Living Blues: The Magazine of the African American Blues Tradition is a bi-monthly magazine focused on blues music, and America's oldest blues periodical. The magazine was founded as a quarterly in Chicago in 1970 by Jim O'Neal and Amy van Singel as editors, and five others as writers. Among them were Bruce Iglauer and Paul Garon. They sold the first copies at the 1970 Ann Arbor Blues Festival.
In 1983, O'Neal and van Singel sold publication rights to the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi, and donated to the center their collection of blues records, photos, subject files, and memorabilia. At that time the magazine became a bi-monthly, O'Neal still the editor. Peter Lee, who later founded Fat Possum, David Nelson and Scott Barretta followed as editors. The headquarters of the magazine moved to Oxford, Mississippi.As of 2014, the magazine was edited by Brett Bonner.
The magazine stress the position of blues as a living African American tradition. Each issue contains a variety of features, including artist interviews and profiles, record reviews, and a monthly Top 25 national blues radio chart. The annual Living Blues Awards have been presented since 1993 in multiple categories.
Two fools
You for wanting me
Me for putting you down
Two fools
Me for leaving
And you for hanging around
Two fools, two fools
Two fools
You for calling
And me for not being home
Two fools
Me for laughing because
You're crying alone
Two fools, two fools
All that kissing
I've been missing
Since we've been apart
I love you
Two fools
You for loving me
Me for breaking your heart
Two fools
You for suffering
Me for thinking I'm smart
Two fools, two fools
All that kissing
I've been missing
Since we've been apart
I love you
Two fools
You for loving me
Me for breaking your heart
Two fools
You for suffering and
Me for thinking I'm smart
Two fools, two fools