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David "Junior" Kimbrough (July 28, 1930 – January 17, 1998)was an American blues musician. His best-known works are "Keep Your Hands off Her" and "All Night Long". Kimbrough was born in Hudsonville, Mississippi, and lived in the north Mississippi hill country near Holly Springs. His father, a barber, played the guitar, and Junior picked his guitar as a child.He was apparently influenced by the guitarists Lightnin' Hopkins, Mississippi Fred McDowell and Eli Green (who had a reputation as a dangerous voodoo man) In the late 1950s Kimbrough began playing the guitar in his own style, using mid-tempo rhythms and a steady drone played with his thumb on the bass strings. This style would later be cited as a prime example of hill country blues.His music is characterized by the tricky syncopation between his droning bass strings and his midrange melodies. His soloing style has been described as modal and features languorous runs in the middle and upper registers. The result was described by music critic Robert Palmer as "hypnotic". In solo and ensemble settings it is often polyrhythmic, which links it to the music of Africa. North Mississippi bluesman and former Kimbrough bassist Eric Deaton suggested similarities between Kimbrough's music and that of Fulani musicians[6] such as Ali Farka Touré.The music journalist Tony Russell wrote that "his raw, repetitive style suggests an archaic forebear of John Lee Hooker, a character his music shares with that of fellow North Mississippian R. L. Burnside" Kimbrough died of a heart attack following a stroke in 1998 in Holly Springs, at the age of 67.According to Fat Possum Records, he was survived by 36 children. He is buried outside his family's church, the Kimbrough Chapel Missionary Baptist Church, near Holly Springs. The rockabilly musician Charlie Feathers, a friend of Kimbrough's, called him "the beginning and end of all music"; this tribute is written on Kimbrough's tombstone. Walter "Wale" Liniger (Born in 1949 in Kehrsatz Sweden ) is an American-Swiss blues musician and professor at the University of South Carolina . Liniger was born and raised in Bern. Until then , Liniger emigrated to the USA in 1982 as a secondary teacher in Kehrsatz . Since 1993 he has been working as a blues professor at the University of South Carolina. Liniger learned from Etta Baker and James Thomas , among others . For his studies with James Thomas he received a scholarship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Walters notes on the recording of this album http://bluesprof.com/index.php?ref=ht...