Alabama Blues Project

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The Alabama Blues Project (ABP) is a non-profit organization whose mission is to preserve and promote the heritage of blues music in the US state of Alabama.

The ABP was founded in 1995 as an unincorporated business by two Tuscaloosa-based blues musicians, Debbie Bond[1] and Michael McCracken. Their first project was to produce a CD titled Moody Swamp Blues, the first recording of regional blues veterans Little Whitt and Big Bo. The release of the CD was followed by a European tour in the spring of that same year.[2]

In 1998, the ABP established its first blues education program in Tuscaloosa County. This was an after-school program that provided hands-on music training to underserved “at-risk” students aged 8–18. Initially, the ABP partnered with the Kentuck Arts Association and later with the Boys and Girls Club of Tuscaloosa.

By 2000, McCracken was no longer working with the project and Bond, working with University of Alabama law professor, blues fan and storyteller Dr. Steven Hobbs, started the process of building a board of directors and turning the ABP into a non-profit organization. The ABP was incorporated in 2001 and was officially granted non-profit status in 2002.

Non-profit work

References

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