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From the emergence of the blues a hundred years ago to modern blues masters, here are the 70 Best Blues Artists of all time!
- Beth Hart: Heart and soul on her sleeve. There’s no match for a vocal with life experience, and when Beth Hart sings, that scorched battle cry evokes a backstory marked by drugs, destitution and mental disorder.
- Lee Brilleaux: The wolf of Canvey Island… Essex boys Dr Feelgood looked like four villains in an episode of The Sweeney, and frontman Brilleaux increased the element of danger with a mean and moody onstage persona, Howlin’ Wolf vocals and a grubby white suit.
- Sister Rosetta Tharpe: The original soul sister with a one-of-a-kind mezzo soprano voice. Her achievements – one of the first to play electric guitar in church, and to cross over from church to secular – detract from her extraordinary vocal and earthy takes on Rock Me, Didn’t It Rain and This Train.
- Shemekia Copeland: Born to sing the blues. For Copeland, the die was cast early. “I swear,” she laughed of her blues-blooded genealogy, “I was in my mother’s arms on my way home from the hospital when my father [Texas blues icon Johnny Copeland] said, ‘She’s going to be a blues singer.’
- John Mayall: All hail the original British blues rocker. As one of the grandfathers of the British blues scene, Mayall has drawn the roadmap for successive generations of singers to follow.
- Jeff Healey: From blues to jazz and back again. The blind Canadian guitarist shot to fame in the late 80s with his debut album See The Light, boosted by the hit ballad Angel Eyes.
- Little Walter: The Chicago blues harp king had another instrument too: his voice. Arguably, Marion “Little Walter” Jacobs’ true “voice” was his harmonica, and he revolutionised its use in the blues by experimenting with distortion and echo.
- Clarence ‘Gatemouth’ Brown: From the bayou to the blues. Born in Louisiana but raised in Texas, Brown could sing anything from straight ahead blues numbers to country and Cajun music.
- B.B. King. Out of the Three Kings of the Blues: Albert King, B.B. King and Freddie King, we’ll pick one and that will be Riley aka B.B. This is for one simple reason - he truly is The King of the Blues AND he gave us Lucille!
- Muddy Waters. Even if you’re not into blues, you would have heard this name: Muddy Waters. Very few others have contributed so much to the development of old time blues into what became rock and roll.
- Stevie Ray Vaughan. Certainly one of the most notable guitarists of the 1980s, Stevie Ray Vaughn had achieved legendary status long before his tragic death in a helicopter crash.
- Jimi Hendrix. Described as “the greatest instrumentalist in the history of rock music” by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame,what else can we add? Jimi Hendrix transcends many musical genres and it’s hard to classify him as a guitarist of just one category but we strongly feel that he deserves a righteous place within our list of most legendary and famous blues artists of all time.
Here is a list of blues artists on Spotify, ranked based on popularity, who exemplifies the blues genre. You can find out what blues genre sounds like where you can preview artists or sort them the way you want, just click the headers to sort.
#NamePopularityFollowers152801921247190384344495598445136653Jul 28, 2010 · Mamie Smith was the ‘Queen of the Blues' but Ida Cox was known as ‘The Uncrowned Queen of the Blues.’ Coronation issues aside, Ida was a terrific performer and one of the greatest singers of the classic female blues period.
Led Zeppelin. Captain Beefheart. Jimi Hendrix. The Sir Douglas Quintet. Doug Sahm. The Allman Brothers Band. Big Brother & the Holding Company. Janis Joplin. John Mayall. Grateful Dead. Jeff Beck. Santana. Lynyrd Skynyrd. Fleetwood Mac. Bob Dylan. Joe Cocker. The Animals. Jethro Tull. Hank Williams, Jr. The Jimi Hendrix Experience. The Yardbirds.