Top 10 Blind Bluesmen From Before You Were Born
Published on August 14, 2008 - 78 Comments
The type of music known as “The Blues”, was first recorded in 1920 by Mamie Smith (”Crazy blues”), but its prerecorded origins is something of a mystery. Although some West African and European similarities and influences have been said to exist,the blues is mostly an American phenomenon, if not entirely.
It was passed along by the oral and song tradition. This all changed with the advent of locomotion, big cities, the Victrola and the jukebox, and the record companies putting out “race records” in 1923. The blues is like a family recipe with spices and ingredients plucked from many different places. It’s a magnificent form, molded from amalgamated parts, containing the secular and sacred.
Not a whole lot is known about a number of the gentlemen on this list. With some, just one picture is all we have to see how they appeared for THAT moment in time. Some others here didn’t so much sing and play the blues, as preach the gospel, but they have been included by many musicologists as being within the blues lexicon nonetheless. What remains most importantly, is the voice, the music, and the heart and soul that crackles through the ages unbound.
Recommended: The Complete Works of Son House & The Great Delta Blues Singers, and When The Levee Breaks: Mississippi Blues Rare Cuts 1926-1941
Reynold’s real name was Joe Sheppard. He was blinded by a shotgun blast to the face in Louisiana in the mid to late 1920s, which resulted in the physical loss of his eyes. Despite this handicap, “Blind Joe” became known for his distinctive bottleneck style as well as his reported accuracy with a pistol, with which it is said he could judge the position of a target by sound alone. Reynolds is known to have been polyamorous, as is apparent from a number of his recordings. He was also known to be outspoken and flamboyant, often using his music as a medium to attack society. He only cut records between 1929 and 1930. Even in the digital age, his music is hard to come by. When listening to the video clip above, close your eyes - the images are not related to the recording.
Recommended: His complete recordings, from 1929-1937
Full name: Theodore Roosevelt Darby. Darby was from Kentucky and settled in St. Louis. He recorded for Paramount, Victor, Bluebird, Vocation and Decca between 1929-37. Darby became blind at the age of twenty from glaucoma (an increase of pressure within the eye). He spent time for bootlegging and recorded a song, “Bootleggin’ Ain’t Good No More”. Later in life, he became a minister.

Recommended: The Complete Recordings 1929-1936
Graves was born in Mississippi. He recorded for Paramount and American Records in 1929 and 36 with his brother Uaroy and band, “The Mississippi Jook Band”. Nothing else of his work is known to exist after the 1930s. He is said to be an early forerunner to rock and roll.
Recommended: Sonny Terry: The Folkway Years 1944 - 1963
Real name: Saunders Terrell. After a couple of farming accidents, Terry was blinded for life at the age of 16. A harmonica was his singing voice. The sound of whoops and hollers through his harp are immediately recognizable as his own. He is known for his collaboration with Brownie McGhee (his music partner for almost forty years) and for his contribution to the blues/folk revival of the 50s - 60s. Terry played with the greats: Blind Boy Fuller, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Woody Guthrie, Rev. Gary Davis, and Leadbelly.
Recommended: Pure Religion & Bad Company
“My grandmother said I taken blind when I was three weeks old. The doctor had something put in my eyes that was too strong and that was what caused me to go blind.” Davis was a marvelous 12 string guitar player with a commanding voice. He began in the blues and was later ordained as a minister and sang only the gospel. He stopped recording in the 30s, only to re-emerge during the 50s - 60s folk fervor in New York. His finger picking style and strong vocal delivery, underlined with a touch of sorrow, make tunes like “Death Don’t Have No Mercy” unforgettable.
Recommended: East Coast Piedmont Style
Real name: Fulton Allen. A street musician staple of Durham, NC in the 30’s, Fuller “learned” the blues through the records of Blind Blake and Rev. Gary Davis. His ragtime Piedmont style hops and pops and sways with an uplifting beat and he sings with assurance and clarity. He even scats at times too, mimicking his melodious flow. According to Wikipedia, the Piedmont style is a,”finger picking method on the guitar in which a regular, alternating-thumb bass string pattern supports a syncopated melody using the treble strings”.
The Piedmont blues typically refers to a greater area than the Piedmont plateau, which mainly refers to the East Coast of the United States from about Richmond, Virginia to Atlanta, Georgia. What is important is the time in which these guys were playing (during the 20s and 30s) - the height of this style.
Recommended: The Complete recordings 1927-1930
When Johnson was a child, lye was accidentally thrown in his face by his stepmother (who was fighting with his father). Johnston became a sidewalk singing evangelist in Texas as an adult. He had an amazing guttural buzz of a singing voice and a driving and, at times, sublime guitar sound. Using a pocketknife instead of a bottleneck, slide guitar was his forte and is considered one of the best examples of this style. His song, “Dark Was The Night, Cold Was The Ground” was shot into space in 1977, via Voyager 1.
Recommended: The Early Years 1927-1933
“Doogie” played a fast and clean 12-string guitar of the Piedmont blues. He got around on his own using echo location, by way of tongue clicks and through cognitive mapping. He had a way of making his instrument talk and mimic and bellow, as if another entity were adding its touch by punctuating the story. His personality comes across strong in all of his recordings.
Recommended: His complete recordings, or Best of Blind Blake
Real name: Arthur Blake or possibly Arthur Phelps. Blind Blake was known for his accomplished Piedmont blues style guitar playing, which combined ragtime, jazz, and elements of vaudeville show tunes. Blake recorded extensively with the Paramount Label, cutting 81 solo sides, practically a disc a month between 1926 to 1932. He then disappeared. His date of death (like his birth) is uncertain. Rev. Gary Davis said he was run over by a street car in NYC and others said murder or alcohol did him in.
Recommended: The Best Of Blind Lemon Jefferson
Jefferson was given the title, “The Father of the Texas Blues”. He was born blind and the youngest of seven children. A true traveling songster. He inspired an eight year old Lightnin’ Hopkins to play the blues and in 1917, while living in Dallas, Texas, he met Leadbelly, who would later rise to fame in the blues and folk music fame, as “the King of the 12 string Guitar”.
Jefferson had an outstanding “one of a kind” voice, with a complex melody chord structure that was plucked and strummed out through his guitar, lending to a different sound of blues. He cut 90 songs in four years. Next to Blind Blake, Jefferson was one of Paramount’s most successful recorded blues musicians. He died before he reached the age of forty.
Contributor: Diogenes
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1. 827kevin - August 15th, 2008 at 4:20 am
i am always amazed at how blind people can achieve such skill!
2. Val - August 15th, 2008 at 4:53 am
Awesome!
3. Brian Moo - August 15th, 2008 at 4:54 am
Awesome list. I love this music.
4. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 4:59 am
Cool list, Diogenes. I love old music, it’s like a time capsule.
5. henry o - August 15th, 2008 at 5:17 am
Brilliant list!
6. lott79 - August 15th, 2008 at 5:29 am
great list, love listening to Blind Lemon Jefferson and Willie Johnson
7. astraya - August 15th, 2008 at 5:42 am
Any comments as to whether these people’s blindness actually affected their performances? I really don’t know enough about blues or blindness (ie anything at all) to speculate. In many forms of music, blind people often do well.
8. Arkz_Archduke_of_Geeks - August 15th, 2008 at 5:42 am
awesome list, personally reverend gary davis and blind lemon jefferson are two of my favortie blues musicians…. maybe we can see a list of bluesmen not just blind ones in the near future maybe?.. that is unless i’m blind and missed something
9. Mom424 - August 15th, 2008 at 5:49 am
Absolutely wonderful. I’m definitely going to have to go through the album collections of my mom and aunt. I know I’ve heard some of these before.
I found a site with many Blind Blake tracks available to listen to on-line or purchase. Gotta love the blues!
http://www.emusic.com/album/Bl.....75404.html
Great job Diogenes.
10. bucslim - August 15th, 2008 at 5:49 am
I am currently working on a blues list.
11. Brickhouse - August 15th, 2008 at 6:15 am
I wish I could listen to those (but I’m at work & I shouldn’t even been writing this!)… older blues and jazz musician’s names always amuse me - how most all of these are Blind something. It was simpler, I guess it was interests me.
Really great list! I’ll listen when I get home.
12. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 6:37 am
I don’t know man, I’m pretty old.
13. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 6:44 am
brickhouse ~ You rebel!
I’m at work, too. I find this website makes my workday more bearable. (I actually had to look that word up, I thought it would have been bareable, because I’m not talking about bears. Anyway…)
14. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 6:48 am
Dopple (can I call you Dopple?)
Are we supposed to ask how old you are?
15. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 6:50 am
If you did I’d say to you that my name is Cain and I have wandered many years.
16. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 6:56 am
Ah, I see, Grasshoppa.
17. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 6:58 am
Wat is it? Dopple or grasshoppa?
18. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 7:00 am
You tell me.
19. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 7:01 am
Fair enuf. ‘Spose Dop will do
20. deepthinker - August 15th, 2008 at 7:09 am
It is interesting how in the absence of one sense, the others will compensate. And I think with Blues, you not only hear the music, but you feel it too.
21. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 7:14 am
Yeah, I’ve hear amazing stories of people other senses being heightened after losing one. My mom told me she went to church with a blind girl who could tell you exactly which coins if you dropped change around her.
22. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 7:16 am
In rare reported cases, blind people have developed sonar locating, like bats. i saw a news clip about a boy who could do it.
23. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 7:22 am
Saw that too. He was on Dateline and Oprah. His mom was awesome. I believe she said “I told him, you’re no different than other kids. Get your own damn cereal.” So he did. He can ride a frickin bike. He’s blind! It’s inspirational.
24. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 7:26 am
still having such a love for videogames, I’m not sure how Id cope sightless. In fact my biggest phobia is not being able to see, akin to fear of the dark.
25. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 7:27 am
“Get your own damn cereal” sounds mean to me.
26. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 7:29 am
I think it was a tough love thing, not to be mean. Either way, it worked. He wasn’t treated like he had a disability, so he didn’t feel disabled.
Yeah, I’d be so sad if I went blind. I think it’s worse to go blind than to be born blind, cause you don’t know what you’re missing if you’ve never seen anything.
27. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 7:34 am
I read somewhere that people born blind dream image-less dreams. But then again through the magic of science, imagine being fated as one who is given the ability to see long after being born. imagine the experience.
I watched another news clip of a little girl who was able to hear for the first time at the age of four. They played a single tone to the artificial nerves and she immediately grabbed mum frightfully. the doctor said that if they played anything but a single tone like ambient noise it would blow her mind in a very bad way. she had to get used to it all.
28. Tempyra - August 15th, 2008 at 7:36 am
Awesome list Diogenes
I like the way this list isn’t just about good musicians - it’s about people who have overcome (and maybe even taken advantage of) the fact that they cannot see.
Unfortunately I can’t get the clips to play :-(. My boyfriend just re-installed Windows for me (finished it 5 minutes ago and I’m back to Listverse already haha) and now I have to tell him that whatever was causing the video problem for me is still there. Uh oh.
29. Tempyra - August 15th, 2008 at 7:39 am
rushfan & Doppleganger: That blind guy who can use echo-location is featured in a video on the 9 Extraordinary Human Abilities list; his name is Ben Underwood
30. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 7:40 am
I forgot about that. cheers mate.
31. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 7:43 am
Cheers, indeed, Tempyra.
Or as we say in the states, thanks, dude.
32. segue - August 15th, 2008 at 8:06 am
Fantastic job, Diogenes!
Blues is one of my favorite genres of music, right along side of classic Rock, Classical, Opera, Jazz and Reggae/Ska.
Blues is so American, and has influences so much of the music that came after it, no matter what form that music took. I was delighted to see this List first thing this a.m.
While I wasn’t around to hear any of these men perform, I have heard several on recordings, at 78rpm, and even with the hiss and pop, you could tell you were in the presence of greatness.
At one time I was told there was a very good likelyhood that I would loose either my hearing or my vision or, more likely, both.
I tried to imagine what the world would be like without one or the other, and decided that, given a choice (which, of course, I wouldn’t get), I’d choose blindness.
At least, with hearing intact, you still experience the world; birdsong and music, ocean waves crashing and your children’s voices, music and books on tape, sunrises and sunsets, the deer in the garden and the garden itself.
I couldn’t imagine blindness. I couldn’t imagine living totally inside oneself, encased in darkness.
I think I’d go mad.
Luckily, the events didn’t go that way. But it gave me a perspective on just how brave and single-minded these men had to be.
33. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 8:27 am
How would one witness “sunrises and sunsets” blind?
34. warrrreagl - August 15th, 2008 at 8:40 am
Doppleganger, you’d be surprised. Don’t assume that the eyes are the only sense capable of experiencing sunrises and sunsets. The next time you are at a sunrise or sunset, close your eyes and try it that way.
35. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 8:48 am
so-ambience noise then?
36. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 8:49 am
[goes to youtube,looks up sunset]
…nope, i guess i dont have the synaesthesia you have.
37. trojan_man - August 15th, 2008 at 8:56 am
C’mon, Doppleganger, don’t be a dingleberry.
38. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 8:58 am
I’m just kidding. Serious- im sure you know what ur talking about. ill give it a try next time i get a chance
39. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 9:00 am
trojan_maaaaaaan
40. Hobolad - August 15th, 2008 at 9:06 am
Cool list! 9 out 10 on my ipod- most of these have songs in the public domain, so songs you’d pay 79p on iTunes for you can get free and legal on other websites if you google around
41. Blogball - August 15th, 2008 at 9:12 am
I love to see lists like this because of their originality. I would guess there is no other list like this in the “universe” I mean who would think there are enough blind bluesmen to make a list.
As I said in a comment before I’m still looking for a few more name for my “Top 10 Albinos over 7 feet Tall that Climbed Mount Everest” list.
Really cool list Diogenes !
42. trojan_man - August 15th, 2008 at 9:16 am
rush: I been a baaaaaad boy.
43. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 9:22 am
I loved the albino from the di vinci code. Creepy. Remember the controversy over it? It spread the stereotype of albinos as evil. How hilarious is that? Right off the internet: “With my film, THE ALBINO CODE, I tried to promote more positive, lighter images of people with albinism: www.albinocode.com”
trojan: does someone need a spankin’?
44. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 9:25 am
trojan and rush get a room.
Copy pasted from another list:
Non-24-hour sleep-wake syndrome
This odd (and extremely rare) disorder consists of a person’s body not recognizing the 24 hour sleep cycle. Consequently, the body will not allow itself to sleep in a regular day/night pattern. Left untreated, non-24-hour sleep-wake syndrome causes a person’s sleep-wake cycle to change every day, the degree determined by how much over 24 hours the cycle lasts. The cycle may go around the clock, eventually returning to “normal” for one or two days before going “off” again. In many cases it can take up to a week for the body to complete one cycle of its disturbed pattern. To add even further weirdness, this disorder takes place almost exclusively in blind people (though there have been one or two accounts of a sighted person suffering from it).
note the last line
45. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 9:32 am
dop, don’t hate, procreate.
joke.
46. trojan_man - August 15th, 2008 at 9:38 am
rush: probably.
Doppleganger: I think I work with one of the sighted sufferers. He drinks at least 4 16oz. energy drinks, 5 cups of green tea, and 3 of those small energy shots a day. Then he comes in the next morning and complains about not being able to sleep at night. Hmmmm…maybe it’s the 5000 grams of caffine that are not working.
47. The Doppleganger - August 15th, 2008 at 9:47 am
Todd, a mate of mine at Dunedin Uni once pulled an all nighter before an exam. He said he’d gone 12 hours or so without food but chucked back 7 energy drinks and 3 or four cups of coffee. an hour before the exam he felt the sleepiness setting in so he had a few wide awake pills. In the exam he could hear loudly his heart beating rushed and his whole body throbbed and pulsed. The constantly changing blood pressure was causing his vision to pulse likewise.
Me, I dont fight sleepiness much, caffeine does very little for me either
48. Lucy - August 15th, 2008 at 10:06 am
lamee
49. Brickhouse - August 15th, 2008 at 10:07 am
I’d like to see a deaf musicians list. That would be interesting, too!
50. YogiBarrister - August 15th, 2008 at 10:09 am
Man I’m getting old. Sonny Terry( with Brownie McGhee) played at a club where I used to work. Rumor had it, he and Brownie weren’t on speaking terms. That was a great job, the guy who did their booking was a huge R&B fan. I saw Sam & Dave, Taj Majal, and John Lee Hooker, among others.
51. Phantom2k4 - August 15th, 2008 at 10:21 am
Amazing list! I just wish there were videos of all them!
52. Brickhouse - August 15th, 2008 at 10:27 am
rushfan: Yeah, this makes work go by faster.
53. rushfan - August 15th, 2008 at 10:32 am
I’m going to the John Lee Hooker concert with Donna!
54. Blogball - August 15th, 2008 at 10:42 am
Mr. Rhythm & Blues Jerry Wexler died today. He was 91.
http://www.rollingstone.com/ne....._at_age_91
55. JayArr - August 15th, 2008 at 11:32 am
List = Love
I sure hope ‘before our time’ does not mean that they died before we were born… else I’m in serious trouble!
What about our old friend (may he rest in peace) Ray Charles? Though he died but 4 years ago, he started singing the blues long before most of our readers were born.
56. Kreachure - August 15th, 2008 at 11:56 am
Hey, how did you know when I was born?
57. CJ - August 15th, 2008 at 12:03 pm
LOL - I was wondering “before WHO was born?”
Great list. Great music.
58. Mullaccio - August 15th, 2008 at 12:38 pm
I don’t usually comment but I will make a rare exception for this fantastic list. Thanks a lot and LONG LIVE THE BLUES!!!
59. goof_ball - August 15th, 2008 at 1:26 pm
haha they all have “blind” in their name. good list
60. Iâran - August 15th, 2008 at 1:35 pm
Amazing list! And some of the best music ever!
61. Diamond_Dragon - August 15th, 2008 at 2:30 pm
I love that song by Sonny Terry! Whoopin’ The Blues!!
I had no bloody idea he was blind!
You learn something everyday!
62. Dee - August 15th, 2008 at 3:00 pm
Hey, can I translate some of your lists to portuguese and publish in my blog? I’ll put your credit. Please, answer me with one e-mail, pls?
xoxo
63. segue - August 15th, 2008 at 3:32 pm
Doppleganger, sorry I couldn’t get back to answer your question any earlier. I’ve been afk most of the day.
I live in the woods, just about 3 minutes from the ocean, and I can tell you from the birdsong and the ambient air-pressure/feel, how close to sunrise/sunset we are. It’s very, very clear. I’ve always been able to do this. I assumed, until I grew up a bit, it was something everyone could do.
I am more alive at the seashore than I am anywhere else. It’s a true, intense feeling. My husband laughs, because even on the coldest winter day I will go wandering blithely into the water, completely at ease, unaware of the cold.
The ocean is our ancestral home, and it calls to us in a voice both deep and secretly soft. I don’t know how people who live in inland places manage to do so without going a little mad. Truly, I don’t. It would be like living without the sky.
When you let your body and mind get in touch with the rhythm of the earth, a whole new sort of existence opens up to you.
It’s *not* some new-age mumbo-jumbo, it’s simply, as Anon put it so perfectly somewhere, leaving a light footprint on the earth. When you live in harmony with the earth, it will tell you when things are about to occur…through all of your senses.
It’s an amazing way to live and, once you’ve you’ve done it, the *only* way to live.
64. Avi - August 15th, 2008 at 3:40 pm
Dont you see!!! the blues is what is making them blind!!!!
65. Diogenes speeding up the hours - August 15th, 2008 at 5:30 pm
cool. thanks for putting it up.
not long in commentory length, i see. that’s ok
a lot of short and sweet thoughts, none-the-less.
I had no idea the team of editors at listverse would take the utube route. Gives a chance for those that havent heard. Cant you all do mp3 or other audio formats for certain music lists? I notice Youtubes dont all last forever and i have noticed older lists with youtubes on Listverse that are already goners. I can send examples of each here… an mp3 and an image(it may take forever ,but i can do it). I know its too late in the day and another will be along and this list will be forgotten in the warehouse of tucked away dustys..and i should learn from this and make my own visual connection . I decided to try anyhow, offer this in the place of the #10 youtube for Blind Joe Reynolds:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=18k5wqm9EIA
maybe watchin a guy in his yard is more entertaining, but hasn’t anything to do with this list. I am so far removed, myself, from having proper means to put together anything of high quality and quick transfer to the web, but I managed to take vhs footage of clouds moving by (from this May, I think) and get the song “Cold Woman Blues” attached.
Really, it’s a marvel if it works, as i have rather rudimentary stuff that takes for ever to do something simple. I write this as it hopefully uploads properly.it’s not anything to contemplate on, just a neutral backdrop to listen to the song.
66. Diogenes blue tounge - August 15th, 2008 at 5:40 pm
oops
p.s.
the homepage doesn’t show an image for this list. There are pictures on the net of Reynolds.
The Doppleganger: odd that you show up here today. you don’t know how close you are.
67. 禾草唐楷 - August 15th, 2008 at 6:24 pm
I have read this blog is the best, most valuable, if more countries culture will be concerned,that’s better
68. jazjsmom - August 15th, 2008 at 11:50 pm
I love this list. I remember going to New Orleans when I was a teenager and absolutely falling in love with the art form of the blues. It is so emotional and you can feel the absolute power of the sadness in the lyrics. It amazes me to hear how passionate the songs can make you feel.
I had a friend in High School about 20 years ago, who was born blind. He played piano and sang in our school choir. He eventually began playing for the country star in the states Lee Greenwood and now plays for the popular gospel group The Gaithers here in the states. It was amazing how he could tell any instruments notes just by sound. I remember sitting in class during a demonstration of his abilities, they played all kinds of instruments, such as trumpet, trombone, piano and they could be played and he heard the pitch and note perfectly and could tell you what it was. It’s amazing how sensitive his senses were and still are. This man’s name is Gordon Mote and I am pleased to have grew up with him. He was amazing and still is, he could play a song after someone played it for him one time.
69. bigski - August 16th, 2008 at 8:55 pm
Pre Rock N Roll baby. That,s what the list is about.
70. evilk8 - August 17th, 2008 at 12:37 am
awesome list.
71. jfrater - August 17th, 2008 at 12:42 am
evilk8: see! There was a list today - you just looked too early
72. ohrmets - August 17th, 2008 at 9:34 am
Haha, what a unique list. This is the kind of stuff that makes this site what it is.
73. Anne - August 17th, 2008 at 9:10 pm
Oh wow. This is a unique list.
74. mannish boy - August 18th, 2008 at 2:12 am
how could you leave off blind melon chitlin’
75. name (or nickname) - August 18th, 2008 at 1:03 pm
I wrote a paper about this and gave some of these musicians as examples. Raul Midon is a contemporary blind musician with awesome style, he’s not a bluesman though. I essence, check him out too
76. Anderi - August 18th, 2008 at 3:58 pm
lol!
“Polyamorous”
a.k.a. “Stud”
Being polyamorous… He couldn’t have been THAT blue about life!
77. Randall - August 18th, 2008 at 7:25 pm
I never got a chance to come in here and say that this was one hell of a great list. Recognition of the great bluesmen is always a good thing…
Nice work.
78. cparker - August 29th, 2008 at 1:28 pm
Dude Still Jammin to Sonny Terry lick you got on here!! Sounds like a bird during the hollarin’ gets my feet dancin though.