Hill Country / Trance Blues
Hill Country / Trance Blues is North Mississippi groove music built on hypnotic riffs, modal drones, few chord changes, call-and-response vocals, fife-and-drum memory, and deep pocket rhythm. Its defining feel is circular rather than verse-to-chorus: guitar, drums, and voice lock into a vamp until time gets pleasantly lost in the weeds.
History
The family comes from North Mississippi counties around Holly Springs, Como, Senatobia, Oxford, and the surrounding hill country, where African American fife-and-drum bands, field hollers, house parties, picnics, and juke joints preserved a groove-centered blues distinct from Delta 12-bar forms. Mississippi Fred McDowell, R. L. Burnside, Junior Kimbrough, Jessie Mae Hemphill, Othar Turner, Robert Belfour, and later the North Mississippi Allstars carried the style from local community music to blues festivals, Fat Possum records, indie rock audiences, and global roots circuits. It influenced garage blues, blues-rock minimalism, trance blues, jam bands, and modern Americana.
Defining artists
Essential listening
- You Gotta Move — Mississippi Fred McDowellSpotifyYouTube
- Goin' Down South — R. L. BurnsideSpotifyYouTube
- All Night Long — Junior KimbroughSpotifyYouTube
- Standing in My Doorway Crying — Jessie Mae HemphillSpotifyYouTube
- Shimmy She Wobble — Othar TurnerSpotifyYouTube
- Hill Stomp — Robert BelfourSpotifyYouTube
Sources
- Alan Lomax, The Land Where the Blues Began
- George Mitchell, Blow My Blues Away
- Robert Palmer, Deep Blues
- AllMusic