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MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Memphis’ claim as the
    “Home of the Blues” will be indisputably evident the first week of February
    when The Blues Foundation hosts its 33rd
    Annual International Blues Challenge. Musicians from around the globe
    will convene in Memphis to compete for cash, prizes, and bookings as they
    are judged the best in IBC categories, among them Band, Solo/Duo, Electric
    Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Harmonica Player, and Self-Produced CD. The
    Challenge’s alumni include such acclaimed musicians as Susan Tedeschi,
    Tommy Castro, Delta Moon, Trampled Under Foot, Sean Costello and Grady
    Champion.
 Historic Beale Street will be the site for each of
    the challenge rounds, opening with the International Showcase on Tuesday,
    January 31, 2017, quarter-finals on Wednesday, February 1 and Thursday,
    February 2, and the Youth Showcase and semi-finals on Friday, February 3.
    The finals round of the world’s largest and most prestigious blues music
    competition will be held at Memphis’ grand Orpheum Theatre on Saturday,
    February 4 beginning at noon. Besides the amazing live blues performances,
    the five-day-long IBC will also present a variety of lectures, seminars,
    workshops, film, networking events, a silent auction, and affiliated blues
    society receptions that will appeal to blues professionals and fans
    alike.
 
 While the International Blues Challenge looks to the
    future, The Blues Foundation’s Keeping the Blues Alive Awards honor those
    individuals and institutions that have helped to keep the blues going
    strong. As Blues Foundation President and CEO Barbara Newman proclaimed,
    “Our 2017 Keeping the Blues Alive recipients are all wonderful examples of
    blues flame keepers, each working in their own sphere of influence to move
    the genre forward while honoring its past.”
 
The
    2017 Keeping the Blues Alive Awards recipients are:  
1.     Baltimore
    Blues Society 
2.     Blues
    and Soul Records 
3.     Kathy
    Bolmer 
4.     Briggs
    Farm Blues Festival 
5.     Kyle
    Deibler 
6.     Greaseland
    Studios 
7.     Highway
    99 Blues Club 
8.     Jay
    Miller 
9.     Jacques
    Morgantini 
10.   James
    Nagel 
11.   Porretta
    Soul Festival 
12.   Steve
    Salter 
13.   Eddie
    Stout 
14.   Suzanne Swanson 
15.   WGLT
    radio 
16.   Wolf
    Records 
These honorees, who will be recognized
    during a luncheon on February 3, represent a broad spectrum of the music
    world: record labels, music festivals, recording studios, clubs, radio
    stations, publications, and individuals with an undying passion to preserve
    and sustain the blues. They include grassroots blues heroes like Steve
    Salter, who created the nonprofit Killer Blues Headstone Project so that
    blues musicians wouldn’t be buried in unmarked graves, and Eddie Stout, who
    is known as the “Ambassador of Texas Blues” for his work single-handedly
    running Dialtone Records. The KBA’s spotlight also shines on events like
    the Briggs Farm Blues Festival, which has been bringing the Mississippi
    Delta to eastern Pennsylvania for nearly 20 years, and Greaseland Studios,
    the San Jose recording studio where Kim Wilson, Maria Muldaur, Elvin
    Bishop, and Charlie Musselwhite have laid down tracks.
 2017’s KBA recipients not only cover America
    coast-to-coast — from the Baltimore Blues Society to Seattle’s Highway 99
    Blues Club — but also reveal blues’ international popularity. Wolf Records
    has been promoting Magic Slim and other Chicago blues acts for over 30
    years, and they aren’t doing it from Illinois, but Austria. The Chicago
    blues were also very important to 92-year-old Jacques Morgantini, known as
    the Alan Lomax of Europe, who brought many American bluesmen to play in
    France. The Porretta Soul Festival, meanwhile, has turned a small Northern
    Italian town into a mecca of soul music, particularly the Memphis variety.
 
 The International Blues Challenge is sponsored in
    significant part by ArtsMemphis, AutoZone, Beale Street Merchants
    Association, BMI, First Tennessee Foundation, Gibson, Lee Oskar Harmonicas,
    Legendary Rhythm & Blues Cruise, Memphis Convention & Visitors
    Bureau, Saint Blues Guitar Workshop, Sierra Nevada Brewing Company,
    Tennessee Arts Commission, and VividPix & Design
 
 Media sponsors include Beale Street Caravan, Big
    City Rhythm and Blues, Blues Festival Guide, Blues Matters!,
    Downtowner, Elwood’s Bluesmobile, and Living Blues
 
 More information on the International Blues
    Challenge can be found at http://blues.org/international-blues-challenge/.
    Passes to the IBC for the entire week’s events are just $100 and add-on
    tickets for the Keeping the Blues Alive luncheon are available online at www.blues.org or by calling 901-527-2583,
    ext. 10
 
 About The Blues Foundation: This world-renowned, Memphis-based organization holds a
    mission to preserve blues heritage, celebrate blues recording and
    performance, expand worldwide awareness of the blues, and ensure the future
    of this uniquely American art form. Founded in 1980, The Blues Foundation
    has approximately 4,000 individual members and 200 affiliated blues societies
    representing another 50,000 fans and professionals around the world. Its
    signature honors and events — the Blues Music Awards, Blues Hall of Fame,
    International Blues Challenge, and Keeping the Blues Alive Awards — make it
    the international hub of blues music. Its HART Fund provides the blues
    community with medical assistance for musicians in need, while Blues in the
    Schools programs and Generation Blues Scholarships expose new generations
    to blues music. The recent opening of the Blues Hall of Fame Museum, in
    Memphis, now adds the opportunity for music lovers of all ages to interact
    with the music and the history. Throughout the year, the Foundation staff
    serves the global blues community with answers, information, and news.
 
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