Latest update: ... Saturday 24th January 2026.
Every day we have the Blues .... Backtracking to the Roots of the Blues - Back, to where it all began ...

Legendary blues artists

Mildred Bailey
 

W C Handy
 

Mississippi John Hurt

Blue Lu Barker
 

Sleepy John Estes
 

Robert Nighthawk
 

J. B. Hutto
 
       
   

Back to the Roots of the Blues ... Backtracking
Latest release 22nd Jan 2025 - Thank you for visiting with us, we cordially invite you to review and download the current production below. 'Backtracking' is a result of our research a journey of discovery that never ends, our love of the Blues and respect for the artists that left us this legacy of music.

All this simply because the music, the history and the culture of the blues never ends. We're honoured and privileged to share the music within the genre of the Blues back in time a hundred years and beyond, a genre so vast and so diverse.

Backtracking is streamed online and is broadcast worldwide. It's free to join the 'Backtracking' time machine - Get the authentic blues on your radio station .....
 
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Featured artist of the week .... Carolina Slim
Edward P. Harris (August 22, 1923 – October 22, 1953), known as Carolina Slim, was an American Piedmont blues guitarist and singer. Possibly he’s best-known for his recordings of Black cat trail (certainly my favourite) and I'll never walk in your door, 

He used various pseudonyms during his brief recording career he recorded 27 songs, using names such as Country Paul, Jammin' Jim, Lazy Slim Jim and Paul Howard. . Details of his life outside of his music career are few and those that exist are questionable, even the reasons for the use of different names are unclear.

Edward was born in Leasburg, North Carolina. He learned to play the guitar from his father essentially influenced by Lightnin' Hopkins and Blind Boy Fuller <

In 1950, he relocated to Newark, New Jersey, and made his recording debut for Savoy Records, finally using the name Carolina Slim. His first single was Black Chariot Blues backed with "Mama's Boogie", recorded on July 24, 1950, and released by Acorn Records, a subsidiary of Savoy. In 1951 and 1952, he recorded a further eight tracks for King Records in New York City, this time using the name Country Paul Howard.

 Slim's style blended Piedmont blues, prominent in songs such as Carolina Boogie and Rag Mama Rag, with the influence of Hopkins steering him increasingly towards Texas blues. He occasionally incorporated a washboard as well as his guitar, as if wishing to emphasise his Carolina roots.

His recordings were not hugely popular but sold in sufficient numbers for him to retain his recording contract. In June 1952, he recorded four more tracks for Savoy, these were his final recordings.

He died in Newark, New Jersey, from a heart attack, which occurred during surgery for a back complaint. He was just 30 years old.
 
 
 
    Carolina Slim - Georgia woman
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Different shades of blue ... Cleo Laine
 

I met this incredible lady at a family occasion some years ago. Having been introduced, I was totally star struck and the dozens of questions and the musical arrangements I desperately wanted to ask about just fell out of my head. As someone bought up and actively a musician since of the age of 7, including playing jazz with a famed uncle (I came a very distant second) Cleo was to me an icon. This track and her plaintive, 'Wish you were here' is fast becoming, due for replacement, it's getting a little worn.

Cleo Liane, was a Jazz musician and actress. Born Clementine Laine in Southall, London to a Jamaican father and English mother who nurtured her musical talent from an early age. Cleo joined the John Dankworth Orchestra in 1953 and performed to sell-out theatre audiences throughout the world. She married 'Johnny' in 1958 and that year played the lead in Sandy Wilson's musical Valmouth. Her talents encompassed jazz, popular and classical music, opera and theatre. She was the first female performer to have received Grammy nominations across the jazz, popular and classical music categories She appeared at the Royal Albert Hall, Carnegie Hall, on Broadway and in the West End, as well as being frequently seen on television. Cleo was created a Dame in the 1997 New Year's Honours list. .... If you fancy a good cry, listen to Cleo singing 'Send in the clowns'.

Cleo Laine - Gotta a right to sing the blues
Download - Gotta a right to sing the blues
 
   
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Facebook ... From the archives
From the PD Productions archives, we're blowing the dust off tracks that don't appear on Backtracking as much as they should...
This time: Bessie-Smith - Dixie Flyer Blues

Check it out / Click and load
 
 
 
Every day we have the blues ..... PD Productions Video archive...
Welcome to the PD Productions video archive. We are delighted to receive video clips from our very good friends around the world to include in our 'Backtracking' program. Below is a list of the clips scheduled for the next few weeks ...  
   
  The Staple Singers - I'll Take You There
  47th Street Jive - June Richmond with Roy Milton's band
  B. B. King - The Thrill Is Gone
  Diunna Greenleaf & Blue Mercy
  Nina Simone - Ain't got no, I got life
  Raymunda Dutch Blues - Pity the fool
  Take Me to the River LIVE - Sharde Thomas and Rising Star
  Send us a video clip of your gig (mp4 format) - Click here
 
   
Current clip: .... Get on board the blues train  
   
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Myths and Legends of the blues ..... R L Burnside

R L Burnside, whose jovial presence and jokes never failed to entertain, reluctantly he retired due to illness in his final years and died at St. Francis Hospital in Memphis on September 1, 2005. According to some documents R.L. stood for Rural L., or for Robert Lee, Burnside. To many locals he was known as simply 'Rule' and to his family he was their beloved 'Big Daddy'

Some stories around the 'Blues' probably embellished over time are too delicious to pass over. Around 1959, he left Chicago and went back to Mississippi to work the farms and raise a family. He killed a man at a dice game and was convicted of murder and sentenced to six months' incarceration (in Parchman Prison). his boss at the time reputedly pulled strings to keep the murder sentence short, due to having need of Burnside's skills as a tractor driver. he later said 'I didn't mean to kill nobody ... I just meant to shoot the sonofabitch in the head. Him dying was between him and the Lord'

   
R L Burnside - Goin Down South  
Download: - R L Burnside - Goin Down South  
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