Read Escaping the Delta Online
Authors: Elijah Wald
March of Time
(newsreel), 232
Markham, Pigmeat, 51
Martin, Dean, 207
Martin, Sara, 21, 26, 27, 40, 41
Mayall, John, 245
Mayfield, Percy, 6 “Me and the Devil” (RJ), 182, 267
devil in, 274
humor in, xvii, 177â79, 274
recorded, 175â79
“Mean Mistreater Blues,” 94, 131, 133
medicine shows, 51, 55, 139, 274
Memphis, 33, 38, 62, 102, 149, 204
“Memphis Blues (Mr. Crump), The,” (Handy) 16â18
Memphis Jug Band, 42
Memphis Minnie, 40, 41, 63, 77, 92, 99, 100, 134, 229, 262
wide repertoire of, 62
Memphis Slim, 209, 242, 243
Messenger's Café jukebox titles, 99â100
Michelangelo, 262
“Midnight Hour Blues” (Carr), 37, 260
Midnight Ramble
(radio show), 96
Milburn, Amos, 198, 216 “Milk Cow Blues” (Arnold), 94, 134, 138, 145, 168â69, 173, 184â85
“Milk Cow Calf Blues” (RJ), 184â85
Miller, Aleck “Sonny Boy Williamson,” 90, 209
on death of RJ, 124
Miller, Glenn, 99, 196
Miller, Steve, 249
Millinder, Luckey, 197
Mills Brothers, 96, 152
Milton, John, 275
Milton, Roy, 198
minstrel shows, 11, 18â19, 28, 33, 35, 44, 46, 50â52, 54â55, 60â61, 139, 222, 224
Mississippi blues players.
See also
Delta blues;
and specific artists
Charley Patton and, 35â36
Chicago sound and, 198, 209
development of, RJ and, 126â28
postwar era, 207
prewar stars from, 83
R&B hits and, 209, 211
recordings, 119â20
Mississippi Jook Band, 126, 153
Mississippi Sheiks, xx, xxi, xxv, 34, 36, 42, 52, 54, 94, 119, 126, 144, 146, 229
Missouri, 83
Mitchell's Christian Singers, 227
moans.
See
field hollers
modernism, 17, 85, 102
RJ and, 144, 177â78
Monroe, Bill, 48
Montgomery, Little Brother, xx, 65â66, 79, 84, 137, 242, 269
“Moonshine Blues” (Ma Rainey), 24
Moore, Johnny, 188, 197, 209
Moore, Monette, 22
Moore, Rudy Ray, 267
Moore, Scotty, 239
Moore, Spence, 51
Moore, Whistlin' Alex, 98
Morand, Herb, 63
Morton, Jelly Roll, 12, 26, 51, 176, 237, 268â70, 275
Mumford, Lewis, 14
musical categories, 193â94, 204â5, 208, 212â13, 218
invention of, 44, 56
musical versatility and variety, 44â69, 95â101, 127, 206, 233
“My Black Mama” (House), 159
“My Blue Heaven,” 98, 118
Myth of the Machine, The
(Mumford), 14
Â
Narmour, William T., 48
Negro and His Songs, The
(survey of black rural folk music), 231
“Negro spiritual” ensembles, 223
Nelson, Romeo, 237
Nelson, Sonny Boy.
See
Powell, Eugene neo-ethnic movement, 240
Newbern, Hambone Willie, 164
Newbern, Willie, 126
New Orleans, 12â13, 29, 33, 157
New Orleans jazz
hoodoo and, 268â69
jazz purists (“moldy figs”) and, 193â94, 237
New Orleans Joys
(album), 238
Newport Folk Festival, 254â55
Wolf at, 214â15
New York Times
, 272
Noone, Jimmy, 62
North Carolina, 83
Â
O Brother, Where Art Thou?
(movie), 272
Oertle, Ernie, 120
“Oh! Red” (McCoy), 63, 152â53
Okeh Records, 27, 30â31, 267
Oklahoma, 83, 198
“Old Original Kokomo Blues” (Arnold), 138, 139
“Old Time” music, 31, 47, 49â50, 52, 52
Oliver, King, 26, 34, 62, 237
Oliver, Paul, 79
On the Road
(Kerouac), 241
Orlando, Tony, and Dawn, 56
Ottley, Roi, 10
Â
Paganini, 271, 275
Palmer, Robert, 71, 77
“Papa's Got a Brand New Bag” (James Brown), 194, 218
Paramount Records, 27â29, 66, 108, 143, 159
“test pressing,” variety of black “bluesmen” and, 56â57
Parchman Farm, 72, 75, 160, 161
Parker, Charlie, xxiv, 188, 193
Parker, Junior, 138, 139, 217
parlor songs, 92
Parton, Dolly, 25
“party blues,” 146
patriotic anthems, 92
Patton, Charley, xiv, xv, xvii, xxv, 56, 57, 59, 79, 113, 118, 119, 143, 206, 210, 214, 215, 268, 273
Delta or “deep” sound and, 77, 90, 102, 126, 156, 158
House, Brown and, 108, 161
influence of, on RJ, 160
lyrics of, 132
popularity of, 35â36, 40, 94, 100
rediscovery of, 240
showmanship of, 108
vocal style, 155
Peer, Ralph, 31
Peetie Wheatstraw: The Devil's Son-In-Law
(record and movie), 267
Pekin Theater (Chicago), 16
“Penitentiary Moan Blues” (field holler), 77
Perkins, George, 34
Pettis, Arthur, 126
Petway, Robert, 126
Phillips, Esther, 203
Phillips, Sam, 214
Phillips, Washtub Robbie, xvi
“Phonograph Blues” (RJ), 147â48
pianists, 209
folk revival and, 242â43
influence of, on RJ, 137
piano-guitar duos, 35â40, 61â62
Picasso, 151, 172
Pickett, Wilson, 252
Piedmont style, 170
“Pinetop's Boogie Woogie,” 100, 211â12
plantation system, 84â85, 101
“Police Station Blues” (Wheatstraw), 146
Polish favorites, 53
polyrhythms, 157â58, 170
popular music “pop,” 7, 58
art vs., 243
bluesmen as entertainers and, xv, 215, 252
Delta prewar taste and, 87â88, 90â95, 98
“folk” vs., 234â37, 240â42, 252
influence of, on bluesmen, 32â33, 58, 60, 127, 129, 130, 201, 262
played by blues artists, 52, 61â62, 64â66
rural artists and, 52â54, 72
“popular culture,” as academic discipline, 235
“postclassic jazz,” 237
Powell, Eugene (Sonny Boy Nelson), xxâxxi, 68
Preachin' Blues (Up Jumped the Devil)” (RJ), 267
House and, 161
recorded, 161â63, 172
rediscovered, 229, 242
Premice, Josephine, 233
Presley, Elvis, 4, 84, 134, 194, 207â8, 211, 215, 221, 239, 241, 244, 248
Price, Lloyd, 212, 252
Price, Sam, 100, 195
Pride, Charley, 69
primitive folk art
white fans and blues as, 220â21, 227â29
prison farms, 72â75, 77, 85
Prohibition, 88
Providence Civic Center concert, 259â60
Pruitt Twins, 26
Pullum, Joe, 94
Â
“Queen” Elizabeth, 276
Â
Rabbit Foot Minstrels, 199
Race records, 16, 21â42
pop music and, 53
rediscovery of, 3, 242
styles not recorded by, 45, 52
work songs and, 80â81
Rachell, Yank, 94
racism.
See also
stereotypes
minstrel shows and, 51â52
Mississippi Delta and, 84â85, 101
radio, 95â99, 101â2, 118, 197
“ragtime” (older African-American rural music), 5, 6, 10â11, 16, 61, 28, 33, 85, 87, 88, 157
RJ and, 153, 170â71
Rainey, Georgia Tom and Rainey, Gertrude “Ma,” 4, 10, 11, 28, 94, 206, 264, 273
influence of, 22, 37â38, 80, 199
influences on, 76
Jefferson and, 32â33
names the blues, 11â12
number of recordings by, 42
postwar covers of, 195, 196, 211
style and variety of, 21â26
Rainey, William “Pa,” 11
Raitt, Bonnie, 197, 256
“Rambling on My Mind” (RJ), 147, 148 recorded, 139â40
Rand, Odell, 63
rap music, 264
Ratliff, Rev. James, xvii, xxv
Real Folk Blues
(Chess album reissue), 245
Really! The Country Blues
(album), 242
“realness,” xiv, 7â8, 232, 233â34, 240â41, 253â54, 258
record collectors, 236, 237
record companies
“blues” term, applied to rural guitarists by, 13
cost of discs and, 57â58
blues queens as first blues hits and, 17â18, 21â26
Delta and, 101
Depression and bankruptcy of, 39
early accompaniments and, 26
early country male recordings by, 27â38
emphasis on new material by, 66â68
female vs. male popularity, 26â27
greatest-of-all-time recording by, 260â61
influence of, on musicians, 46, 58â59, 79
limit black musicians to blues, 47, 52â53, 56â68
live performance and, 21, 40, 44â47
male singer-guitarists and, 27â36
regional markets and, 30â31
rise of black artists and, 21â22
RJ discovered by, 119â21
stars of, of 1920s and 1930s, 39â42
urban sounds replace country guitar-singers and, 36â42
white blues revival and, 240â41
WW II and, 196â97
Redding, Otis, 37, 218
Red Scare, 239
Reed, Jimmy, xxiii, 3, 136, 138, 207, 217â18, 245
“reels,” 10
regional differences, 30â31, 157
Reinhardt, Django, 201
reissues, 240, 245, 247, 263
Rembrandt, 241
“rent parties,” 38, 61, 67
Rhodes, Walter, 59, 94
Rhythm and Blues (R&B), 6.
See also
Billboard charts
Carr resurfaces on, 183
as category, 194, 208, 212
“down-home” bluesmen and, 206â7
hits, 199, 209â10, 211â12, 216â18
influences on, 37
hoodoo and, 268
McGhee and, 234
term becomes standard, 203â6
Welk hit and, 97
rhythm duos, 188
Richards, Keith, 221, 239, 243â46
Rite of Spring
(Stravinsky), 241
Robertson, Alec, 87
Robeson, Paul, 81, 93
Robinsonville, Miss., 107, 108, 109
Rock, Chris, 274
“Rock Island Line,” 232, 238
rock 'n' roll, 6, 137, 210
bluesmen as roots of, 220
as category, vs. blues, 194, 208
European blues revival and, 243
folk music vs., 239
RJ and, 263
Turner and, xxiii, 199, 205
Rodgers, Jimmie, xxiv, 56, 69, 80, 94, 96, 118, 188, 240, 244, 255, 263
Rogers, Jimmy, 261
Rogers, Roy, 97, 239
“Roll and Tumble Blues,” 164, 180
Rolling Stones, xxiv, 128, 220â21, 239, 243â46, 252, 254, 255, 276
Romanticism, 223
black vs. white, 9, 276
lone black guitarist myth and, 8â9, 12â13, 19, 248â49, 263
obscurity and, 240â42
RJ myth and, 263, 266
white view of black culture and, 226, 248â49, 257â58
Roomful of Blues, 259
Roosevelt, Theodore, 224
Ross, Lanny, 99, 101, 129
Royal Canadians, 96
Rubinstein, Arthur, 251
Ruffin, David, 37
rural black artists.
See also
country blues; “down-home” sound; Delta blues; “Old-Time” music; “ragtime”
early echoed, 157
folklorists and, 223, 224
influence of Rainey on, 12
recordings, early boom in, 31, 32
rural music, 47, 51, 54, 157
blues boom and, 40, 42
“folk” music in prewar South, 70â82
“neo-ethnics,” 240
overlap of black and white, in south, 47â52
“songster” label and, 55â56
variety of styles and, 44â45, 54
Rushing, Jimmy, 93, 99, 195, 196, 205
Â
“Sagefield Woman Blues” (Arnold), 135
St. Augustine, 273
St. Louis, xvi, 38, 40, 102, 116â17, 219
“St. Louis Blues” (Handy), 11, 16, 17, 21, 58, 93, 94
Sallie Martin Singers, 202
“Salty Dog Blues,” 28, 94
Santeria, 271
Satherley, Art, 120
Schulta, Arnold, 48
Scruggs, Uncle John, 49â50
sea chanteys, 73
“Section Gang Blues” (field holler), 77
“Section Hand Blues,” 80â81
Seeger, Pete, 239
“See See Rider” (Rainey), xxiii, 195, 202
hit as “C.C. Rider,” 211
segregation, 48, 51â52, 204
Senegal song, 75â76
“Shake, Rattle and Roll” (Turner), xxiii, 194, 205, 206, 211
“Shake It Baby” (Hooker), 244
Shakespeare, 241
“Shake That Thing” (Jackson), 28, 38
sharecropping, 84â85, 87