Blazing a trail from Macon, Georgia, to Memphis, Tennessee, he created a sound that reached across the color line, winning over a large white audience without diluting his rural, black roots.
42.
My introduction to black salsify came in Germany, where it is called schwarzwurzel ( black root ) and is served in autumn and winter as a sort of poor man's asparagus.
43.
Phillips studied at Immaculate Heart College, where as a freshman in 1962 she became interested in black roots music and travelled to Raleigh, North Carolina, to join the civil rights movement.
44.
His Black Roots label featured his productions of these artists plus others such as Little John, Tony Tuff, Barrington Levy, Horace Andy, and one of his discoveries from England, Trevor Hartley.
45.
It starred Jim Collier, who is credited also with " dialogue improvised by . " Collier and Rogosin had previously worked together in " Black Roots ", produced two years earlier.
46.
Due to the development of resistant cultivars, compared to other diseases found on strawberries such as, gray mold, red stele, and black root rot, common spot of strawberry has become more manageable.
47.
"It's all part of an increased awareness by blacks about their slave ancestry, " said Tony Burroughs, author of " Black Roots : A Beginner's Guide to Tracing the American Family Tree ."
48.
Some jazz fans disliked the musical " Jelly's Last Jam " by George C . Wolfe because, they said, it unfairly portrayed Morton as a racist who denied his black roots and scorned Louis Armstrong.
49.
With more black roots than peroxide on her shaggy head, and bone-deep exhaustion in her eyes, she creates an indelible portrait of a woman borne up by cunning and a survival instinct that won't quit.
50.
Initially viewed with prejudice and discrimination because it had black roots, the samba, because of its hypnotic rhythms and melodic intonations in addition to its playful lyrics, eventually conquered the white middle class as well.