Active: 30's, 40's Born: January 20, 1888 in Mooringsport, LA
Davy Graham, Little Axe, Bob Dylan, Koerner, Ray & Glover, Daniel Lemma, The Horrors, Brownie McGhee, James Mathus & His Knockdown Society, Marvin "Hannibal" Peterson, John "Spider John" Koerner, Bob Gibson, X, Bessie Jones, Mary Travers, John Campbell, Jesse Fuller, Van Morrison, Uncle Tupelo, Bob Weir
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Huddie Ledbetter, known as Leadbelly, was a unique figure in the American popular music of the 20th century. Ultimately, he was best remembered for a body of songs that he discovered, adapted, or wrote, including "Goodnight, Irene," "Rock Island Line," "The Midnight Special," and "Cotton Fields." But he was also an early example of a folksinger whose background had brought him into direct contact with the oral tradition by which folk music was handed down, a tradition that, by the early years of the century, already included elements of commercial popular music. Because he was an African-American, he is sometimes viewed as a blues singer, but blues (a musical form he actually predated) was only one of the styles that informed his music. He was a profound influence on folk performers of the 1940s such as Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger, who in turn influenced the folk revival and the development of rock music from the 1960s onward, which makes his induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1988, early in the hall's existence, wholly appropriate.
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