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I knew it! Ojai and I are of the last generation of virgin or asexual births.Sex was invented in 1960, so she means something else.
My mom after the divorce used to describe it as a case of “immaculate deception.”I knew it! Ojai and I are of the last generation of virgin or asexual births.

One factor in his new success was that the equipment used — especially the microphone — was in the midst of a period of innovation, one that allowed Smith’s gentle voice to compete with others.
Blind Lemon Jefferson was to Texas blues what Charley Patton was to Mississippi blues. His performances had a direct influence upon such legendary Texas musicians as Lightnin' Hopkins, T-Bone Walker, and Leadbelly, while his recordings helped bring his influence to an even larger audience. In the decades since, Jefferson's songs have been covered by countless musicians including Bob Dylan, John Hammond, Jr., and Kelly Joe Phelps, to name just a few. The late '50s and early '60s brought the reissue of some of Jefferson's recordings on the Riverside and Milestone labels, sparking a renewal of widespread public interest in the bluesman. As a result, Blind Lemon Jefferson Clubs were opened in California and New York during the '60s, and the rock band Jefferson Airplane reputedly chose their name after the great bluesman.
and from Armstrong's Life in New Orleans, "Lots of cats tried to play like Bix; ain't none of them play like him yet."
“Every musician in the world knew and admired Bix. We all respected him as if he had been a god.”

Both Gene Autry and future Louisiana governor Jimmie Davis (said to have been author of "You Are My Sunshine") began their careers as Jimmie Rodgers copyists, and Merle Haggard, Hank Snow, and Lefty Frizzell later did tribute albums.
The Essential Jimmie Rodgers
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Rodgers, whose recording career extended from 1927 until his death in 1933, was one of the first names in the development of country music. In fact when the Country Music Hall of Fame was established in 1961, Rodgers was one of the initial three inductees (Hank Williams was the only other performer initially inducted). Listening today to his famous slow yodeling drawl, I am fascinated how popular and influential this was - but indeed it was.
From Wiki:
Even later rock artists were interested in Rodgers style - Lyrnyrd Skynyrd covered "Blue Yodel #1 (T is For Texas)" on their live album. Bob Dylan compiled a tribute album with contributors that included Bono (?!), John Mellencamp, Aaron Nevile, Alison Krauss, Jerry Garcia, and Willie Nelson. One can hear Rodgers' influence on honky tonk and rockabilly (Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Johnny Cash all mentioned an appreciation).
seeing-stars.com tells us:Rudy Vallee - The Voice That Had Them Fainting (1928-37)
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Have tried to be somewhat chronological as we progress through the 1920s, but (as with Ethel Waters), as we get to the later 1920s, many compilations will bridge into the next decade
Break out the fur coat and megaphone - it's Rudy Vallee! Vallee was one of the first pop stars where listeners went wild over him (as this compilation brags). Indeed, he was akin to Sinatra, Elvis, or the Beatles in this era. Why? Who the heck knows - his voice is thin and his range is narrow. Not to lump on but he's kind of goofy looking too. The numbers in the set are charming but hardly wow - still the flappers saw something else
I really can't think of Vallee with laughing for two reasons - one is the line by Joe E. Brown as Osgood Fielding in Some Like It Hot with his plan to woo Daphne (Jack Lemmon) with his Rudy Vallee records. The other is Vallee's own performance in Preston Sturges The Palm Beach Story where his awkward, shy millionaire tries to romance Claudette Colbert. Vallee indeed shows off his comic chops.