THE Crossroads |
These days you are much more likely to drive into Clarksdale, even if
you are just a musical pilgrim wanting to see the place. There is a
monument made up of guitars on that famous crossroads. And if you
have a car and are a blues pilgrim there, you can also visit Dockery
Farm, where an information board says that it is there that blues
music was born. Charlie Patton – its earlies recorded performer –
worked here for some time. Charlie Patton taught Willie Brown how to
play and Willie Brown taught Robert Johnson, who, as is well known
(to some) was THE blues singer.
Nobody
knows exactly when the blues was born but it is assumed that it was
sometime at the beginning of the 20th
century. Nobody before that time had written this kind of music in
musical score (clearly nobody thought music of the black ghettos was
worthy of that honour) and the earliest recordings date from
1920ties. It soon turned out that there is some demand for those
recordings and there is some money to be made there. Consequently
quite a number of them were made and not for any ethnographic
collection but for a real audience. There are recordings of the blues
in Dixie jazz style, like those of Louis Armstrong, there are so
called “classic blues” recordings, which meant a voice (often
female, like that of Bessie Smith) accompanied only by a piano, there
also are recordings of the so called “country blues”, which meant
a voice (this time usually male) accompanied only by a guitar. The
guitar on those recordings is played in a most unusual way, which
didn't have much in common with the way the white men played it. It
was played with a bottleneck, which was a metal or glass tube
(sometimes a real neck knocked out of a bottle) put on a little
finger of the left hand, which made possible the characteristic blues
glissando. It was played with the strings tuned “out of tune”, or
rather in tunings different to that of the classic guitar. In
1920ties a resonator steel guitar was invented and used by the blues
bottleneck players and in 1930 first electric guitars appeared. The
electric guitar was quickly picked up by blues players from Chicago
and Memphis, who developed the style known as “city blues”. It
was usually played by a four-piece band: drums, bass guitar, electric
slide guitar and a harmonica. In the 1950ties a young musician from
Memphis (a non-Black, which was important) picked up this style, sped
up the tempo, called it “rock and roll” and sold it to non-Black
audience. From then on the blues started to conquer the world.
Birthplace of the blues? |
It soon turned out that among those old scratchy records there are
some that had some unusual qualities. One could listen to them and
never get bored, like listening to Bach. They had one thing in
common: they were all recorded by one Robert Johnson. Some people
started looking for him. Perhaps he still played in an old tavern
forgotten by everybody? Or perhaps he stopped playing and occupied
himself with something else buy could be persuaded to do some
recordings? The search ended when people who knew him well were found
and the story of Robert Johnson came to light.
Robert Johnson was brought up in the area known as Mississippi Delta.
The name is misleading because this is not the actual delta of the
great River but the flat area on its left side between cities of
Memphis and Vicksburg. It is a fertile plain where cotton is grown.
It is here that the country blues was played. His white enthusiasts
nick named Robert Johnson “King of the Delta Blues”, but he was
actually more than this. All of his track (only 29 of them are known)
have been recorded like “country blues”, with an acoustic guitar
as the only accompaniment, but in his style all elements of Chicago
“city blues” are present. One can almost say that this musician
brought up among cotton fields is the grandfather of all rhythm and
blues and rock and roll. And scores of guitarists from all over the
world making pilgrimages to the famous crossroads seem to confirm
that this is the source.
Mural of Robert Johnson in Clarksdale |
Today many guitarists travel to Clarksdale just to see the
crossroads. Some of those guitarists are quite famous, like Jimmy
Page and Robert Plant, who even recorded an album entitled “Walking
into Clarksdale”. Some of those musical pilgrims also go to Dockery
Farm, where next to the board informing about the birthplace of the
blues there is a button, pressing of which will cause some recordings
of Charlie Patton to be played. Nobody goes to The Tree Forks,
though. Some people tried to find the place but couldn't. Honeyboy
Edwards in his autobiography explains why this is so: sometime after
the famous event a tornado came and took the whole building, so that
nothing remains today.
Cigar box guitar |
No comments:
Post a Comment