Fb-Button
Magic Slim Archives - I Love Blues Guitar
I Love Blues Guitar

Tag: Magic Slim

  • Magic Slim – Crazy Woman

    Magic Slim – Crazy Woman

    Magic Slim – Crazy Woman

    Magic Slim – The Towering Bluesman Who Kept Chicago Loud and Proud

    Some blues artists make you think.
    Some make you cry.
    Magic Slim?
    He made me want to turn it way up and never look back.

    The first time I heard him, it wasn’t subtle. It wasn’t polite.
    It was rough, raw, relentless.
    And it was exactly what I needed.

    Magic Slim played the blues like a man with nothing to prove—and everything to say.


    Who Was Magic Slim?

    Born Morris Holt in Mississippi in 1937, he lost the tip of his little finger in a cotton gin accident, which ended his dreams of becoming a piano player.

    So what did he do?
    He picked up a guitar, moved to Chicago, and proceeded to lay down some of the toughest electric blues the city ever heard.

    Backed for decades by his powerhouse band The Teardrops, Magic Slim became a Chicago blues institution—not because he chased trends, but because he stuck to what he knew best: gritty, stomping, take-no-prisoners blues.

    He passed away in 2013, but if you’ve ever seen him live—or even just cranked one of his records on a Friday night—you know: the man brought the thunder.


    The Sound: Fender Fury and Bare-Knuckle Blues

    Magic Slim didn’t mess around.

    • 🎸 His guitar tone was all muscle—usually straight from a Fender amp, no effects, just attitude.
    • 🎤 His voice was deep and gravelly—world-weary, no-nonsense, and very real.
    • 🎶 His band, The Teardrops, were tight as hell—built for long nights and loud clubs.

    It wasn’t fancy. It wasn’t delicate.
    It was Chicago blues, served hot and heavy.


    Albums That Blew My Hair Back

    If you’re just diving into Magic Slim, here are some stone-cold classics:

    • 🎧 Raw Magic (1982) – One of my personal favorites. Rough, soulful, and alive.
    • 💿 Black Tornado (1993) – Aptly named. He and the Teardrops tear the roof off.
    • 🔥 Scufflin’ (1996) – Features some of his best playing and groove work.
    • 🎶 Blue Magic (2002) – Later-career magic (no pun intended) that proves he never lost a step.
    • 🎤 Bad Boy (2012) – One of his final albums and a powerful statement to end on.

    Every record is a masterclass in how to play mean and still swing.


    Seeing Magic Slim Live – A Wall of Blues

    I was lucky enough to catch Magic Slim and the Teardrops in a small club not long before he passed.
    He came out slow, almost casual, but the moment he hit that first chord?
    The entire room snapped to attention.

    He didn’t jump around. He didn’t preach.
    He just played the hell out of that Strat.
    Set after set, solo after solo—he brought the house down, all while looking like it was just another night at the office.

    And that’s the thing—Magic Slim made it look easy, but what he did was pure craft.


    Why Magic Slim Still Matters

    In a world full of polished blues and over-produced nostalgia, Magic Slim kept it dirty, real, and deeply alive.

    He didn’t water it down.
    He didn’t play nice.
    He just gave you the blues, straight up—loud, loose, and full of soul.

    He influenced generations, even if he never became a household name.
    And honestly? That’s part of his charm.
    Magic Slim was for the true believers.


    Where to Start If You’re New

    Here’s your Magic Slim starter kit:

    • 🎸 Raw Magic – Essential early fire.
    • 💿 Black Tornado – A perfect intro to the Chicago club sound.
    • 🎧 Blue Magic – Later years, still fierce.
    • 📺 YouTube: Search “Magic Slim live” or “Scufflin’ Magic Slim” to feel the power.

    More at alligator.com and delmark.com


    Magic Slim wasn’t flashy. He didn’t chase fame.
    He just brought the real blues, night after night, year after year.

    And when I need to remember what it’s all about—when I want grit, groove, and guitar that speaks truth—I put on Magic Slim.
    And turn it way the hell up.

    🎸💥🍻

    Video

    Thank You

    We appreciate your time and dedication to reading our article. For more of the finest blues guitar music, make sure to follow our Facebook page, “I Love Blues Guitar”. We share exceptional selections every day. Thank you once again for your continued support and readership.

  • Magic Slim – I Need Lovin’

    Magic Slim – I Need Lovin’

    Chicago’s Heavy Hitter: How Magic Slim Showed Me the Blues Still Had Muscle

    The first time I heard Magic Slim, it was “Gravel Road”—and it sounded like someone had plugged a muddy Mississippi juke joint straight into a Chicago power grid. The tone? Dirty and defiant. The groove? Swaggering. His voice? Gritty as a busted muffler.

    I’d heard plenty of blues players who were slick and polished. Magic Slim wasn’t that. He was raw, real, and ready to rumble. And that’s why I couldn’t stop listening.


    From Mississippi Fields to Chicago Steel

    Magic Slim—born Morris Holt in 1937 near Grenada, Mississippi—wasn’t born with a guitar in his hand. He actually started as a pianist, but a cotton gin accident cost him a finger and forced him to switch to guitar.

    Good thing, too. Because when he finally landed in Chicago, he brought that Delta attitude with him and plugged it into the city’s urban blues machine. He learned under the great Magic Sam, who gave him the nickname “Magic Slim”—and man, did he grow into it.

    He formed his band, The Teardrops, and spent the next 40+ years turning every club, festival, and juke joint into a full-on blues brawl.


    The Sound: Fat-Tone, No-Frills, Gutbucket Blues

    Magic Slim didn’t waste time with flashy solos or sweet harmonies. His guitar playing was mean and muscular—huge tone, deep grooves, always in the pocket. He played a stripped-down Fender setup, cranked loud and loose, with riffs that stomped as much as they swung.

    And vocally? Slim growled, barked, and shouted like a man who’d lived every word. His voice wasn’t about finesse—it was about truth.

    His sound was Chicago blues at its toughest: no horns, no frills, just a Strat, a backbeat, and a whole lot of soul.


    Albums That Hit Like a Freight Train

    If you want to feel what the blues really feels like when it’s sweating and stomping, here’s where to dive in:

    • 🎸 Gravel Road (1990) – Down & dirty. Pure Slim power. Title track is a monster.
    • 💥 Scufflin’ (1996) – Big riffs, big tone, no apologies.
    • 🔥 Black Tornado (1998) – A late-career peak. Tight, loud, and rowdy.
    • 🎶 Raising the Bar (2010) – Proof he never lost a step. Gritty, grooving, and hard-hitting.
    • 🕯️ Live at B.L.U.E.S. (1986) – One of the greatest live blues records you’ll ever hear. Raw, raucous, and unforgettable.

    And don’t sleep on The Teardrops—they were one of the best backing bands in the business. Tight, groovy, and locked in like a machine.


    Seeing Him Live: Blues with a Body Slam

    I saw Magic Slim once, years ago, in a smoky little club where the ceiling tiles were practically sweating. He walked out, tall and solid, Strat slung low, and without saying a word, hit the first note like a punch to the chest.

    The band dropped in behind him, and the groove was instant—thick, steady, and totally unrelenting. He wasn’t trying to impress anyone. He was being himself. And you couldn’t look away.

    He played for the people—no flash, no gimmicks. Just real-deal blues with blood under its fingernails.


    Why Magic Slim Matters Now More Than Ever

    In a world where the blues sometimes gets too clean or too careful, Magic Slim is a reminder of what this music is meant to be: rough around the edges, street-tough, and full of feeling.

    He didn’t chase trends. He didn’t crossover. He held the line for raw, stomping, house-rocking electric blues. And in doing so, he inspired generations—from young Chicago kids to blues fans all over Europe and the U.S.

    When he passed in 2013, we didn’t just lose a player—we lost a pillar.


    Where to Start If You’re New

    Step into the ring:

    • 🎧 Gravel Road – The perfect intro to his sound.
    • 💿 Black Tornado – Late-career fire.
    • 🎤 Live at B.L.U.E.S. – To feel the full live power.
    • 📺 YouTube: Search “Magic Slim live Teardrops” or “Magic Slim Scufflin’” for a front-row seat to blues thunder.

    More at Magic Slim’s Alligator Records page


    Magic Slim didn’t reinvent the blues. He reminded us what it was really about: tone, truth, and groove that hits you in the chest. He didn’t need flash—he had feel. He didn’t need a spotlight—he had the soul. And man, am I grateful I pressed play when I did. 🎸🔥

  • Magic Slim – Buddy Budy’s Friend

    Magic Slim – Buddy Budy’s Friend

    Raw, Real, and Loud: How Magic Slim Became My Blues Backbone

    If there’s one bluesman who could blow the roof off a bar with nothing but a Telecaster and a stare, it was Magic Slim.

    I can still remember the first time I saw him—tall, broad, towering over his guitar like it was a weapon. No frills, no flash. Just blues, cranked up, stomping, and true. The band kicked into “Ain’t Doing Too Bad,” and by the first solo, I was hooked. Not in a polite nod-your-head way—I mean shouting-into-my-beer hooked.

    That night, I learned: Magic Slim wasn’t here to finesse you. He was here to flatten you—with tone, truth, and a groove so tight it felt like a vice grip on your chest. And I’ve been chasing that sound ever since.


    The Road from Mississippi to Chicago

    Born Morris Holt in Mississippi in 1937, Slim grew up in the Delta dirt, steeped in the raw, emotional power of the blues. But when he hit Chicago in the ’50s, he found his voice—loud, mean, and sharp as broken glass. He didn’t come up playing slick riffs in studio lounges. He came up grinding it out in clubs where you had to earn every cheer.

    Originally a piano player, he switched to guitar after losing a finger in a cotton gin accident. That’s right—he lost a finger and still became one of the greatest electric blues players of all time. That’s grit. That’s blues.

    His early days were spent learning from the best—Magic Sam, his mentor and the guy who gave him the nickname. And it stuck. Magic Slim. Not flashy. Just formidable.


    Magic Slim & The Teardrops: The Ultimate Barroom Blues Machine

    You can’t talk about Magic Slim without talking about The Teardrops, his longtime backing band and one of the tightest, funkiest, hardest-hitting blues outfits I’ve ever heard. They didn’t just back him up—they drove the whole train.

    When I saw them live, it was like watching a freight train roll through a juke joint. Bass thumping, drums snapping, Slim’s guitar slicing through the mix like a knife through barbecue.

    They kept it simple. A few chords, a big groove, a songbook full of pain and swagger. Songs like:

    • 🎸 “Goin’ to Mississippi” – a total barn-burner
    • 🎶 “Ain’t Doing Too Bad” – classic Teardrop fire
    • 💥 “Rough Dried Woman” – as gritty as a gravel road
    • 🐍 “Let Me Love You Baby” – raw and full of bite

    I’ve seen a lot of bands try to “modernize” the blues. Not Slim. He made the blues bigger, not slicker. He never pandered, never sweetened it. Just turned up, plugged in, and let it rip.


    The Albums That Changed the Game for Me

    Magic Slim made dozens of records, and nearly all of them are front-to-back blues beatdowns. But here are the ones that stayed glued to my CD tray:

    • 🔥 Scufflin’ (1996) – My introduction. Crunchy, wild, and full of swagger.
    • 🎸 Black Tornado (1998) – Aptly named. This one rips.
    • 🥃 Raw Magic (1991) – Gritty, stomping, no-nonsense Slim.
    • 🎤 Raising the Bar (2010) – One of his final records, and it proves the man never slowed down.

    Slim didn’t make “hits.” He made statements. Records that punched you in the gut and dared you not to feel something.


    Seeing Magic Slim Live Was Like Going to Church (If the Church Served Whiskey)

    I was lucky enough to see Slim in the early 2000s in a small club in Chicago—no stage lighting, no fanfare, just Slim, The Teardrops, and a packed room of sweaty blues fans who knew what was coming.

    He played like a man possessed—head down, guitar snarling, voice cutting through the smoke like a buzzsaw. He didn’t talk much. Didn’t need to. The music spoke. It roared. It preached. And we all said amen.

    When he launched into “Luv Sumbody,” I swear the floor shook. That moment is burned into my memory as one of the most pure blues experiences of my life.


    Why Magic Slim Still Rules

    In a world where blues sometimes gets watered down or polished up for polite company, Magic Slim was a reminder of where it came from. The barrooms. The jukes. The streets. The struggle.

    He played like every song had something to prove. And in a way, it did.

    Magic Slim passed in 2013, but his music hasn’t lost a drop of power. Put on any record, and you’ll hear it: that grinding groove, that slashing tone, that truth. He played like a man who meant it. Every time.


    Where to Start if You’re New

    Here’s your fast track into Slim’s world:

    • 💿 Scufflin’ – Classic Teardrop stomp.
    • 🔊 Gravel Road – Straight-up electric Chicago blues.
    • 🎤 Black Tornado – Thunderous, aggressive, unforgettable.
    • 📀 Raising the Bar – Late career, no loss of edge.
    • 🕺 Anything Live – Because seeing (or hearing) Slim live is essential.

    And trust me: once you hear him, you’ll want to hear all of him.


    Magic Slim didn’t clean up the blues—he cranked it up, stomped it down, and made it swing. He’s the reason I love my blues big, bold, and unapologetically real. And once you step into his world, there’s no going back.

    Thank You

    We appreciate your time and dedication to reading our article. For more of the finest blues guitar music, make sure to follow our Facebook page, “I Love Blues Guitar”. We share exceptional selections every day. Thank you once again for your continued support and readership.

  • Magic Slim – Mind Your Own Business

    Magic Slim – Mind Your Own Business

    The Last Real Bluesman: The Grit, Groove, and Glory of Magic Slim

    Somewhere in the smoky haze of a late-night juke joint, where the floorboards creak with the ghosts of a thousand stomping boots and the walls bleed Mississippi soul, Magic Slim’s guitar still howls. It’s a sound that doesn’t beg for your attention—it grabs you by the collar, drags you through heartbreak, and leaves you sweating in the heat of a solo that burns like Memphis asphalt in July. Magic Slim didn’t just play the blues—he lived them, and every note he bent was a lifeline thrown across decades of hard living, deep feeling, and no-frills authenticity.

    Born Morris Holt in Torrance, Mississippi, in 1937, Slim was baptized in the church of cotton fields and gospel choirs. The blues found him like they always do—with pain and promise. He lost his pinky in a cotton gin accident as a boy, but that didn’t stop him. In fact, it made him play harder. “The blues ain’t about perfection,” Slim once said in his gravel-drenched growl. “It’s about feeling something.” And he meant it. That missing finger became a badge of honor in a world where every scar had a song.

    After a stint backing the legendary Magic Sam—who gave him the nickname that would follow him for life—Slim made the trek north to Chicago. This was the 1960s, and the Windy City was a crucible for electrified blues. Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Otis Rush—all were kings of the scene. But Slim didn’t come to pay homage. He came to claim his corner. With his band, the Teardrops, he carved out a gritty niche in clubs like Florence’s and the Checkerboard Lounge, pouring sweat and soul into marathon sets that could run until sunrise.

    What set Magic Slim apart wasn’t flash or flair. He wasn’t the fastest gun in the West Side blues stable, and he didn’t try to be. Instead, his playing was about groove—deep, hypnotic, gut-punching groove. He had a way of locking into a riff and riding it like a freight train bound for heartbreak. Songs like “Mama Talk to Your Daughter” or “Ain’t Doing Too Bad” didn’t need tricks. They needed truth. And Slim gave it, raw and unfiltered.

    But Slim’s story is more than just solo spotlights and smoky clubs—it’s also about the brotherhood of the blues. Throughout his career, Magic Slim was a magnetic force, pulling other musicians into his orbit. He played alongside titans like Buddy Guy and Otis Clay, and younger players sought him out like a blues shaman. “Slim taught me what it means to mean it when you play,” said the late guitarist Michael Coleman, who cut his teeth under Slim’s mentorship. “He didn’t say a lot—but when he played, you listened.”

    Perhaps nowhere was this camaraderie more evident than in Slim’s tight-knit bond with his band, the Teardrops. The group became a proving ground for future stars and a testament to Slim’s philosophy: play hard, keep it tight, and let the music do the talking. Guitarist John Primer, a longtime Teardrop and later a celebrated bluesman himself, often recalled the intensity of touring with Slim. “You didn’t just play the blues with Slim,” he said. “You survived them.”

    Magic Slim was also a road warrior in the purest sense. For decades, he lived out of vans, cheap hotels, and backstage green rooms, carrying the blues to Europe, Japan, and every U.S. dive bar willing to give him a stage. He released nearly 30 albums, never straying far from the meat-and-potatoes sound that defined him. Whether on the Alligator label or Blind Pig Records, a Magic Slim album always promised a no-nonsense, full-throttle blues experience.

    When he passed in 2013, at the age of 75, the world didn’t just lose a guitarist—it lost one of the last living links to the down-home, gutbucket blues of the postwar South. But Slim didn’t leave quietly. His legacy is tattooed on every gritty barroom riff, every deep shuffle rhythm, every broken-hearted lyric played with honest hands. You hear it in the players he inspired, the clubs that still blast his records, and in the faces of fans who never forgot what it felt like to be in the room when Slim hit that first note.

    In a world where the blues are often polished and prepackaged, Magic Slim remained gloriously, stubbornly real. He didn’t play to impress—he played to survive. And maybe that’s why his music still kicks so hard. It’s not just the sound of the blues. It’s the soul of them.

    Thank You

    We appreciate your time and dedication to reading our article. For more of the finest blues guitar music, make sure to follow our Facebook page, “I Love Blues Guitar”. We share exceptional selections every day. Thank you once again for your continued support and readership.

  • Magic Slim – Crazy Woman [video]

    Magic Slim – Crazy Woman [video]

    Magic Slim – The Towering Bluesman Who Kept Chicago Loud and Proud

    Some blues artists make you think.
    Some make you cry.
    Magic Slim?
    He made me want to turn it way up and never look back.

    The first time I heard him, it wasn’t subtle. It wasn’t polite.
    It was rough, raw, relentless.
    And it was exactly what I needed.

    Magic Slim played the blues like a man with nothing to prove—and everything to say.


    Who Was Magic Slim?

    Born Morris Holt in Mississippi in 1937, he lost the tip of his little finger in a cotton gin accident, which ended his dreams of becoming a piano player.

    So what did he do?
    He picked up a guitar, moved to Chicago, and proceeded to lay down some of the toughest electric blues the city ever heard.

    Backed for decades by his powerhouse band The Teardrops, Magic Slim became a Chicago blues institution—not because he chased trends, but because he stuck to what he knew best: gritty, stomping, take-no-prisoners blues.

    He passed away in 2013, but if you’ve ever seen him live—or even just cranked one of his records on a Friday night—you know: the man brought the thunder.


    The Sound: Fender Fury and Bare-Knuckle Blues

    Magic Slim didn’t mess around.

    • 🎸 His guitar tone was all muscle—usually straight from a Fender amp, no effects, just attitude.
    • 🎤 His voice was deep and gravelly—world-weary, no-nonsense, and very real.
    • 🎶 His band, The Teardrops, were tight as hell—built for long nights and loud clubs.

    It wasn’t fancy. It wasn’t delicate.
    It was Chicago blues, served hot and heavy.


    Albums That Blew My Hair Back

    If you’re just diving into Magic Slim, here are some stone-cold classics:

    • 🎧 Raw Magic (1982) – One of my personal favorites. Rough, soulful, and alive.
    • 💿 Black Tornado (1993) – Aptly named. He and the Teardrops tear the roof off.
    • 🔥 Scufflin’ (1996) – Features some of his best playing and groove work.
    • 🎶 Blue Magic (2002) – Later-career magic (no pun intended) that proves he never lost a step.
    • 🎤 Bad Boy (2012) – One of his final albums and a powerful statement to end on.

    Every record is a masterclass in how to play mean and still swing.


    Seeing Magic Slim Live – A Wall of Blues

    I was lucky enough to catch Magic Slim and the Teardrops in a small club not long before he passed.
    He came out slow, almost casual, but the moment he hit that first chord?
    The entire room snapped to attention.

    He didn’t jump around. He didn’t preach.
    He just played the hell out of that Strat.
    Set after set, solo after solo—he brought the house down, all while looking like it was just another night at the office.

    And that’s the thing—Magic Slim made it look easy, but what he did was pure craft.


    Why Magic Slim Still Matters

    In a world full of polished blues and over-produced nostalgia, Magic Slim kept it dirty, real, and deeply alive.

    He didn’t water it down.
    He didn’t play nice.
    He just gave you the blues, straight up—loud, loose, and full of soul.

    He influenced generations, even if he never became a household name.
    And honestly? That’s part of his charm.
    Magic Slim was for the true believers.


    Where to Start If You’re New

    Here’s your Magic Slim starter kit:

    • 🎸 Raw Magic – Essential early fire.
    • 💿 Black Tornado – A perfect intro to the Chicago club sound.
    • 🎧 Blue Magic – Later years, still fierce.
    • 📺 YouTube: Search “Magic Slim live” or “Scufflin’ Magic Slim” to feel the power.

    More at alligator.com and delmark.com


    Magic Slim wasn’t flashy. He didn’t chase fame.
    He just brought the real blues, night after night, year after year.

    And when I need to remember what it’s all about—when I want grit, groove, and guitar that speaks truth—I put on Magic Slim.
    And turn it way the hell up.

    🎸💥🍻

    Video

    Thank You

    We appreciate your time and dedication to reading our article. For more of the finest blues guitar music, make sure to follow our Facebook page, “I Love Blues Guitar”. We share exceptional selections every day. Thank you once again for your continued support and readership.

  • Magic Slim and Keb’ Mo’ – Mother In Law Blues

    Magic Slim and Keb’ Mo’ – Mother In Law Blues

    Magic Slim

    Morris Holt (August 7, 1937– February 21, 2013), called Magic Slim, was an American blues vocalist and guitarist. Born at Torrance, near Grenada, Mississippi, the kid of sharecroppers, he adhered to blues greats such as Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf to Chicago, establishing his own location in the Chicago blues scene.

    (photo via wikipedia.org)

    Magic Slim was compelled to give up playing the piano when he lost his little finger in a cotton gin incident. He relocated initially to nearby Grenada.He initially pertained to Chicago in 1955 with his pal as well as advisor Magic Sam. The elder Magic (Sam), (by 6 months), allow the younger Magic (Slim) play bass with the atrioventricular bundle and also provided him with his label.

    In the beginning, Slim was not ranked quite extremely by his peers. He returned to Mississippi to function and got his younger brother Nick curious about playing bass. By 1965 he was back in Chicago and also in 1970 Nick joined him in his team, the Teardrops. They played in the dim, smoke-filled juke joints preferred in Chicago in the 1970s on bandstands barely big sufficient to hold the band.

    Slim and the Teardrops

    Slim’s recording occupation started in 1966 with the tune “Scufflin’”, followed by a number of singles into the mid-1970s. He videotaped his initial cd in 1977, Born Under A Bad Sign, for the French MCM tag. During the 1980s, Slim launched titles on Alligator, Rooster Blues as well as Wolf Records and won his very first W.C. Handy Award. In 1980 he tape-recorded his cover version of “Mustang Sally”.

    In 1982, the guitarist John Primer signed up with the Teardrops as well as stayed and also played for him for 13 years. Releases consist of Spider in My Stew on Wolf Records, and also a 1996 Blind Pig release called Scufflin’, which presented the post-Primer line-up with the brand-new addition of the guitar player and vocalist Jake Dawson.

    In 1994, Slim relocated to Lincoln, Nebraska where the Zoo Bar had been booking him for years. Slim was frequently come with by his son Shawn Holt, an accomplished guitarist and also the vocalist.

    In 2003, Magic Slim and the Teardrops won the W.C. Handy Award as ‘Blues Band Of The Year’ for the sixth time. They released a real-time performance on CD as well as DVD in August 2005 qualified Anything Can Happen.

    Slim passed away at a medical facility in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on February 21, 2013, at age 75. He had a health issue that had worsened while he got on tour a number of weeks earlier. His manager had mentioned hemorrhaging ulcers had actually sent out Slim to the hospital, but that he additionally suffered from heart, lung as well as kidney troubles.

    In May 2013, Magic Slim was posthumously granted another Blues Music Award in the ‘Traditional Blues Male Artist’ group.

    (source: wikipedia.org)

    [yellowbox]See Top Albums by Magic Slim here…[/yellowbox]

  • Magic Slim & the Teardrops – I’m a Bluesman

    Magic Slim & the Teardrops – I’m a Bluesman

    Magic Slim

    Slim plays raw extreme blues, a design that makes use of no pedals down on the floor, simply him. Slim and The Teardrops efficiencies have actually ended up being famous, and they play the blues with an indisputable strength that will certainly leave you out of breath on the floor and in a requirement for more. This is an appearance into a guy that’s from the nation and plays to audiences on phases all throughout the world.

    Slim’s take on composing tunes. Exactly what about a tune to play? Some of Slim’s preferred locations to play are Brazil, Paris, Russia and right here at the house in the U.S

    This huge guy of the blues was born Morris Holt in Torrence, Mississippi on August 7th, 1937. Slim revealed his musical skills early, singing in his church choir and playing the piano. After his mishap, he could not play the piano any longer due to the fact that he didn’t have that little pinky finger so he selected up the guitar.

    Some of them can play too; I do not understand how they feel, due to the fact that the blues is a feelin’. “If you desire to play the blues, play the blues. If you are goin’ to play rock, play rock.

    Slim plays raw extreme blues, a design that utilizes no pedals down on the floor, simply him. Magic Sam likewise offered Slim suggestions on playing the guitar, and it was Sam who called his bass gamer “Magic Slim,” due to the fact that back then Slim was tall and lean and he discovered from Sam rapidly. I utilize absolutely nothing on my finger, a lot of gamers attempt to get a noise like me and I play the very same guitar everyone else plays.”

    Magic Slim is a guy that originated from the nation; he was tall and slim attempting to play cries, now he can play cries. And like Slim states, “If you wish to play cries, play cries, if you do not feel cries, leave it alone, trigger you can not be playin’ it if you do not feel it.”.

    It was in 1955 when Slim made his very first journey to Chicago, to play for Magic Sam, a pal of his from the house. Magic Sam likewise offered Slim ideas on playing the guitar, and it was Sam who called his bass gamer “Magic Slim,” since back then Slim was tall and lean and he discovered Sam swiftly. I utilize absolutely nothing on my finger, a lot of gamers attempt to get a noise like me and I play the exact same guitar everyone else plays.”

    “If you desire to play the blues, play the blues. If you are goin’ to play rock, play rock.”

     

  • Magic Slim & the Teardrops – Going to Mississippi

    Magic Slim & the Teardrops – Going to Mississippi

    Magic Slim

    Slim plays raw extreme blues, a design that makes use of no pedals down on the floor, simply him. Slim and The Teardrops efficiencies have actually ended up being famous, and they play the blues with an indisputable strength that will certainly leave you out of breath on the floor and in a requirement for more. This is an appearance into a guy that’s from the nation and plays to audiences on phases all throughout the world.

    Slim’s take on composing tunes. Exactly what about a tune to play? Some of Slim’s preferred locations to play are Brazil, Paris, Russia and right here at house in the U.S

    This huge guy of the blues was born Morris Holt in Torrence, Mississippi on August 7th, 1937. Slim revealed his musical skills early, singing in his church choir and playing piano. After his mishap he could not play the piano any longer due to the fact that he didn’t have that little pinky finger so he selected up the guitar.

    Some of them can play too; I do not understand how they feel, due to the fact that the blues is a feelin’. “If you desire to play the blues, play the blues. If you are goin’ to play rock, play rock.

    Slim plays raw extreme blues, a design that utilizes no pedals down on the floor, simply him. Magic Sam likewise offered Slim suggestions on playing the guitar, and it was Sam who called his bass gamer “Magic Slim,” due to the fact that back then Slim was tall and lean and he discovered from Sam rapidly. I utilize absolutely nothing on my finger, a lot of gamers attempt to get a noise like me and I play the very same guitar everyone else plays.”

    Magic Slim is a guy that originated from the nation; he was tall and slim attempting to play cries, now he can play cries. And like Slim states, “If you wish to play cries, play cries, if you do not feel cries, leave it alone, trigger you can not be playin’ it if you do not feel it.”.

    It was in 1955 when Slim made his very first journey to Chicago, to play for Magic Sam, a pal of his from house. Magic Sam likewise offered Slim ideas on playing the guitar, and it was Sam who called his bass gamer “Magic Slim,” since back then Slim was tall and lean and he discovered from Sam swiftly. I utilize absolutely nothing on my finger, a lot of gamers attempt to get a noise like me and I play the exact same guitar everyone else plays.”

    “If you desire to play the blues, play the blues. If you are goin’ to play rock, play rock.”

    blues music t-shirts

  • Magic Slim and Keb’ Mo’ – Mother In Law Blues

    Magic Slim and Keb’ Mo’ – Mother In Law Blues

    Magic Slim

    Morris Holt (August 7, 1937– February 21, 2013), called Magic Slim, was an American blues vocalist and guitarist. Born at Torrance, near Grenada, Mississippi, the kid of sharecroppers, he adhered to blues greats such as Muddy Waters and Howlin’ Wolf to Chicago, establishing his own location in the Chicago blues scene.

    (photo via wikipedia.org)

    Magic Slim was compelled to give up playing the piano when he lost his little finger in a cotton gin incident. He relocated initially to nearby Grenada.He initially pertained to Chicago in 1955 with his pal as well as advisor Magic Sam. The elder Magic (Sam), (by 6 months), allow the younger Magic (Slim) play bass with the atrioventricular bundle and also provided him with his label.

    In the beginning, Slim was not ranked quite extremely by his peers. He returned to Mississippi to function and got his younger brother Nick curious about playing bass. By 1965 he was back in Chicago and also in 1970 Nick joined him in his team, the Teardrops. They played in the dim, smoke-filled juke joints preferred in Chicago in the 1970s on bandstands barely big sufficient to hold the band.

    Slim and the Teardrops

    Slim’s recording occupation started in 1966 with the tune “Scufflin’”, followed by a number of singles into the mid-1970s. He videotaped his initial cd in 1977, Born Under A Bad Sign, for the French MCM tag. During the 1980s, Slim launched titles on Alligator, Rooster Blues as well as Wolf Records and won his very first W.C. Handy Award. In 1980 he tape-recorded his cover version of “Mustang Sally”.

    In 1982, the guitarist John Primer signed up with the Teardrops as well as stayed and also played for him for 13 years. Releases consist of Spider in My Stew on Wolf Records, and also a 1996 Blind Pig release called Scufflin’, which presented the post-Primer line-up with the brand-new addition of the guitar player and vocalist Jake Dawson.

    In 1994, Slim relocated to Lincoln, Nebraska where the Zoo Bar had been booking him for years. Slim was frequently come with by his son Shawn Holt, an accomplished guitarist and also the vocalist.

    In 2003, Magic Slim and the Teardrops won the W.C. Handy Award as ‘Blues Band Of The Year’ for the sixth time. They released a real-time performance on CD as well as DVD in August 2005 qualified Anything Can Happen.

    Slim passed away at a medical facility in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on February 21, 2013, at age 75. He had a health issue that had worsened while he got on tour a number of weeks earlier. His manager had mentioned hemorrhaging ulcers had actually sent out Slim to the hospital, but that he additionally suffered from heart, lung as well as kidney troubles.

    In May 2013, Magic Slim was posthumously granted another Blues Music Award in the ‘Traditional Blues Male Artist’ group.

    (source: wikipedia.org)

    [yellowbox]See Top Albums by Magic Slim here…[/yellowbox]

    Magic Slim feat Keb' Mo' - Mother In Law Blues, The Blues Is Alright
    Magic Slim feat Keb’ Mo’ – Mother In Law Blues, The Blues Is Alright
  • Magic Slim & the Teardrops – I’m a Bluesman

    Magic Slim & the Teardrops – I’m a Bluesman

    Magic Slim

    Magic Slim plays raw extreme blues, a design that makes use of no pedals down on the floor, simply him. Slim and The Teardrops efficiencies have actually ended up being famous, and they play the blues with an indisputable strength that will certainly leave you out of breath on the floor and in a requirement for more. This is an appearance into a guy that’s from the nation and plays to audiences on phases all throughout the world.

    Slim’s take on composing tunes. Exactly what about a tune to play? Some of Slim’s preferred locations to play are Brazil, Paris, Russia and right here at the house in the U.S

    This huge guy of the blues was born Morris Holt in Torrence, Mississippi on August 7th, 1937. Slim revealed his musical skills early, singing in his church choir and playing the piano. After his mishap, he could not play the piano any longer due to the fact that he didn’t have that little pinky finger so he selected up the guitar.

    Some of them can play too; I do not understand how they feel, due to the fact that the blues is a feelin’. “If you desire to play the blues, play the blues. If you are goin’ to play rock, play rock.

    Magic Slim, a legendary figure in the Chicago blues scene, was known not only for his raw, powerful guitar style but also for his collaborations with other blues greats. Throughout his career, Slim worked with numerous influential artists, further cementing his place in blues history. Early in his career, he was mentored by Magic Sam, who helped him develop his unique sound.

    Slim also played with icons like Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, and Buddy Guy, absorbing their styles and contributing his own signature riffs to their sessions. His backing band, The Teardrops, frequently collaborated with other blues musicians, creating a dynamic interplay that enriched live performances and recordings.

    These collaborations showcased Magic Slim’s versatility and deep connection to the blues tradition, making him a beloved figure among peers and fans alike.

    Slim plays raw extreme blues, a design that utilizes no pedals down on the floor, simply him. Magic Sam likewise offered Slim suggestions on playing the guitar, and it was Sam who called his bass gamer “Magic Slim,” due to the fact that back then Slim was tall and lean and he discovered from Sam rapidly. I utilize absolutely nothing on my finger, a lot of gamers attempt to get a noise like me and I play the very same guitar everyone else plays.”

    Magic Slim is a guy that originated from the nation; he was tall and slim attempting to play cries, now he can play cries. And like Slim states, “If you wish to play cries, play cries, if you do not feel cries, leave it alone, trigger you can not be playin’ it if you do not feel it.”.

    It was in 1955 when Slim made his very first journey to Chicago, to play for Magic Sam, a pal of his from the house. Magic Sam likewise offered Slim ideas on playing the guitar, and it was Sam who called his bass gamer “Magic Slim,” since back then Slim was tall and lean and he discovered Sam swiftly. I utilize absolutely nothing on my finger, a lot of gamers attempt to get a noise like me and I play the exact same guitar everyone else plays.”

    Magic Slim & the Teardrops - I'm a Bluesman
    Magic Slim & the Teardrops – I’m a Bluesman

    “If you desire to play the blues, play the blues. If you are goin’ to play rock, play rock.”

    Thank You

    We appreciate your time and dedication to reading our article. For more of the finest blues guitar music, make sure to follow our Facebook page, “I Love Blues Guitar”. We share exceptional selections every day. Thank you once again for your continued support and readership.