The mangaka/author is definitely knowledgeable when it comes to Robert Johnson and the myths surrounding him. But this is by no means a manga biography of Johnson. Given that there is very little verifiable information on the bluesman, the book takes a lot of liberties and, in my opinion, gets a bit far-fetched at times.
The book' depictions of 30's blues clubs and the like seem relatively authentic, and compared to a lot of other manga, the book has a very 'western' feel.
The artwork is one of the book's strong points, with a lot of attention of detail. Most is gritty-looking and fleshed out
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Alternative TitlesSynonyms: Me & the Devil Blues Japanese: 俺と悪魔のブルーズ More titlesInformationType: Manga
Volumes: Unknown
Chapters: Unknown
Status: Publishing
Published: Nov 25, 2003 to ?
Demographic:
Seinen
Serialization:
Young Magazine the 3rd Authors:
Hiramoto, Akira (Story & Art) Statistics Ranked: #6412 2 based on the top manga page. Please note that 'R18+' titles are excluded. Popularity: #863
Members: 22,458
Favorites: 283 Available AtResources | Reviews
Filtered Results: 2 / 3
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Your Feelings Categories Dec 8, 2024
To give a broad, spoiler free overview: This manga is about RJ, a famous African Blues musician from Depression Era America, wanting to pursue blues (for no reason), selling his soul to the devil for the skills to play the blues (again, for no reason. The fantastical elements are deliberately depicted as potentially merely mundane misunderstandings, though not really since everyone can see his bedeviled hand (I've looked up RJ's music, it's quite slow paced so I've no idea why there are historical claims he played fast enough for 2 people)), struggling with racism and being unable to safely refuse the orders of the white
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