Latest update: ... Saturday 21st February 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 5th February 2026 - 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 .....
   
 
 
Backtracking directory..
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Featured artist of the week .... Memphis Minnie
It’s been said that Memphis Minnie played guitar like a man. – in 1897 she was born Lizzie Douglas in Louisiana and raised in Algiers, across the river from New Orleans. . Her parents nicknamed her Kid and her early life as a performer saw her performing under the, not surprising name Kid Douglas.  Conversely to the claim on her guitar playing, there were plenty of men who wanted to play guitar like Memphis Minnie. She once even beat the great Big Bill Broonzy in a picking contest. Her title Queen of the Country Blues was no hype. Minnie perhaps suggests a timid lady, far from it, she did everything the boys could do and more, and she did it in a fancy gown with full hair and makeup. She had it all: stellar guitar, a powerful voice, a huge repertoire including many original, signature songs and a stage presence simultaneously glamorous, bawdy and tough.

She transcended both gender and genre. Her recording career reached from the 1920s heyday of country blues to cutting electric sides in 1950s Chicago. Minnie helped form the roots of electric Chicago blues, as well as R&B and rock ‘n’ roll, long before she plugged in. Her unique storytelling style of song writing drew such surprising fans as Country Music Hall of Famer Bob Wills, the King of Western Swing, who covered her song about a favourite horse, Frankie Jean, right down to copying Minnie’s whistling. Though she inspired as many men as women, her influence was particularly strong on female musicians, her disciples including her niece Lavern Baker, a rock and R&B pioneer in her own right, as well as Maria Muldaur (who released a 2012 tribute CD) Bonnie Raitt, Rory Block, Tracy Nelson, Saffire and virtually every other guitar-slinging woman since.

She died following a stroke in 1973, Bonnie Raitt paid for a headstone to be erected at her grave in Walls, Mississippi. She remains one of the greatest women guitarists and blues singers in American history.

 
 
 
    Memphis Minnie - Chickasaw train blues
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Different shades of blue ... Bo Diddley
 
Combining R&B and blues with eccentric onstage performances, Bo Diddley is often considered one of the pioneers of rock and roll music. Otha Ellas Bates was born on 30 December 1928. He never knew his father, Eugene Bates; his mother, Ethel Wilson, was only fifteen or sixteen years old when Ellas was born. Ethel’s first cousin, Gussie McDaniel, raised him while the family tried to make a living as sharecroppers.

In 1934, in the midst of the Great Depression, they moved to Chicago, where Bo started to develop an interest in music. His first instrument was a violin, and he took lessons from classical teacher O. W. Frederick. He also taught himself to play the drums and the trombone.

At age twelve Otha received his first guitar, a Christmas present from his stepsister, Lucille McDaniel. John Lee Hooker had already become one of his heroes, and he wanted to play just like him. But he had trouble strumming the guitar: I couldn’t play the guitar like everyone else, Bo later recalled. Other guitarists have skinny fingers, I didn’t, I play drum licks on the guitar. This music style evolved into the distinctive shave and a haircut, two bits rhythm that characterised most of his repertoire.

 
Bo Diddley - Signifying blues
Download - Bo Diddley - Signifying blues
A bit more about Bo Diddley (pdf)
 
   
Get in touch, How to contact ... PD Productions
 
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Every day we have the blues ..... PD Productions Audio / Video ...
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: ....Delta Gator Swamp Blues  
   
Play the current video clip  
Legal / Copyright stuff  
 
 
Blowing the dust off a few ... From the audio archives
From the PD Productions archives, we're blowing the dust off tracks that don't appear on Backtracking as much as they should...
Dock Boggs - Country Blues- 1966 (Live)
Down south blues
Who was Dock Boggs
   
Myths and Legends of the blues ..... Maxwell Street Blues

In our music there are plenty of references to ‘Maxwell Street - The music the migrants played on the Street was different from the acoustic blues they brought from the South. It relied on borrowed electricity from businesses, run via extensions to the street, to amplify the Mississippi Delta blues sound so it could be heard above the market noise.

The idea of attracting crowds of listeners appealed to business owners, too, these were potential customers. The resulting amplified and distinct Chicago blues sound was made famous by people such as Muddy Waters, Junior Wells, and Bo Diddley—the latter of whom played on Maxwell Street with his band, the Hipsters, who were later called the Langley Avenue Jive Cats.

   
Papa Charlie Jackson -Maxwell Street Blues (1922)  
Download: - Papa Charlie Jackson -Maxwell Street Blues (1922)  
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