In this episode of Blues Moments in Time, January 23 shows up as a bridge date—linking chain gangs and street corners to Broadway stages and European radio countdowns. We start with Huddie “Lead Belly” Ledbetter, born this day in 1888, whose 12‑string guitar and booming voice carried the stories of the Jim Crow South from prison farms to Northern concert halls. His songs—about work, violence, love, and survival—turned Black suffering into a global conversation and helped define what we now call American roots music.
We then walk alongside Reverend Dan Smith, another January 23rd child, blowing harmonica and preaching gospel blues on city sidewalks, insisting that Black lives and Black faith mattered in neighborhoods marked by poverty and neglect. From there, we step into the world of May Barnes and the Mills Brothers, where the blues slips into Broadway, cabarets, and radio—Charleston steps, smooth harmonies, and songs like “St. Louis Blues” quietly smuggling Black repertoire into mainstream American sound.
January 23 also lives in the present tense: European radio specials crowning French rocker Manu Blandon’s Man on a Mission, and new releases like Elise Frank’s I Didn’t Pay for It keeping the focus on truth‑telling, vulnerability, and grit. Along the way, we remember John Mills Jr., gone at 25, whose work with the Mills Brothers helped normalize Black vocal groups on records and radio, blending jazz, pop, and blues into a new popular language.
Taken together, January 23 traces the blues’ long journey—from Southern fields to Northern studios, from storefront churches to folk festivals, from juke joints to international airwaves—proving that this music is still a living conversation, not a relic, and that its core job hasn’t changed: tell the truth, no matter where the microphone is.Hosted by: Kelvin Huggins
Presented by: The Blues Hotel Collective
Keep the blues alive.
© 2026 The Blues Hotel Collective.