Read Escaping the Delta Online
Authors: Elijah Wald
Holiday, Billie, 202, 203, 205, 226, 230, 237, 260
Holladay, Kenny, xvi, xvii
Holland, Justin, 46
Holman, Libby, 233
“Home on the Range” (black cowboy song) 57
“Honeymoon Blues” (RJ), 182â83
“Hoochie Coochie Man” (Waters), 204, 209, 212, 244
Van Ronk and, 177
hoodoo or mojo, 268â71
Hooker, John Lee, xix, xxiii, 76, 78, 90, 206â9, 212, 216, 217
revivalists and, 242â45, 257
Hopkins, Lightnin', xxiii, 136, 206â7, 242â44
Horowitz, Vladimir, 251, 255
Horton, Big Walter, 90
“Hound Dog” (Presley), 211
House, Son, xv, 9, 56, 79, 90, 118, 120, 209, 272â73
blues history and, 126, 127
Chicago bluesmen and, 213
“deep” blues and, 77â78
Delta sound and, 88, 156, 158
early recordings of, 158, 161
influence of, on RJ, 108â11, 130, 132, 133, 139, 150, 155, 158â59, 161â62, 172, 229
Lomax and, 96, 231
“Preachin' Blues” and, 161â63
on RJ and Devil, 275
on RJ death, 124
on RJ record, 121
recording method of, 176
rediscovery of, 240, 242
Howell, Peg Leg, 33, 61
Howlin' Wolf, xix, 63, 83, 208, 209
Delta and, 90, 113
popularity and style of, 210, 214â15
Rolling Stones and, 245, 246
vocal style of, 155, 217
white audience and, 214, 244â45
“How LongâHow Long Blues” (Carr), 36â38, 58, 67, 93, 94, 196
Hughes, Langston, 224, 225
Humes, Helen, 196, 243
humor, 177â78, 214, 274
Hunter, Alberta, 21â23, 27, 42, 202
Hunter, Ivory Joe, 197, 212
Hurt, Mississippi John, xxiii, 9, 10, 161, 254
early black guitarists and, 157
range of material of, 55, 69
white audience and, 48, 80, 240, 242, 254â55
Hyatt, Harry Middleton, 266
hymns, 92
Â
“I Believe I'll Dust My Broom” (RJ), 140, 147, 155
boogie shuffle on, 136â38
recorded, 135â38
as standard, 138, 139, 148, 188
Wolf sings at Newport, 214â15
“I Believe I'll Make a Change” (Carr), influence of, on RJ, 135
“If I Had Possession Over Judgment Day” (RJ), 163â65, 180, 274
“I Got the Blues” (first published blues), 16
“I Got You (I Feel Good)” (Brown), 218
“I'm a Steady Rollin' Man” (RJ), 170
Ink Spots, 37, 63, 96, 183
In Search of Robert Johnson
(documentary), 276
interracial music, 46â52
segregated by folklorists, 57
segregated by record companies, 52â53
“In the Evening” (Carr), 37, 96, 183.
See also
“When the Sun Goes Down”
Isley Brothers, 246
Italian favorites, 53, 137
“It Makes a Long Time Man Feel Bad,” 160
“It's Tight Like That” (Tampa Red/Georgia Tom), 36, 38, 67
“I Wonder” (hit of 1940s), 197
Â
Jackson, Jim, 35, 40, 94
Jackson, John, 49, 96
Jackson, Lew, 34
Jackson, Mahalia, 38, 253
Jackson, Mississippi, 102, 152
Jackson, Papa Charlie, 27â28, 38, 42, 94
Jagger, Mick, 6, 215, 221, 239, 246
James, Elmore, xiv, xxiii, 79, 90, 209, 213, 239
covers RJ song, 138, 139, 148
James, Etta, 203, 216, 258
James, Skip, xv, xxiii, 67, 90, 120, 260, 263, 272
blues history and style of, 76â78, 126, 137, 150
Devil songs and, 274
influence of, on RJ, 142â44, 149â51, 171
rediscovery of, 240, 242, 254â55
wide repertoire of, 59â60, 69
Jaxon, Frankie “Half Pint,” 38
jazz, 26, 34, 45, 54
aesthetic of obscurity and, 241
blues and, 5, 6, 62â63, 98, 195
as category, 193â94
prewar Delta and, 88, 99
Lonnie Johnson and, 29
white fans and, 205, 226, 236
white pop music and, 96â97
Jefferson, Blind Lemon, xxv, 10, 26, 39, 78, 79, 94, 143, 198, 206, 210, 233, 253, 260
early success of, 29â35, 40, 42
field hollers and, 32â33, 76
influence of, 79â80
influence of, on RJ, 132, 136, 159, 183
white rediscovery of, 231, 237, 240
Jeffries, Herb, 97
“Jelly Jelly” (Eckstine), 100, 196
jigs and reels, 47
jive style, 63, 188, 200
Joel, Billy, xiv
John, Little Willie, 218
“John Henry,” 10, 224, 238
Johnson, Alec, 54â55
Johnson, Alonzo “Lonnie,” xxiii, xxv, 10, 26, 94, 116, 118, 196, 262
disappearance of, 221
early popularity of, 28â29, 34, 41, 61â62, 77
influence of, 79â80, 196, 200
influence of, on RJ, 174, 178
R&B vs. blues and, 204, 205
style and virtuosity of, 28, 54, 61, 127, 129, 174, 177
white revivalists and, 237, 238, 242, 244
Johnson, Big Jack, xxii
Johnson, Buddy, 100, 195
Johnson, James P., 227
Johnson, Larry, 246
Johnson, LeDell, 271â72
Johnson, Lil, 40
Johnson, Merline (“Yas Yas Girl”), 42, 62
Johnson, Noah (RJ's father), 107
Johnson, Pete, 204, 205, 227
Johnson, Robert (RJ), xiv, 98.
See also
specific songs
begins recording, 119â22
birth and early life of, 105â8
black vs. white audience and, xxivâxxvi, 188â89, 220, 218
boogie shuffle and, 217
as bridge between Delta and commercial world, xvâxvi
Chicago bluesmen and, 213, 215
commercial aspirations of, xivâxv
Complete Recordings
of, xxiv, xxvâxxvi
contemporaries of, in 1940s, 198
as cream of large crop, 261
death of, 123â25, 194â95, 274
Delta during time of, 90, 91
Delta “jukes” and, 93, 94, 115â16
direction might have been pursued by, 186â88
disproportionate focus on, 40
evolution of black music and, xv, xxivâxxvi
first sessions, hits attempted, 131â48
first sessions, reaching back to older influences, 149â65, 173
folk blues revival and focus on, 247â49
grave marker ceremony of 1991
and, xviâxvii
guitar playing and slide playing of, 113â14, 118, 119
hip-hoppers and, 219
House and, 158
influence of, 79, 187â88
legacy of music of, 186â89
looks of, 9, 111â12
magnetism of, 117â18
marries Callie Craft, 110
meets House and Brown, 108â11
modern blues audience vs. peers and, 253, 254
modern writers on guitar playing of, 256
musical world of, 101, 102
myth of, xviâxvii, xxvâxxvi, 8â9, 106, 188, 237â38, 258, 262â63
myth of Devil and, 266â67, 269, 270, 272, 274â76
original signature pieces of, 119
other musicians and, 154
personality of, 112â14
professionalism of, 7â8
record success and, 166â67
rediscovery of, xxiv, 228â32, 241â42
Rolling Stones and, 246
second session, 122, 166â85
Skip James and, 150â51
songwriting by, 118â19
stock arrangements of, 148
travels of, 111â17
understanding, in context of his world, 126â30
unknown until “blues revival” of 1960s, xxiv
variety of music played by, 59, 60, 118
versatility of, 127
women and, 122â24
Johnson, Tommy, xx, 63, 108, 110, 119
Delta style and, 76, 90, 126, 158
Devil and, 271â75
test pressing, 56â57
Jolson, Al, 39, 46
Jones, Brian, 239
Jones, Curtis, 42
Jones, Lewis, 86â91, 101
Jones, Ruth.
See
Washington, Dinah
Joplin, Janis, 6, 257
Joplin, Scott, 10
Jordan, Louis, 63, 88, 100, 101, 188, 194, 198â200, 201, 208, 218, 219, 236
jug bands, 96, 129, 238
jukeboxes, 88â89, 90, 95, 99â101
juke joints, 67, 268â70
“Juke” (Little Walter), 204, 210
“jump” combos, 197, 261
Â
Kansas City style, 195, 196, 198â99, 204â5
Kaye, Sammy, 100, 101
Kentucky, 48, 83
Kentucky Boys, 48
Kerouac, Jack, 241
Khan, Ali Akbar, 260
Khulthoum, Oum, 5
“Kind Hearted Woman Blues” (RJ), 140, 147, 173, 175, 182
first release of, 166
recorded, 131â35
Kind of Blue
(Davis), 143
King, Albert, 90, 217, 254, 262
King, B. B., xiii, 5, 90, 254, 259, 264
hits, 211, 216, 219
improvisation and, 176
influences on, 28, 79â80, 200, 201
R&B vs. blues and, 204, 208
white vs. black audience and, 216, 217, 219
King, Freddie, 254, 259
King, Martin Luther, Jr., xx
King and Anderson Plantation, 91
King Cole Trio, 198
“King of Spades” (Wheatstraw), 173
King of the Delta Blues Singers
(RJ album reissue 1961), xxiv, 163, 247â48
Kings of Rhythm, xix
Kingston Trio, 238, 239
Kirkland, Eddie, 258â59
Koerner, Spider John, 246
Korner, Alexis, 238â39
Â
LaBelle, Patti, 25
Lacey, Rube, 126, 272
Lang, Eddie, 29
LaSalle, Denise, 189, 219
“Last Fair Deal Gone Down” (RJ), 160â61
Latimore, 219
LaVere, Steven, 275
Law, Don, 120â21, 122
Leadbelly, 215, 230, 232â34, 237, 238, 239, 248, 257, 261, 263
“Lead Pencil Blues” (Temple), 137
Lee, Peggy, 63, 202
Lehmann, Lilli, 225, 226
Lewis, Furry, 10, 157
Lewis, Homer, 59
Lewis, Jerry Lee, 211, 213
Lewis, Meade Lux, 227
Library of Congress.
See also
Fisk UniversityâLibrary of Congress field team
Josh White concert at, 235â36
recordings of House, 158
recordings of Waters, 57â58
Life
, 232
“Life Saver Blues” (Lonnie Johnson), 174â175
Liggins, Jimmie, 198
Liggins, Joe, 198
Limelighters, 239
Lippmann, Horst, 243
Lipscomb, Mance, 43, 55, 242, 261
Little Milton, 9, 66, 215â16, 217, 219
“Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane, The,” 31, 49â50
“Little Queen of Spades” (RJ), 173â75
Little Richard, 25, 211, 243, 246
Little Walter, 204, 209â10, 211
live performance, 43â69
barbershop, 43â44
blues as black, southern style and, 21â22
hillbilly styles and, 47â50, 52
interracial, 46â52
minstrel shows and, 50â52
recorded vs., 61, 67
variety of musical styles in, 44â45, 52â59
Locke, Alain, 236
Lockwood, Robert, 112â13, 122, 261
Lomax, Alan, 73, 86, 239, 252
field hollers and, 74â76
House interviews, 111
Mississippi field trip of, 57â59, 97, 231, 270
rediscovery of rural blues and, 230â36, 241
Lomax, John A., 57, 73, 224, 230, 232, 233, 235
Lombardo, Guy, xiv, 96, 196
Los Angeles, 198
Louisville, 83
Louisville Jug Band, 27, 63
“Love in Vain” (RJ), 163
recorded, 183â84
Rolling Stones cover, 246
lullabies, 92
Â
Mabon, Willie, 209, 210
McCartney, Paul, 245
McClennan, Tommy, 93, 100, 139
McCormick, Mack, 106, 124â25, 276
McCoy, Charlie, 54â55, 63, 77, 137, 152
McCoy, Kansas Joe, 42, 54â55, 63, 77, 152, 202, 274
McDowell, Fred, 246
McGee, Sam, 96, 157
McGhee, Brownie, xiii, 48, 238, 239, 243
on going “white,” 233, 234
McGhee, Kirk, 47
McGhee, Stick, 234
Macon, Uncle Dave, 49â50
McShann, Jay, 59, 93, 100, 195, 196
McTell, Blind Willie, 33, 63, 67, 118, 157
Maggio, Antonio, 16
Mahal, Taj, 246
Maid of Harlem
(musical revue), 20
male performers, 27â38
“Malted Milk,” (RJ), 175