Whether plugged in on the backline of a dance floor or whispering through a borrowed amp in a border town, Texas Blues spoke in a dialect all its own: hot, unrepentant, full of bend and breath and reverb. This book names its legends, but also listens for the sidemen, session players, backroom singers, and ghosted venues that kept the current alive.Johns writes with the authority of a documentarian and the pulse of a listener. His attention never wavers from the labor behind the music, the ethics of its amplification, and the costs of its transmission. Texas Blues: Barrooms, Borders, and Firebrands does not flatten the sound into myth. It honors the ones who shaped it—who made guitars weep, tremble, and shout back when words weren’t enough.This is not just music. It is geography, resistance, and memory. It’s what happens when you play like you mean it—and loud enough that the silence has to answer. Read more

ISBN13 979-8292287339
Language English
Publisher Independently published
Dimensions 6 x 0.9 x 9 inches
Book 6 of 8 The Blues Atlas: A History in Sound and Shadow
Item Weight 1.17 pounds
Print length 397 pages
Publication date July 13, 2025

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