Music_of_Mississippi Music_of_Mississippi

Music of Mississippi - Definition and Overview

Music of the United States
Local music
AK - AL - AR - AS - AZ - CA - CO - CT - DC - DE - FL - GA - GU - HI - IA - ID - IL - IN - KS - KY - LA - MA - MD - ME - MI - MN - MO - MP - MS - MT - NC - ND - NE - NH - NM - NV - NJ - NY - OH - OK - OR - PA - PR - RI - SC - SD - TN - TX - UT - VA - VI - VT - WA - WI - WV - WY
History (Timeline) Ethnicities
Before 1900 African American
1900-1940 Native American (Inuit and Hawaiian)
40s and 50s Latin (Tejano and Puerto Rican)
60s and 70s Cajun and Creole
80s to the present Other immigrants (Jewish, European, South and East Asian, modern African and Middle-Eastern)
Genres (Samples): Classical - Hip hop - Rock - Pop - Folk

Mississippi is best-known as the home of the blues, which developed among the freed African Americans in the latter half of the 19th century. The fiddle and banjo are common folk instruments in Mississippi, which has also seen some development as a gospel, country music and Appalachian folk music center. The Leake County Revelers' brand of folk music saw some national popular late in the 1930s. The state song is "Mississippi Song".

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