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Compatibility testing

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Another version was used as the ending song for the Japanese drama series Shiroi Kyoto(2003-2004 version).Another version was used as the ending song for the Japanese drama series Shiroi Kyoto(2003-2004 version).Another version was used as the ending song for the Japanese drama series Shiroi Kyoto(2003-2004 version).

Another version was used as the ending song for the Japanese drama series Shiroi Kyoto(2003-2004 version).Another version was used as the ending song for the Japanese drama series Shiroi Kyoto(2003-2004 version).Another version was used as the ending song for the Japanese drama series Shiroi Kyoto(2003-2004 version).

Lyrics

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  • "Where Did You Sleep Last Night?" (file info)
    • Performed by Leadbelly, a folk singer and guitarist; this Southern Appalachian song dates to the 1870s
  • [[Media:{{{filename}}}|"Cross Road Blues"]] ([[:Image:{{{filename}}}|file info]])
    • Performed in 1937 by Robert Johnson, a Delta blues guitarist
  • "Po’ Gal" (file info)
  • [[Media:|"Caldonia"]] ([[:Image:|file info]])
    • Jump blues performed by Louis Jordan in 1945
  • "Back Door Man" (file info)
    • Chicago blues performed by Howlin' Wolf in 1960
  • [[Media:|"Try (Just a Little Bit Harder)"]] ([[:Image:|file info]])
    • Blues rock performed by Janis Joplin in 1969
  • Problems playing the files? See media help.

Early blues frequently took the form of a loose narrative, often with the singer voicing his or her "personal woes in a world of harsh reality: a lost love, the cruelty of police officers, oppression at the hands of white folk, hard times".[1] Many of the oldest blues records contain gritty, realistic lyrics, in contrast to much of the music being recorded at the time. One of the more extreme examples, "Down in the Alley" by Memphis Minnie, is about a prostitute having sex with men in an alley. Music such as this was called "gut-bucket" blues. The term refers to a type of homemade bass instrument made from a metal bucket used to clean pig intestines for chitterlings, a soul food dish associated with slavery and deprivation. "Gut-bucket" described blues that was "low-down" and earthy, that dealt with often rocky or steamy man-woman relationships, hard luck and hard times. Gut-bucket blues and the rowdy juke-joint venues where it often was played, earned blues music an unsavory reputation. Upstanding church-going people shunned it, and some preachers railed against it as sinful. And because it often treated the hardships and injustices of life, the blues gained an association in some quarters with misery and oppression. But the blues was about more than hard times; it could be humorous and raunchy as well:

Rebecca, Rebecca, get your big legs off of me,
Rebecca, Rebecca, get your big legs off of me,
It may be sending you baby, but it's worrying the hell out of me.

Audio examples

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A spectrogram of the bassoon's B-flat in four octaves.


Media

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Media

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Christmas carol media

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Media

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Media

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