Roy Brown
Blues Masters: The Very Best of T-Bone Walker
Good Rocking Tonight: The Best of Roy Brown
Ruth Brown

Blues » Electric Blues » Urban Blues

The descriptive phrase Urban Blues was first used in the early part of the 20th century to differentiate between the more uptown sentiments pervasive to the style and the cruder, more rural stylings of country-blues artists. This term was later used in the 1940s to describe a type of sophisticated blues written about the vagaries of city life, its lyrics alternately dealing with romantic strife and the innumerable good times to be easily obtained in an urban area. Always city-derived, the music is earmarked by a pronounced uptown emphasis, embracing everything from jump blues to jazz-influenced stylings to smooth, supper-club-style vocals.

Urban Blues Artists Highlights

Roy Brown
Roy Brown
Ruth Brown
Ruth Brown
Charles Brown
Charles Brown
Nat King Cole
Nat King Cole
Louis Jordan
Louis Jordan
Albert King
Albert King

More Urban Blues Artists

Urban Blues Album Highlights

Blues Masters: The Very Best of T-Bone Walker
T-Bone Walker
Blues Masters: The Very ...
Good Rocking Tonight: The Best of Roy Brown
Roy Brown
Good Rocking Tonight: The ...
Live at the Regal
B.B. King
Live at the Regal
Jazz Me Blues: The Best of Jimmy Witherspoon
Jimmy Witherspoon
Jazz Me Blues: The Best of ...
Ultimate Hits Collection
Ray Charles
Ultimate Hits Collection
King of the Blues Guitar
Albert King
King of the Blues Guitar

More Urban Blues Albums

Urban Blues Song Highlights

Title/Composer Performer Stream
West Side Baby T-Bone Walker
Let the Four Winds Blow Roy Brown
Every Day I Have the Blues B.B. King
Ain't Nobody's Business Jimmy Witherspoon
Cold Feet Albert King
Trouble Blues Charles Brown
The Chicken and the Hawk (Up, Up and Away) Big Joe Turner
Choo Choo Ch'Boogie Louis Jordan
Roll 'Em Pete Jimmy Witherspoon
Price for Love Lowell Fulson

More Urban Blues Songs

Other Styles in Electric Blues