Sunday, December 9, 2012

Blues Society Discounts

Blind Willie McTell
Heroes of the Blues
Drawn by R. Crumb
Here's to you---- all you amazing Blues Lovers and Supporters. We at Keep On Truckin' Apparel love the blues, and since you do to, we are offering a special coupon code to all you like minded folks. Enjoy 10% all the Heroes of the Blues long and short sleeve t-shirts and hoodies too.

Choose from 36 full color portraits of the early great blues musician who where among the first to record the blues. You'll find Son House, Blind Blake, Blind Gary Davis, Cannon's Jug Stompers, Skip James, Charley Patton, Memphis Minnie, Mississippi John Hurt, Blind Willie McTell, Whistler & His Jug Band, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Furry Lewis, Big Bill Broonzy, Blind Willie Johnson, Peetie Wheatstraw, Bo Carter and many more. All images available on our 100% cotton quality tees in your choice of color and size.

Just enter the Coupon Code:  BluesBaby at checkout to receive your discount. Order by December 12th to insure Christmas delivery.

A portion of the proceeds from each "Heroes of the Blues" t-shirt and hoodie sold will be donated to the Music Maker Relief Foundation. So what are ya wantin' for???

Happy Holidays from all of us at Keep On Truckin Apparel!
www.kotapparel.com

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

On Sale this week Son House T-shirt

Heroes of the Blues
Son House
www.kotapparel.com
All this week and just in time for holiday gift giving, enjoy 15% off this exclusive Keep On Truckin' Apparel t-shirt design, no coupon code required.

From our Heroes of the Blues Collection illustrated by Robert Crumb, this full color portrait of the legendary blues man, Son House, is available in both short and long sleeve styles, in conventional and organic cotton. Shown here in Black, it is also available in White, Chestnut and Indigo Blue in Sizes Small to 3X.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Blues Hero Papa Charlie Jackson

BT-627 Papa Charlie Jackson
www.kotapparel.com
Art by R. Crumb
Born in New Orleans in 1890, musician Papa Charlie Jackson was one of the first self-accompanied blues performers to record. Discovered on the streets of Chicago, he produced over seventy sides between 1924 and 1935, most of them on a guitar tuned, six-string banjo. Jackson combined sophisticated technique with a driving beat. His dance hit "Shake That Thing" was one of the most influential tunes of the era, and his  inspired approach created the hokum style, a spicy form of popular song that made repeated and continual references to sex, a tradition carried on by the likes of Georgia Tom and Tampa Red.

On Sale this week, a portion of the proceeds from the sale of this Keep on Truckin' Apparel exclusive t-shirt will be donated to Music Maker Relief Foundation. Enjoy 15% off, no coupon code required, your discount will be applied at checkout.

Image copyright of Shanachie Entertainment Corp.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Furry Lewis Blues

BT-633 Furry Lewis
Heroes of the Blues
www.kotapparel.com
Walter (Furry) Lewis the country blues guitarist and song writer was born about 1900 and raised in Memphis, Tennessee, where he learned guitar in the early 1900s by listening to his mentor, a middle-aged street singer, named Blind Joe. Never a full-time musician, Lewis played mainly on local streets where his most popular piece was "John Henry." From 1927 to 1928, he recorded twenty-three sides. Most notably "John Henry" and "Kassie Jones" arguably one of the great blues recordings of the '20s. Known to be one of the best blues storytellers, and an extremely nimble-fingered guitarist who both picked and used a slide, he was equally adept at blues and ragtime.

During the folk blues revival in the 1960s the personable Lewis began a second career as a concert performer. Lewis opened twice for The Rolling Stones, played on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, and had a part in a Burt Reynolds Movie , W.W. and the Dixie Dance Kings (1975). Furry was a charming man who was a living repository for the blues, as many of his contemporaries had passed on by the time anyone had a real interest in preserving and documenting the lives of these musicians who where among the first to record the blues.

A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this Keep on Truckin' Apparel exclusive t-shirt will be donated to Music Maker Relief Foundation.

Image copyright of Shanachie Entertainment Corp.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Blues Musician Jaybird Coleman

BT-624 Jaybird Coleman Tee
www.kotapparel.com
Burl C. "Jaybird" Coleman was born in Gainseville, Alabama in 1896, the son of a sharecropper he was one of four children. As a child of twelve, he taught himself how to play harmonic, and used his new skill to entertain family and friends.
Coleman began performing the blues as an entertainer for American soldiers while serving in the Army during World War I. It was during this time that he was given the nickname "Jaybird" because of his independant nature.



After his discharge, he moved to the Birmingham, Alabama area. While he lived in Birmingham, he would perform on street corners and occasionally play with the Birmingham Jug Band. Between 1927 and 1930, he recorded eleven sides, appearing in the rather unusual role of harmonica player accompanying his own vocals. Of all recorded blues harmonica players, Coleman developed probably the richest and most varied tone. He was largely inactive after 1930, playing mostly on street corners, and died in Tuskegee, Alabama in 1950.

Enjoy 15% off both short and long sleeve 100% cotton tees this week, no coupon code required, your discount will be applied at check-out.

A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this Keep on Truckin' Apparel exclusive t-shirt will be donated to Music Maker Relief Foundation.

Image copyright of Shanachie Entertainment Corp.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Clifford Gibson (1901-1963)
BT-620 Clifford Gibson
www.kotapparel.com

Born in Louisville, Kentucky, in 1901, Clifford "Grandpappy"Gibson was an American blues singer and guitarist who cut his musical teeth in St. Louis, Missouri. He recorded twenty-four sides for two different labels between 1929 and 1931. He is best known for the tracks, "Bad Luck Dice" and "Hard Headed Blues".

One of the first purely urban performers whose playing had no pronounced rural influences, Gibson's inventive single-string, vibrato-laden approach resembled that of the highly sophisticated jazz blues guitarist Lonnie Johnson, but placed more emphasis on improvisation. Gibson died in 1963.

This week enjoy 15% Off this "Heroes of the Blues" t-shirt design. No coupon code required, discount will be applied at checkout.

A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this Keep on Truckin' Apparel exclusive t-shirt will be donated to Music Maker Relief Foundation.

T-shirt Image copyright of Shanachie Entertainment Corp.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

On Sale: Memphis Minnie "Guitar Queen"

Memphis Minnie born Lizzie "Kid" Douglas in Algiers, Louisiana on June 3, 1897, was an American blues guitarist, vocalist and songwriter. She was the only female blues artist considered a match to male contemporaries as both a singer and an instrumentalist and was among the first to record the blues.

She recorded over 200 sides during her forty years career, almost unheard of for any woman in show business at the time and not common in any blues artist. A flamboyant character who wore bracelets made of silver dollars; and would spit tobacco wearing a chiffon ball gown, she was a very popular blues recording artist at the height of her career from the early Depression years through World War II.

One of the first generation of blues artists to take up the electric guitar she combined her Louisiana-country roots with Memphis blues to produce her own unique country-blues sound. In 1933 Minnie and Big Bill Broonzy participated in a Blues Showdown at a club in Chicago, Memphis Minnie preformed "Chauffeur Blues" and "Looking the World Over" and won the prize--a bottle of whiskey and a bottle of gin. Big Bill and Minnie became friends and later preformed together on several occasions.

Enjoy 15% off this week on this Keep On Truckin Apparel exclusive design. Available in both short and long sleeve t-shirts. No coupon code required your discount will be applied at checkout at www.kotapparel.com

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Featured weekly Blues Artist: Barbecue Bob


Barbecue Bob (1901-1931)


Heroes of the Blues Trading Tee Card #28


Art by R. Crumb, Text by Stephen Calt


Robert Hicks was born in 1902 at Walnut Grove, Georgia, and learned guitar from his brother, who recorded under the name Charlie Lincoln. Around 1920 Hicks moved to Atlanta; his employment at a local restaurant gave rise to his recording name, Barbecue Bob. Between 1927 and 1930, Hicks recorded fifty-five sides. His twelve-string guitar style was among the most percussive found in blues, setting him apart from some like-sounding Georgians. He died in 1931.



On sale this week, 15% discount will be applied at checkout, no coupon code required. Choose from both short and long sleeve tees in a variety of colors!


A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this Keep on Truckin' Apparel exclusive t-shirt will be donated to Music Maker Relief Foundation.


Image copyright of Shanachie Entertainment Corp.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Featured Blues Artist this week: Rube Lacey


Rube Lacey(1901-1972)


Heroes of the Blues Trading Tee Card #13


Art by R. Crumb, Text by Stephen Calt


Rubin (Rube) Lacey was born in 1901 at Pelahatchie, Mississippi, and learned guitar in his teens from an older performer, George Hendrix, Working out of the Jackson area in the Mississippi Delta, he became one of the state's most popular blues singers. His bottleneck style inspired that of the better-known performer Son house. In 1928, Lacey recorded two dance tunes for Paramount; four years later he became a minister. He died in 1972.


Enjoy 15% off both short and long sleeve Rube Lacey, Heroes of the Blues t-shirts this week! A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this Keep on Truckin' Apparel exclusive t-shirt will be donated to Music Maker Relief Foundation.


Image copyright of Shanachie Entertainment Corp.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Featured Blues Artist: Bo Carter


Bo Carter (1893-1964)


Heroes of the Blues Trading Tee Card #36


Art by R. Crumb, Text by Stephen Calt


Armenter Chatmon, better known as Bo Carter, was raised in Bolton, Mississippi. He learned guitar in the early 1900's, played bass viol in a family string band led by his brother, Lonnie Chatmon, in the 1910's, and later joined the Mississippi Sheiks. Carter's career as a street singer was largely imposed by the blindness that afflicted him in the late 1920's. Between 1930 and 1940, he recorded 105 titles, many notable for their musical sophistication and for the clever sexual innuendo of their lyrics.


Enjoy 15% off this week on all Bo Carter t-shirts, no coupon code required, discount will be applied at checkout.


A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this Keep on Truckin' Apparel exclusive t-shirt will be donated to the Music Maker Relief Foundation.


Image copyright of Shanachie Entertainment Corp.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

R. Crumb Illustration of Memphis Minnie & Kansas Joe


Lizzie Douglas, born in Algiers, Louisiana, was raised in Memphis, and learned guitar at the age of eleven. As Kid Douglas, she toured the South from 1916 onward, returning to Memphis in the late 1920's under the name Memphis Minnie. An accomplished guitarist and gifted song-writer, she recorded over 150 sides between 1929-1941. Most were solo blues, but she also teamed for duets with her second husband, guitarist Kansas Joe McCoy, and her third husband, guitarist Little Son Joe Lawlar. Memphis Minnie was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in 1980.


R. Crumb of underground comics fame immortalized Memphis Minnie, as well as 35 other early great musicians and singers who were among the first to record the Blues,when creating the original “Heroes of the Blues” Trading Card Set for Yazoo Records in 1980.




In 2010 Keep On Truckin' Apparel of Carlton, Oregon negotiated the rights to reproduce these amazing portraits on t-shirts and hoodies. A portion of the proceeds from each sale is donated to Music Makers Relief Foundation so you can support the blues while wearing the blues.

Featured Blues Artists: Leroy Carr and Scrapper Blackwell


Leroy Carr (1905-1935)
Scrapper Blackwell (1903-1962)


Heroes of the Blues Trading Tee Card #8


Art by R. Crumb, Text by Stephen Calt


Leroy Carr, one of the first blues singers to use understated vocal delivery, was born in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1905. Francis (Scrapper) Blackwell was born in 1903 and learned guitar in childhood, eventually developing a delicate vibrato blended with string-snapping. The Indianapolis-based team of Carr and Blackwell popularized the piano-guitar blues duet. They made more than one hundred sides between 1928 and Carr's death in 1935, including the famous "How Long Blues."


A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this Keep on Truckin' Apparel exclusive t-shirt will be donated to Music Maker Relief Foundation.


Image copyright of Shanachie Entertainment Corp.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Featured Heroes of the Blues Artist this week: Curley Weaver & Fred McMullen


Curley Weaver & Fred McMullen


Heroes of the Blues Trading Tee, Card #10


Art by R. Crumb, Text by Stephen Calt


Curley Weaver was born in 1906 and raised near Porterdale, Georgia. He learned guitar around 1922 and moved to Atlanta, Georgia, a few years later. Most of his records were duets with other local blues recording artist, such as Atlanta based Blind Willie McTell and Fred McMullen of Macon, Georgia. McMullen began recording in 1933. He teamed up with Curley Weaver and Buddy Moss that same year in a recording trio known as The Georgia Browns.


This week enjoy 15% off on this exclusive Keep On Truckin Apparel t-shirt design at www.kotapparel.com


A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this Keep on Truckin' Apparel exclusive t-shirt will be donated to Music Maker Relief Foundation.


Image copyright of Shanachie Entertainment Corp.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Featured Heroes of the Blues Artists: The Mississippi Sheiks


The Mississippi Sheiks(Walter Vinson, Lonnie Chatmon, Bo Carter)


Heroes of the Blues Trading Tee Card #12


Art by R. Crumb, Text by Stephen Calt


Singer-guitarist Walter Vinson and fiddler Lonnie Chatmon worked together for over a decade before recording as The Mississippi Sheiks in 1930 and producing the hit "Sittin' on Top of the World." Natives of Bolton, Mississippi, they played for local white square dances, often with Lonnie's brothers who included Bo Carter (Armenter Chatmon), seen at left (see card No. 36). Both read music and their 78 titles offer a mixture of blues and pop styles. They disbanded soon after their final session in 1935.


On Sale this week, enjoy 15% off this Keep On Truckin' Apparel "Heroes of the Blues" exclusive design t-shirt. Available in both short or long sleeve tees, in colors white, black, chestnut and indigo blue, with sizes small to 3X large.


A portion of the proceeds from the sale of this Keep on Truckin' Apparel exclusive t-shirt will be donated to Music Maker Relief Foundation.


Image copyright of Shanachie Entertainment Corp.