Blues Moments in Time...Music History

From the Blues Hotel Collective, welcome to Blues Moments in Time—a daily dive into the echoes of blues history. Each episode rewinds the reel to spotlight a moment that shaped the sound, the culture, or the spirit of the blues. No myths, no legends—just the real stories behind the music. Tune in daily for a soulful slice of the past.


Blues Moments in Time...

Blues Moments in Time - February 15: Crossroads, Kings, and the Blues Echo

Sat, 14 Feb 2026

February 15 is a crossroads date in blues history—a day of vindication, breakthrough, and heavy loss. In this episode of Blues Moments in Time, we trace the journey from Blanch Kelso Bruce presiding over the U.S. Senate in 1879 to Mississippi declaring “B.B. King Day” in 2005, and Henry Lewis breaking the color line as the first Black conductor of a major American orchestra.

We follow the “blues echo” of the British Invasion as the Beatles hit number one in 1964, then step into Muddy Waters’ blistering 1978 Bottom Line set that reminded young rockers who wrote the book. Along the way, we spotlight “Stormy Weather” composer Harold Allen and modern torchbearer Gary Clark Jr., before reflecting on the shared February 15 losses of Nat King Cole, Little Walter, and Mike Bloomfield—a solemn reminder of the cost of carrying the blues into the future.

Hosted by: Kelvin Huggins

Presented by: The Blues Hotel Collective - your home for EVERYTHING BLUES.

Website: https://www.theblueshotel.com.au/

Keep the blues alive.

© 2026 The Blues Hotel Collective.

Blues Moments in Time - February 14: From “Little Valentine” to “Respect”

Fri, 13 Feb 2026

February 14 is more than roses and romance—it’s a cornerstone date in blues history. In this episode of Blues Moments in Time, we trace how Frederick Douglass’s chosen birthday helped inspire Black History Month, creating the cultural space for the blues to be honored as serious art, and how the founding of the SCLC in 1957 pushed the music from acoustic Delta roots into the urgent, electric sound of soul and R&B.

We drop into Mamie Smith’s 1920 “Big Bang” recording session and Aretha Franklin’s 1967 take on “Respect,” where a blues-drenched performance turned a man’s plea into a woman’s demand for equality. Along the way, we spotlight West Side guitar firebrand Magic Sam, funk-blues sax master Maceo Parker, and Chitlin’ Circuit hero G.B. Coleman—voices that prove February 14 is a day when the blues speaks of identity, struggle, and triumph.

Hosted by: Kelvin Huggins

Presented by: The Blues Hotel Collective - your home for EVERYTHING BLUES.

Website: https://www.theblueshotel.com.au/

Keep the blues alive.

© 2026 The Blues Hotel Collective.

Blues Moments in Time - February 13: Royalties, Resistance, and the Electric Future of the Blues

Thu, 12 Feb 2026

February 13 traces a century of change in the blues—from backroom deals to royalty checks, from quiet suffering to anthems of resistance. In this episode of Blues Moments in Time, we look at how the founding of ASCAP in 1914 laid the groundwork for blues songwriters to finally claim their intellectual property, and how the 1960 Nashville sit-ins helped push the music from “my baby left me” laments to soul-drenched protest songs.

We revisit key recording sessions by Lonnie Johnson and Earl “Fatha” Hines that bridged Delta roots with urban sophistication, and mark the births of King Floyd and Peter Tork, artists who smuggled blues feeling into funk and pop. Finally, we reflect on the deaths of Piedmont master Blind Boy Fuller and “outlaw” country legend Waylon Jennings, two figures whose lives bookend the journey from acoustic street corners to the electric roar of Chicago and beyond.

Hosted by: Kelvin Huggins

Presented by: The Blues Hotel Collective - your home for EVERYTHING BLUES.

Website: https://www.theblueshotel.com.au/

Keep the blues alive.

© 2026 The Blues Hotel Collective.

Blues Moments in Time - February 12th: From Freedom’s Promise to Shock Rock

Wed, 11 Feb 2026

February 12 is a landmark date in blues history—a day where politics, culture, and legendary artists intersect. This episode explores how the founding of the NAACP protected early blues musicians on the road, why Abraham Lincoln’s birthday became a reminder of freedom still out of reach, and how Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue pushed the blue note into high society.

We spotlight the birthdays of Piedmont great Pink Anderson and Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek, and reflect on the passing of Delta master Ishmon Bracy and the theatrical trailblazer Screaming Jay Hawkins. Together, their stories show how February 12 captures the blues as a force that shaped America and influenced music worldwide.

Hosted by: Kelvin Huggins

Presented by: The Blues Hotel Collective - your home for EVERYTHING BLUES.

Website: https://www.theblueshotel.com.au/

Keep the blues alive.

© 2026 The Blues Hotel Collective.

Blues Moments in Time - February 11th: Land of the Blacks, Downhearted Blues, and ‘I Am a Man’

Tue, 10 Feb 2026

February 11th traces a straight line from the first legal Black resistance in colonial America to Bessie Smith’s breakthrough and the streets of Memphis. We begin in 1644 New Amsterdam, where eleven enslaved Africans petitioned for—and won—their freedom, creating the “Land of the Blacks” and setting an early precedent for legal resistance inside a hostile system. Centuries later, in 1990, Nelson Mandela walks free after 27 years in prison, a living embodiment of the liberation themes long carried in spirituals, blues, and jazz.

We then move to Memphis, 1968. After sanitation workers Echol Cole and Robert Walker are killed in a faulty garbage truck, more than 700 of their coworkers gather on February 11 to vote to strike. Their “I Am a Man” signs transform a labor dispute into a demand for basic humanity and draw Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to the city—while the soul and blues of Stax Records become the movement’s soundtrack.

On the musical side, February 11, 1923, marks Bessie Smith’s first recording session for Columbia, cutting “Downhearted Blues” and selling nearly 800,000 copies. That single proves the blues is not just folk expression but a major commercial force, opening the door for artists to make a living telling hard truths on record.

We round out the date with the lives tied to it: Josh White, the Piedmont bluesman who turned his guitar into a weapon for justice; Otis Clay and Little Johnny Taylor, who helped carry the music from Delta grit into urban soul and R&B; Whitney Houston, whose church‑rooted voice stands on that same foundation; and Nashville session great Jerry Kennedy, who blurred the lines between country and R&B. February 11th emerges as a day where courts, picket lines, and recording studios all echo the same message: the blues is resistance set to music.

Hosted by: Kelvin Huggins

Presented by: The Blues Hotel Collective - your home for EVERYTHING BLUES.

Website: https://www.theblueshotel.com.au/

Keep the blues alive.

© 2026 The Blues Hotel Collective.

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