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Biscuits & Jam

Nashville Bluesman Keb’ Mo’

Biscuits & Jam

Meredith Corporation

Music Interviews, Arts, Food, Music

4.8608 Ratings

🗓️ 21 September 2021

⏱️ 33 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this week’s episode, Sid Evans, Editor-in-Chief of Southern Living Magazine, talks to Grammy-winning blues artist and California native Keb’ Mo’ about the perfect biscuit, collaborating with legendary singer-songwriter Taj Mahal, and how moving to Nashville made him feel a connection to country music he didn’t know he had. For more info visit: southernliving.com/biscuitsandjam Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

If you haven't tried Abercrombie denim yet, you're missing out.

0:03.8

Denim should fit like this.

0:06.0

It's all about proportions.

0:07.7

Abercrombie has their classic fits and athletic fits for guys who want a little more room in the thigh.

0:13.1

When you find your staple fit, it'll be the pair you reach for day after day for every plan.

0:19.2

Shop Abercrombie denim in, in the app, online, and in store.

0:36.1

Welcome to Biscuits and Jam from Southern Living.

0:39.0

I'm Sid Evans, editor-in-chief of Southern Living magazine.

0:42.8

My guest this week is a Grammy-winning blues artist who grew up in California,

0:46.9

but who always felt a musical kinship with the South.

0:51.2

Nashville really represents American music in a big way, but really where it was,

0:58.5

which is in New Orleans, Alabama, Mississippi, Memphis, you know, that's where it all came from.

1:04.5

What's really great about it is like, Rutha Franklin walks into most of the shows expecting

1:08.8

to find black musicians and figuring

1:11.4

all those guys were white.

1:13.3

So that tells you it was southern culture.

1:16.6

It wasn't white or black culture.

1:19.4

It was southern culture.

1:21.1

Kevin Moore released his first album Rainmaker in 1980 and didn't follow it up for nearly

1:26.8

15 years until he reemerged under the

1:29.6

moniker Keb Moe in 1994, influenced by legendary bluesmen like Robert Johnson and Muddy Waters.

1:37.6

Known for his incomparable talents on the steel guitar, he's since collaborated with a

...

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