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🎵 Tracklist: 00:00 - Crimson Neon Shuffle 04:38 - Mudflat Lantern Blues 07:50 - Neon Shadows On Thirty-Third 11:18 - Magnolia Breeze Hymn 14:51 - Furnace Street Shuffle 19:19 - Delta Gravel Walk 21:52 - Midnight Strut on Lakeview 25:12 - Cracked Mirror Shuffle 28:52 - Back Porch Ember 32:24 - Southern Veil of Evening 35:54 - Creekbed Shadows 38:29 - Mudflat Whispers 42:09 - Soft Ember Glow 46:06 - Broken Gear Shuffle 49:35 - Neon Gridlock Shuffle 53:01 - Bayou Tender 57:06 - Neon Grind 01:00:46 - Urban Shadows Flicker This is a late-night roadhouse blues session—electric guitar and harmonica played loud, raw and unpolished, like a bar gig on the edge of a forgotten highway. No safe studio edits, no plastic tone—just tube amps, dirty strings, breath on the reeds and that barroom energy you feel in your chest. Blues didn't start clean. It came from field hollers, work songs and spirituals in the American South, rising from pain, survival, and storytelling. From the early Delta pioneers like Robert Johnson, Son House and Charley Patton, the music traveled north, turned electrified in Chicago with Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Willie Dixon and John Lee Hooker, then split into new voices: Texas blues fire from Stevie Ray Vaughan and T-Bone Walker, Memphis soul from Albert King and Booker T., and the emotional phrasing of B.B. King and Freddie King. As the decades rolled on, blues bled into rock—The Rolling Stones, Eric Clapton, Led Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix, Cream, ZZ Top, Rory Gallagher and Gary Moore carried that torch, while modern voices like Joe Bonamassa, Gary Clark Jr., Samantha Fish, Christone “Kingfish” Ingram and The Black Keys keep twisting it into new shapes. None of them copied the past—they extended it. This channel lives inside that lineage—not as a museum, but as a smoky roadhouse where the guitar bends like a confession and the harmonica screams like a second voice. You’ll hear those influences here, not as imitation, but as DNA. 🎵 What you’ll hear in this video: • electric blues guitar with roadhouse attitude • harmonica leads and call-and-response phrasing • gritty tube-amp saturation, no digital polish • loose, live-style performance with room noise • smoky dive-bar atmosphere for late-night listening and long drives This jam is for people who feel blues in their bones—musicians, night drivers, and anyone who needs something real while the world sleeps. It’s for fans of back-road blues, dirty guitar tone, underground bar sessions and music recorded after midnight, not in a polished studio at 10am. If you enjoy mixes like “Whiskey Blues,” “Midnight Blues,” “Blues for the Road,” “Chicago Electric Blues,” or live clips of Stevie Ray Vaughan, John Lee Hooker, B.B. King, ZZ Top, Rory Gallagher, Gary Clark Jr., or Kingfish, you’re in the right place. 👉 Keep the night going: • Watch more roadhouse blues jams: / • The ULTIMATE Roadhouse Blues Jam | Smoky B... • Guitar + harmonica sessions: / • The ULTIMATE Roadhouse Blues Jam | Smoky B... • Blues for long highway drives: / • The ULTIMATE Roadhouse Blues Jam | Smoky B... Help keep this little bar alive: • Like to support the session • Comment where you're listening from • Share with someone who loves raw electric blues • Subscribe and stay for the next midnight set Thanks for stepping into this roadhouse—small stage, loud amps, and music that never stops. Turn it up and stay as long as the night lets you. #RoadhouseBlues #ElectricBlues #BluesRock #HarmonicaBlues