Read Escaping the Delta Online
Authors: Elijah Wald
Chuck Wagon Gang, 120, 149
church songs, 92.
See also
gospel; religion civil rights movement, 235
Civil War, 38, 48
Clapton, Eric, xxiv, 6, 244â47, 249, 256
Clark, Carroll, 31
Clark, Israel, 107â8
Clarksdale, Miss., xviiiâxix, 88, 98, 99, 101, 102
class, audience for blues and, 251
classical music, 44, 46â47
“classic” jazz, 237
Clinton, George, 194
Clovers, 213
Coahoma County, 86, 88
Coasters, 212
cocktail blues, 197â98
Coffee, Willie, 107, 115, 123, 124, 275
coffeehouses, xxiii, 242
Cole, James, 52
Cole, Nat “King,” 36, 66, 187, 195, 197, 200
Coleman, Ornette, 151, 260
Columbia Records, 227, 228, 230, 247
“Come Back Baby,” 100
“Come On in My Kitchen” (RJ), 119, 181, 266
influences on, 142â44, 151, 171
recorded, 142â45, 172
slide guitar on, 142, 143, 144, 162
Como, Perry, 98
Confessions
(St. Augustine), 273
Continental Monthly
, 222
Cooke, Sam, xxiii, 37, 274
“coon” songs, 51â52
Copeland, Martha, 34
“Corinna” (song), 11, 58, 211
“corner loading,” 120
“corn” or “cornfield” songs, 74.
See also
field hollers
Cotten, Elizabeth, 157
Cotton, James, 213
country-and-western music, 31, 69, 73
hits, blacks and, 92, 99, 203 “country blues”
Charters establishes term, 242
rediscovered by whites, 240
Country Blues, The
(Charters), xxivâxxv, 241â42
country sensibility, 25â26, 29â30, 35, 88, 160.
See also
“down-home” style; ragtime
ragtime-blues genre and, 53
vaudeville style vs., 34â35, 54â55
covers, bluesmen play live, 66â68
cowboy music, 97, 118
yodeling, 54, 56, 69
Cowboy Songs and Other Frontier Ballads
(John Lomax), 224
Cox, Ida, 10, 23, 28, 196
number of recordings by, 42
popularity of, 26, 202
Craft, Callie (wife of RJ), 110
Crayton, Pee Wee, 198
“Crazy Blues” (Mamie Smith), 17, 21â22
Cream, 245
crooners, 37, 39, 206
Crosby, Bing, xxvi, 37, 39, 53, 65, 96, 118, 235
“Cross Road Blues” (RJ), 167, 172
lyric, 155, 156, 274â75
recorded, 155â56
slide guitar on, 155â56, 159
“crossroads to meet devil” concept, 271, 274â76
Crudup, Arthur “Big Boy,” 138
on blues, 218
hits postwar, 207
Presley covers, 207, 221
“Cruel Heated Woman Blues,” 131
Crumb, R., xvii
Crump, E. H., 16
Â
Dallas, 32, 38, 77
“Dallas Blues” (sheet music), 16, 19, 21, 32
dances
changes in, prewar Delta, 87â88, 94â95, 102
interracial bands and, 48â49
lyrics and, 132
musical styles and, 45, 60â61, 67
rhythms, of 1940s, 196
white vs. black tastes in, 68
work songs and, 160
Davis, Rev. Gary, 157, 254
Davis, Jimmie, 96
Davis, Miles, 143
Davis, Sammy, 66
Davis, Tyrone, 219
Davis, Walter, 40, 58â59, 77, 93, 94, 100, 229
covers RJ song, 139
number of recordings by, 41
“Dead Shrimp Blues” (RJ), 154â55
“deep” blues artists, popularity of, in Mississippi, 77â78
Deep Blues
(Palmer), 71, 77
Delta, 86â91
African styles and, 76
blues lovers picture of, 100
Charley Patton and, 35â36
dances, 58â59
day-to-day soundtrack of, 101
field hollers and, 76, 77
ghosts of songs in, xxiâxxii
Handy and, 8
as home to unique strain of blues, 83â84
interviews in, 129
jukebox tunes in prewar, 95, 99â101
life in prewar, xxii, 84â90, 102
magical beliefs in, 268, 270, 271, 273â75
music as only escape from difficult life in, xxii
music styles and tastes in prewar, 83, 87â102
in 1940s, 89â90, 102
non-blues and popular music, 101
R&B of 1950s and, 209
research in, xixâxxii, xxv
RJ and, xvâxvi, 115â16, 263
variety of musical styles and, 45â46
Delta blues
blues artists and, 79â80, 82
classic, vs. wide variety of emergence of, 156â58
defined by Hammond, 229â30
music played in Delta and, 56â59
primitivism and, 177
RJ's first session and, 149, 155â57
RJ's music in context of, 126â27, 180, 187â88
RJ's vocals and, 139
slide style of, 144
special conditions of region and, 83â84
Depression, 39, 83, 121, 202
DeSanto, Sugar Pie, 244
Desdumes, Mamie, 12
Detroit, 38, 219
Devil and supernatural, myths of, 265â76
“Devil Got My Woman” (James), 76, 142, 144, 171, 260
“Devil's Son-in-Law, The” (Wheatstraw), 178
Diddley, Bo, 208, 209, 243, 244
“diddley bow,” 107
disco, 218
Dixon, Floyd, 198
Dixon, Willie, 90, 209, 243, 259
Dockery Plantation, 108, 156, 268
Dodds, Johnny, 63
Dodds, Julia Major (RJ's mother), 106â7
Dodds-Spencer, Charles (RJ's “father”), 106, 107
Dogg, Snoop, 218
Doggett, Bill, 211
Domino, Fats, 211â13
Dominoes, 37
Donegan, Lonnie, 238, 239, 241
“Done Sold My Soul to the Devil,” 178, 265
“Don't Let Your Deal Go Down” (Carson), 160
Dorsey, Thomas “Georgia Tom,” 24, 36â38, 42, 273
Dorsey, Tommy (big band), 99
double-entendre, 35, 38, 54, 146, 14
“Down Hearted Blues” (Bessie Smith), 22â23
“down-home” sound, 210
associated with Delta, 83
Delta prewar jukeboxes and, 100
early, of 1920s, 29â30, 32
impact of, in 1940s, 188
R&B of 1950s and, 206â18
white folk fans and, 229, 242â43
Dre, Dr., 194
Drifters, xxiii
“Drown in My Own Tears,” 211
“Drunken Hearted Man,” (RJ), 175
“Dry Southern Blues,” 183
Duchin, Eddy, 100, 101
Dupree, Champion Jack, 242
Dylan, Bob, xxiv, 170, 188, 227, 245â46
Â
Eckstine, Billy, 100, 196
Edison, Thomas, 20
Edwards, David “Honeyboy,” 10, 26, 60, 86, 231, 261
on RJ, 123â24, 166
“Egyptians” or Gypsies, 270, 271
eight-bar blues, 37
electric “down-home” Chicago sound, 198, 212â14, 245â46
electric guitar
early, 62
folk revivalists and, 242â43
Walker and, 200, 201
electronic amplification, 38â39, 51
Ellington, Duke, 29, 45, 51, 54, 60, 64, 67, 80, 88, 97, 99, 100, 176, 193, 196, 260
Elliott, Missy, 194
Eminem, 215, 274
English Folksongs from the Southern Appalachians
(Sharp), 224
Ertegun, Ahmet, 205
Estes, Sleepy John, 240, 242, 244
ethnic impersonators, 18
Europe.
See also
British blues boom
folk and blues revival in, 242â44
legend of Devil in, 270â271
Evans, David, 272
Evora, Cesaria, xiv
Â
fiddle-and-guitar duos, 52
fiddlers, 47â49, 52, 54, 55, 58, 68, 80, 87, 93, 266
field hollers, 71â81, 206â7
fife-and-drum music, 126, 157
Finn, Julio, 268
Fisk Jubilee Singers, 223
Fisk UniversityâLibrary of Congress (Jones, Lomax, Adams) field team, 86â102, 231
“floating” couplets, 132, 135, 159
Florida, 83
Foddrell, Turner, 48
folk-blues tradition
disappearance of, in Delta, prewar, 91
Jefferson and, 32â33
folk fans
folk festivals, 242â44
folklorists, 6, 22â24, 223â24
field hollers and, 72â76, 78
Fisk study and, 86â91
hoodoo and, 270
pop material not recorded by, 53
split Southern music along racial lines, 57
folk music, 239
blues reconceived as, by Lomax and Hammond, 230â32
disappearance of, in prewar Delta, 91
“pop” vs., 234â35
in rural prewar South, 70â82
folk revival, 232â34, 238â42
Folkways Records, 241
“44 Blues,” reworked as “22-20 blues,” 67, 149
Foster, Stephen, 224
France, 238, 244
Franklin, Aretha, xxiv, 6, 194, 218, 227, 274
Friars Point, Miss., 88â89, 180 “From Four Until Late” (RJ), 170â71, 174
“From Spirituals to Swing” concert, 186â87, 205, 226â29, 230, 235
Fuller, Blind Boy, 40, 41, 94, 100, 118, 152, 182, 200, 218, 228â30
Fulson, Lowell, 83, 198
funk, 194
Â
Gaillard, Slim, 63
Gaither, Bill, 40, 41
Gant, Cecil, 37, 197
Gates, Rev. J.M., 80
Georgia, 83
Georgia Yellowhammers, 48
Geremia, Paul, 257, 263â64
Gibbs, Georgia, 244
Gillespie, Dizzy, 193, 239
Gillum, Jazz, 40
Glenn, Lloyd, 198
Gluck, Alma, 31
“Going to Chicago,” 93, 99, 102, 196
“Going to Move to Kansas City,” 94
Golden Gate Gospel Quartet, 93, 99
Goodman, Benny, 63, 98, 99, 193, 230, 232
“Goodnight Irene,” 239 “good-time jazz,” 63
gospel music, 5, 24â25, 33, 37, 38, 59, 202, 216
Delta, 92, 93, 99
influence of, on RJ, xvii, 160
gospel-soul fusion, 273â74
Grand Ole Opry
, 47, 49, 51, 96
Green, Lil, 63, 93, 100, 202, 227
guitar(ists).
See also
specific musicians
black 19th-century, 46â47
early recordings of, 26, 28â36, 40
early styles, 87, 157
hillbilly influence on, 96
prewar Delta and, 88
RJ and, 108â10, 135
white revivalists favor, 242, 249
Guitar Slim, 6, 211
Guralnick, Peter, xvii, 106, 107, 125, 172
Guthrie, Woody, 231, 233
Guy, Buddy, 252, 259
Â
Haley, Bill, 205, 213
Hammond, John, 186, 205, 226â32, 234, 235, 241, 247
Hammond, John, Jr., 245, 276
Hampton, Lionel, 202
Handy, W. C., 3, 6, 7, 16â18, 25, 50, 202
Delta and, 88, 94
as Father of the Blues, 11
covers and, 31
ragged loner myth and, 8, 9, 19
roots of music question and, 33
white singers and, 20â21, 96
Harlem Hamfats, 42, 63, 152â53
Harlem Renaissance, 81, 224â24
Harlem Rides the Range
(film), 97
harmonica, 96, 242
RJ and, 109, 117â18
Harney, Hacksaw, xxi, 59, 136
Harpo, Slim, 217
Harris, Marion, 18, 20, 23, 27
Harris, R. H., 37
Harris, Wynonie, 196, 197, 199
Harrison, Wilbert, 212
Hart, Alvin Youngblood, 263
Harvey, Morton, 18
Hawkins, Erskine, 195
Hawkins, Screamin' Jay, 220
Hayes, Clifford, 27
“Heartbreak Hotel” (Presley), 194
Hee Haw
, 51
Hegamin, Lucille, 21, 42
“Hell Hound on My Trail” (RJ), 267, 274
influences on, 150â51, 171, 172
recorded, 171â72
white romanticism and, 237â38
Hellhounds on My Trail: The Afterlife of Robert Johnson
(documentary), 275
Henderson, Fletcher, 62
Henderson, Rosa, 42
Hendrix, Jimi, xxiv, 188, 243, 246, 249
Hill, Miz, xviiiâxix, xxv
Hill, Z. Z., 219
hillbilly styles.
See also
country sensibility; country-and-western; hoedown
black musicians and, 27, 28, 33, 44â45, 47â53, 69, 96â98, 118
radio and, 97â98
record companies market, as white, 52â53
RJ and, 160
white prisons and, 73
white rediscovery of, 240
Hines, Earl, 45, 60, 63, 68, 99, 100, 196, 198
hip-hop, 194, 219
Hite, Les, 200â201
Hodges, Johnny, 100
hoedown, 35, 45, 47, 52, 85, 93
Hogan, Carl, 200
Hogg, Smokey, 206, 208
hokum, 28, 37â38, 62, 64, 152, 203
Hokum Boys, 41, 42, 200