Shownotes
This episode sits with February 3rd—a single date that reads like a compressed history of Black struggle, joy, and reinvention through the blues. We start in 1870 with the ratification of the 15th Amendment, tracing how the promise of the vote and its betrayal in Reconstruction hardened field hollers into 12‑bar blues, the emotional soundtrack of disenfranchisement and sharecropping. We then move to 1956, when Autherine Lucy walked onto the campus of the University of Alabama, her fight for dignity echoing the quiet demands embedded in 1950s blues lyrics.
From there, we step onto the diamond in 1920 as Rube Foster launches the Negro National League, drawing a powerful parallel between the Negro Leagues and the Chitlin’ Circuit—two traveling ecosystems of Black excellence sharing the same roads, hotels, and communities. The date then becomes a studio logbook: Muddy Waters cutting “My Eyes Keep Me in Trouble” in 1955 with Little Walter and Willie Dixon, Bob Dylan’s early blues‑soaked demos in 1961, and The Blues Brothers’ A Briefcase Full of Blues hitting number one in 1979, dragging Chicago and Memphis grooves into suburban living rooms and jump‑starting a mass blues revival.
We spotlight the births of Johnny “Guitar” Watson—space‑age jump‑blues pioneer turned funk‑blues icon—and Jesse “Baby Face” Thomas, whose decades‑long career anchors the Texas sound. Finally, we confront February 3rd as a day of loss: the death of session wizard Wild Jimmy Spruill, and the 1959 plane crash that took Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and the Big Bopper—a moment remembered as “the day the music died,” but also a deep cut to the blues, as Holly’s Bo Diddley‑inspired rhythms carried the music to the world. February 3rd emerges as a living ledger of resilience, where ballots, ballparks, and backbeats all feed the same river called the blues.
Hosted by: Kelvin Huggins
Presented by: The Blues Hotel Collective
Keep the blues alive.
© 2026 The Blues Hotel Collective.