Read Escaping the Delta Online
Authors: Elijah Wald
S
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The Guitar Players
. New York: William Morrow, 1982.
S
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The Big Book of Blues
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Honkers and Shouters: The Golden Years of Rhythm & Blues
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S
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The Music of Black Americans: A History
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S
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Jazz Dance: The Story of American Vernacular Dance
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S
TEWART
-B
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Ma Rainey and the Classic Blues Singers
. New York: Stein and Day, 1970.
T
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Blacking Up: The Minstrel Show in Nineteenth Century America
. New York: Oxford University Press, 1974.
T
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ICK
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Unsung Heroes of Rock 'n' Roll
. New York: Harmony Books, 1991.
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Where Dead Voices Gather
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T
OWNSEND
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ENRY, AS TOLD TO
B
ILL
G
REENSMITH
.
A Blues Life
. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1999.
W
ARDLOW
, G
AYLE
D
EAN
.
Chasin' That Devil Music: Searching for the Blues
. San Francisco: Miller Freeman, 1998.
W
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, P
ETE, AND
T
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B
YRON
.
Bluesland
. New York: Dutton, 1991.
W
EXLER
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D
AVID
R
ITZ
.
Rhythm and the Blues
. New York: Knopf, 1993.
W
HITBURN
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OEL
.
Top 40 Country Hits
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Top Pop Singles, 1955â1990
. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research, 1991.
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Top R&B Singles, 1942â1995
. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research, 1996.
W
OLFE
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HARLES, AND
K
IP
L
ORNELL
.
The Life and Legend of Leadbelly
. New York: HarperCollins, 1992.
W
OLFMAN
J
ACK, WITH
B
YRON
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AURSEN
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Have Mercy!
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W
ORK
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OHN
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American Negro Songs and Spirituals
. New York: Crown Publishers, 1940.
W
RIGHT
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ICHARD
.
Black Boy
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ZUR
H
EIDE
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ARL
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ERT
.
Deep South Piano: The Story of Little Brother Montgomery
. London: Studio Vista, 1970.
The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.
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accordionists, 52, 59, 266
Acuff, Roy, 93, 99
Adams, Samuel, 86, 91â96, 98â102
aesthetics
of black vs. white fans, 83, 217, 218, 220â21, 248â49
blues producers of 1930s vs. modern-day fans, 145
country vs. professional, 233
effect of, on direction of music, 250â54, 256â59
African-American audience blues defined by, 7â10
blues as women's market and, 215â16
blues in postwar period and, 194, 208â18
country vs. urban styles and, 31â32, 38, 216, 217
end of blues as pop music for, 218â19
first black artist marketed to, 21
hillbilly radio and, 96
not charmed by poverty, 258
older, rural music and, 10â11, 52
race records and, 3
reaction of, to RJ
*
, xviiâxviii
singers preferred by, 21, 217
varied musical tastes of, 98â99
white blues fans ignore, 237â38
African-American music.
See also
specific artists and styles
mainstream pop, xxiii, xxiv, 72, 78â80
pre-1920s, 45â52
Southerner tradition of, 71â82
white audiences and revival of, 221â49
African-American musicians, 20, 34
See also
rural black artists
and specific artists and styles
early, white music overlap and, 46â52
range of material played by, 52â62
recording limits, 22
African influences, 5, 57, 70â73, 75â76, 85, 141, 157
religion and, 270â71
Aguilera, Christina, xiv
Alexander, Alger “Texas,” 34, 54, 76â77, 79, 198, 206
Allison, Mose, 4
Allman, Duane, 245
American Federation of Musicians, 196â97
Ammons, Albert, 227
Amsterdam News
, 26, 201â2
Andrews, Ed, 27
Animals, 255
antebellum South, 46â47
Anthology of American Folk Music
(6 LP set), 240
Apex Club Orchestra, 62
Apollo Theater (Harlem), 51
ARC company, 120â22, 147, 166â67, 182
“archaic” jazz, 237
Arhoolie Records, 97
Arkansas, 83
Armstrong, Howard “Louie Bluie,” 53â54
Armstrong, Louis, xxiv, 29, 35, 51, 62, 68, 96, 100, 174, 188, 215, 241
Arnold, Billy Boy, 268
Arnold, Eddy, 98
Arnold, Kokomo, xiv, 42, 94, 119, 127, 133, 134â36, 138â39, 144, 146, 166, 168â69, 173, 184â85, 256
art, concept and myths of, 232â33, 239â42, 245â46, 263
Atlanta, 33, 38, 60
Atlantic records, 205
audience.
See also
African-American audience; white audience
musicians attempt to please, 69
shift from black to white, and effect on music, 250â56, 260â61, 264
“authenticity.”
See
“realness”
Autry, Gene, xxvi, 54, 58, 59, 80, 97, 99, 101, 233
Â
Baby Face Leroy, 208
Bailey, DeFord, 49, 96
Baker, LaVern, 206
ballads, 35, 37, 38, 224, 224
Ballard, Hank, 211
band singers, 188, 196â97
banjo, 28, 49â52, 157
Delta, 87, 88
supernatural skills and, 266
Barbecue Bob, 35, 79
Barber, Chris, 238â39
barbershops, 43â44
Barker, Danny, 84
Barnes, Booba, xixâxx
Barnes, George, 62
Basie, Count, 4, 37, 63, 93, 98â101, 195, 196, 205, 226, 232, 235, 227, 243
Baxter, Andrew, 48
Bayes, Norah, 18
“Beale Street Blues” (Handy), 17, 94
beat movement, 236, 237, 239â41
Bechet, Sidney, 227
Beck, Jeff, 249
Beefheart, Captain, 263
“Before Music Was Segregated,” 48
Belafonte, Harry, 81, 234, 238, 239
Bennett, Tony, 98
Berlin, Irving, 65, 206
Bernard, Al, 18, 20, 27
Berry, Chuck, 6, 128, 194, 208, 210, 211, 238, 239, 244, 246â48
Jordan's influence on, 200
Bible, 168
big bands, 98â99, 196â99, 202, 205, 206
Big Maybelle, 206
Billboard
charts, 203
“Black,” 219
“Blues,” 219
country, 200
“Harlem Hit Parade,” 195
“Hot Soul,” 219
“pop,” 199â200
“Race” 197, 198, 202
“Rhythm and Blues” (R&B), 203â8, 216, 219
black folk tradition
blues as, 43
white audience and, 222â23, 232
black migrations, 38, 80, 197â98
Black Music for White People
(Hawkins album), 220
“Black Snake” cycle of songs, 34, 94
“Black Snake Moan” (Jefferson), 34, 76, 100
Black Swan records, 23
Blackwell, Scrapper, 37, 65, 131, 133, 139
Bland, Bobby “Blue,” 97â98, 189, 212, 216â17, 219, 248, 258
Bland, James, 224
Blesh, Rudi, 237â38
Blind Blake, 33, 34, 35, 67, 79, 118, 157, 170â71, 200, 210
number of recordings, 42
Bloomfield, Michael, 249
“Blue Ghost Blues” (Lonnie Johnson), 174â175
“blue note,” 5, 6, 78
blues
acoustic, modern, 256, 257
aesthetic, and division between “pop” and “folk,” 234â35
as black pop music, early history of, 8, 9, 16â24, 36â37
as black pop music of 1940s, 200â206
as black pop music of 1950s and 1960s, 211â18
as black pop music, end of, 218â19
black to white audience shift and, xiiiâiv, 218â19, 250â53
British boom, and Rolling Stones, 238â39, 243â46, 255
as category, artificiality of, 194, 212â13
commercial, as grab-bag, 5â6, 71
commercial, Lomax and, 230â31
compared to illness, 162
country guitarists and, 27â36
decline of individuality in modern, 254â55
“deep” or “true” and hollers, 81â82
defined, 4â10, 194
Delta life and, 83, 85, 101
Delta prewar pop and, 87â88, 91, 92, 99â100
Depression and, 39
“down-home” market for, 29â35, 206â7
early recordings, 20â42
early live performance and, 21, 43â59
early white artists and, 18â19, 27
early writers on, xxiiiâxxiv
European rediscovery of, 243â45
evolution of, folk vs. pop influences and, 32â33
evolution of, paradox of RJ's reputation and, xvâxvi, xxivâxxvi female singers and, 26â27
first heard by blues artists on record, 58, 79
first performed onstage, 16
first published, 16â14
folklorists record, 72â73
future of, 250â64
Hammond and Lomax rediscover, 227â34
Harlem Renaissance and, 224
history of, before 1920s, 46â52
Jordan and, 199â200
macho-satanic joking in, 177â78
modern players of, 262â63
older Southern black tradition and, 9, 71
origin of, 4, 9â13
overlap of, with jazz, 62â63, 98, 198
as poetic form, 168
pop and folk roots in, 32â35
pop recording artists underemphasized, 40â42
postwar period and, 194â219
Presley influenced by, 207
radio and prewar, 95â98
R&B vs., 203â4
recording industry segregates, 55â61
obscure and “country,” preferred by white revivalists, 240â43
rock 'n' roll as prism for history of, 7, 220â21
romanticism and myth of, xxiii, 8, 177, 256â58, 263â64
rural guitarists and, 13
searching for roots of, in contemporary Delta, xviâxxiii
singers dominate, 196â97, 216â17
subcategories of, artificiality and limits of, 193, 194
supernatural and, 178, 266â68, 270â74
top recording stars of blues era, 40â42
urban musicians replace country guitarists, 36â42
variety of black musical styles and, 55â57
white cult audience and, xiii, 220â22, 253
white folk audience and, 81â82, 226, 234â40
white jazz fans and, 237â39
as women's music, in 1940s, 201â3
working-class and, 16, 251
blues queens, 7, 13, 18, 34â35, 37
field hollers and, 76
jazz and, 63, 237
postwar, 195, 201â3
rise of black, in 1920s, 22â29
sales of, 40
variety of music performed by, 61
white, in 1920s, 20, 23
work songs and, 80â81
blues revival, xxiv, 55, 67, 69, 78, 83, 176, 245â49
blues shouters, 198â99 “blue yodels,” 80
Bobo, Mississippi, xxii
Boggs, Dock, 5, 6
boogie bass, RJ's, 187â88, 217
boogie woogie, 204, 205, 243
Booker, Jim, 48
Booze, Wee Bea, 195, 202
Borges, Jorge Luis, 220
Boyd, Eddie, 209, 210, 242
Bracey, Ishmon, 119, 272
Bradford, Perry, 21, 25, 81
Bradley, Tommie, 52
brass band concerts, 44, 88
British blues boom, 238â39, 243â46, 255
Broadway show tunes, 99
Brockman, Polk, 30â31
Bronze Buckaroo, The
(film), 97
Broonzy, Big Bill, xiv, 10, 77, 202, 205
covers of, as hits, 211
number of recordings by, 39, 41
versatility of, 62
white audiences and, 81, 214, 227â28, 231, 232, 235, 237, 238
on writing blues lyrics, 145â46
Brown, Buster, 212
Brown, Charles, 37, 83, 183, 197, 198, 208, 210, 211, 213
Brown, James, xxiii, 4, 6, 25, 194, 200, 215, 218â19, 252, 274
Brown, Roy, 66
Brown, Ruth, 6, 203, 212
Brown, Sterling, 236
Brown, Walter, 93, 196
Brown, Willie, 90, 108â11, 161
Bumble Bee Slim, 39, 66, 182
number of recordings by, 41
RJ songs and, 131
Bunch, William.
See
Wheatstraw, Peetie
Butler, Jerry, 37
Butterfield, Paul, xxiv, 245
Â
Café Society, 187
Cahill, Marie, 18â19, 21
Calloway, Cab, 64, 99, 215
camp-meeting shouts, 92
Canned Heat, xxiv
Carcassi, 46
Caribbean influence, 157, 268
Carmichael, Hoagy, 60
Carolinas, black musicians in, 60
Carolina Tarheels, 44â45
Carr, Leroy, xiv, 16, 34, 61, 96, 198, 211, 215, 219, 230, 253, 260, 264
disappearance of, 221
influence of, 36â37, 40, 58, 79, 93, 94, 98, 127, 195â97, 200, 204, 216
influence of, on RJ, 131â35, 144, 173, 179, 182â84
number of recordings by, 41
professionalism of, 177
reissues of, 242, 248
variety of music played live by, 63â65
white blues revival and, 237, 240
Carson, Fiddlin' John, 31, 33, 49, 160
Carter, Bo (Bo Chatmon), 35, 40, 54â55, 77, 119, 146, 182
number of recordings by, 41
Carter, Clarence, 189
Carter Family, 240
Caruso, 46
Casals, Pablo, 143, 260
Champion Race records, 52
Charles, Ray, xxiv, 6, 203, 274
career of, and RJ, 187
hits by, 211
influences on, 36, 201
musical categories and, 212
Charters, Samuel, xxivâxxv, 234, 241â42
Chasin' That Devil Music
(Wardlow), 274
Chatmon, Bo.
See
Carter, Bo
Chatmon, Lonnie, 54, 77
Chess, Leonard, 210
Chess, Marshall, 212â13, 215â16
Chess Records, 210, 244, 245, 260
Chicago blues, 10, 39â40, 83, 173, 204, 208â9, 212â13, 219, 252
“Sweet Home Chicago” as anthem of, 139
RJ as bridge figure from Delta to, xvi studio groups, 39â41
white blues revival and, 243â45
Chicago Defender
, 26, 29, 35, 50â51, 96, 270, 195â96, 201â2, 208â9, 213
children's games songs, 5, 87, 129
Chopin, 251
Christian, Charlie, 200, 227, 230
Christmas records, 34