In this episode of Blues Moments in Time, January 13 unfolds as a full panorama of what the blues really is—music, yes, but also prisons, politics, studios, and classrooms. We step into Folsom Prison in 1968, where Johnny Cash sings “Folsom Prison Blues” to 2,000 incarcerated men, turning their reality into a hit record and a quiet act of solidarity. We spin back to 1962, when Chubby Checker’s “The Twist” returns to number one, a Black R&B club groove that explodes into a global dance craze and loosens the rules of how bodies—and cultures—move together.
We then trace the political arc to 1990, when Douglas Wilder is inaugurated as the first elected Black governor in U.S. history, a moment that feels like a long echo of the stories the blues has told for decades about punishment, freedom, and the slow crack in the old order. In the studio, we drop in on January 13, 1955, as Lowell Fulson cuts “Reconsider Baby” in Chicago—a smooth, horn-laced, electrified sound that bridges West Coast finesse and South Side grit, helping define the polished club blues that would shape rock, soul, and R&B.
January 13 is also a hinge between continuity and loss: the birth of Texas bluesman Wes Jeans, plugging old Texas feeling into modern amps, and the passing of Thomasina Winslow, a tradition bearer who taught chords, tunings, and stories to the next generation. Taken together, this date becomes a microcosm of the blues itself—a living, shifting force that moves from prison yards to dance floors, from statehouses to small-town stages, always telling the truth about the American experience.
Hosted by: Kelvin Huggins
Presented by: The Blues Hotel Collective
Keep the blues alive.
© 2026 The Blues Hotel Collective.