Blues Unlimited
Blues Unlimited (ISSN 0006-5153) was a British monthly music magazine dealing with all aspects of blues music. Co-founded in 1963 by Simon A. Napier (not to be confused with Simon Napier-Bell) and Mike Leadbitter, it was - along with its later American counterpart Living Blues - considered one of the premier magazines for blues music. It adopted the name of an earlier magazine published by Max Vreede in the Netherlands, which had ceased publication.[1]
The magazine launched in April 1963[2] as a typed, mimeographed pamphlet; its last issue (#148/149), by then a full-fledged photo-offset production, was published in the winter of 1987[2] and edited by Mike Rowe.[3]
Notes and references
- Steve Cushing, Pioneers of the Blues Revival, University of Illinois Press, ISBN 0252096207, 2014, p.170
- W. K. McNeil (18 October 2013). Encyclopedia of American Gospel Music. Taylor & Francis. p. 155. ISBN 978-1-135-37707-6. Retrieved 7 July 2016.
- Paul Garon: Historiography.- in Edward M. Komara (ed.): Encyclopedia of the Blues. Taylor and Francis (Routledge), 2005, 1440 pp., ISBN 0-415-92699-8
gollark: WRONG! The earth is a DINOSAUR.
gollark: ???
gollark: Can you be more specific?
gollark: I mean, it would be easy for a single company to go around conning silly people, much harder for an entire very significant sector of the economy to have a massive conspiracy and keep it covered up.
gollark: > Tell me why exactly you think someone would go to the effort of grafting and setting up a real company, only to con people... because, conning people... gets you money?
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