Robert Johnson - Classic or Dud?

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xp Just been listening to '26-'29 recordings of much less filtered blues / roots recordings and now I've got to the mid '30s, and the lomaxes have arrived and this astonishing variety of music has turned into capital-B Blues, as filtered through the prism of the taste of a couple of white guys with well-meaning but ultimately racist ideas about noble savages and the like. Lots of this music is good! but also it is much more uniform than before. I worry that RJ's music will be much the same as Kokomo Arnold or Big Bill Broonzy, just with a mythology added which I don't care about. But maybe I'll be wrong, who knows. Will know in a couple of months.

Wuhan!! Got You All in Check (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 21 May 2020 18:00 (three years ago) link

Has the speed been reduced on that one?

It must have been; it seriously sounds like you're sitting across from a guy who's playing an acoustic guitar and singing.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 21 May 2020 18:03 (three years ago) link

Does sound a lot different but a spot check of "Kind-Hearted Woman Blues" gives the exact same runtime.

Spocks on the Run (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 21 May 2020 18:08 (three years ago) link

Unless of course Spotify just put the same recordings retrofitted into King of the Delta Blues Singers.

Spocks on the Run (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 21 May 2020 18:10 (three years ago) link

I worry that RJ's music will be much the same as Kokomo Arnold or Big Bill Broonzy, just with a mythology added which I don't care about. But maybe I'll be wrong, who knows. Will know in a couple of months.

This is pretty much my experience tbh. As a kid my intro to this world of early blues was skip james, and by the time i got around to robert johnson i couldnt figure out why he was elevated as the great figure of this era & genre (other than he happens to be the guy who many influential 70s rockers were first introduced to). I like the records plenty, but dont find a lot there that I cant also get from a good number of other players around then. Especially if you're already well steeped in the sounds and figures of that era, I'd say dont go in expecting any major revelations.

turn the jawhatthefuckever on (One Eye Open), Thursday, 21 May 2020 18:39 (three years ago) link

nine months pass...

https://i.imgur.com/IXkWAGS.jpg

calstars, Saturday, 27 February 2021 02:41 (three years ago) link

Loool!

The Ballad of Mel Cooley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 27 February 2021 02:49 (three years ago) link

Like his stuff actually sounds like that

calstars, Saturday, 27 February 2021 02:52 (three years ago) link

Haha, that it does.

pomenitul, Saturday, 27 February 2021 02:56 (three years ago) link

There’s a famous Keith Richards quote about that

The Ballad of Mel Cooley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 27 February 2021 03:03 (three years ago) link

I first heard his songs in thee mists of childehood: Cream's cover of "Crossraods," Stones' "Love In Vaon" (credited to "Woody Payne," I think), Zep's "Traveling Riverside Blues," various folkies doing "Ramblin' On My MInd," Howlin' Wolf and a bunch of others doing "Dust My Broom"---then way into the 70s, heard some of his own pre-LP hotel room tracks made into an album, King of the Delta Blues Singers (with the rustic setting of the cover painting, his head down over his guitar, when nobody knew what he looked like): glas I heard all that as an intro, but by the time of the bag 'o' tracks on CDs, I was pretty well acquainted by how box sets and bootlegs could go beyond the conditioned sense of shape,no complaints.
Would like to read this recent book:
Blues legend Robert Johnson has been mythologized as a backwoods loner, his talent the result of selling his soul to the devil. Wrong and wrong again, according to Johnson's younger stepsister, who lives in Amherst, Mass. She tells his true story in Brother Robert: Growing Up with Robert Johnson, a memoir about growing up with her brother she published in June...Amherst is a long way from the Memphis of Mrs. Anderson's childhood, where she grew up in an extended family of siblings, half-siblings and the guitar-playing older stepbrother she called Brother Robert.

"Brother Robert and I used to do the buck dance," Anderson says. "Because you know he could move. People don't know. He didn't just sit and play like they showed him with that caricature."

Anderson's childhood — back then she was Annie Spencer — was steeped in the tunes played by Johnson and others, along with all the popular songs they listened to together on the radio.
https://www.npr.org/2020/12/29/950794131/brother-robert-reveals-true-story-of-growing-up-with-blues-legend-robert-johnson

dow, Saturday, 27 February 2021 18:22 (three years ago) link

mists ov typos too, sorry!

dow, Saturday, 27 February 2021 18:24 (three years ago) link

Does the mystique survive the ease of getting hold of music by the artist in question.
& is there something there when you don't need to invest a lot of time tracking the music down.
I'd guess something, think he wasa bit of a powrful performer though kind of weird to hear something like i think its the 4th side of the double lp king of the Delta Blues singers where he's turned into what sounds like a jukebox and playing a number of different songs in different styles.

Great imagery in his toons anyway

Stevolende, Saturday, 27 February 2021 18:47 (three years ago) link

Cos I think there wasa time when the quest was part of the experience. having to track down lps from some place in th ecentre of london or before taht from some place in the Southern states.
Or even having to wait to fgind out what the record you'd ordered more locally was going to be like, but it was going to take you however long to get there.
During which time you could dream about what the contents of this thing you'd been reading about was like.
Kind of different in a time when a lot of things are on youtube or spotify really.

Stevolende, Saturday, 27 February 2021 18:51 (three years ago) link

Wuhan!! Got You All in Check (Camaraderie at Arms Length) at 7:00 21 May 20
xp Just been listening to '26-'29 recordings of much less filtered blues / roots recordings and now I've got to the mid '30s, and the lomaxes have arrived and this astonishing variety of music has turned into capital-B Blues, as filtered through the prism of the taste of a couple of white guys with well-meaning but ultimately racist ideas about noble savages and the like. Lots of this music is good! but also it is much more uniform than before. I worry that RJ's music will be much the same as Kokomo Arnold or Big Bill Broonzy, just with a mythology added which I don't care about. But maybe I'll be wrong, who knows. Will know in a couple of months
Reporting back 9 months later, afraid I was not convinced that RJ was particularly outstanding compared to his contemporaries, expectations too high maybe.

Bastard Lakes (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Saturday, 27 February 2021 18:53 (three years ago) link

Zep's "Traveling Riverside Blues,"

This one is convoluted. LZ's "Traveling Riverside Blues" has no musical connection with RJ's "Traveling Riverside Blues" (tho Plant quotes a few lyrics from OTHER RJ songs a couple times), the music seems original to my ears.

Should be noted that "The Lemon Song" borrows lyrics from RJ's "Traveling Riverside Blues" (whose music is inspired by Howling Wolf's "Killing Floor".)

Robert Johnson's music was only quoted by LZ in "Custard Pie" (via RJ's version of "Shake 'Em On Down") & "Trampled Underfoot" ("Terraplane Blues") afaik.

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Saturday, 27 February 2021 18:57 (three years ago) link

So RJ as part of the um folk process, v good carry on (and be ready to explain and demonstrate in court, as John Fogerty and Charlie Daniels did, successfully enough)

dow, Saturday, 27 February 2021 19:10 (three years ago) link

Never found the mythical, supernatural claims made by Clapton et al to be true as far as RJs music, but maybe I had to hear it in the 60s, but he has a lot of good songs. I've read interviews with guys like muddy waters saying RJ scared them when they saw him play, but I wonder sometimes if that's to please rock writers interviewing them. Did read the good anti revisionist Elijah Wald book on RJ a long time ago and have recently been thinking of revisiting it.

candyman, Saturday, 27 February 2021 19:49 (three years ago) link

I think there might be a bit of the ‘magical negro ‘ concept in claptons reverence for RJ

calstars, Saturday, 27 February 2021 20:00 (three years ago) link

xxxp What I meant was, I'm so glad I got to hear and hear of him first of all in the 60s and 70s, cresting in that first (?) legit LP, before alll the hype peaked, before the floatation of takes on the CD set, and then the revisionism leading to anti-hype as another form of hype, aside from expectations too high maybe., which is certainly understandable and balanced view than kneejerk clickbait anti-hype of some.

Stevolende mentions the jukebox aspect---and as I put it on the Harry Smith vs. Alan Lomax thread, re Johnson and Jimmie Rodgers as traveling performers (RJ by reputation, JR also as recording artist)
... up-to-date and golden-oldies human jukebox sense: you better be ready with that stuff if the audience, esp. the drinking-dancing one, gets enough of the sensitive folk ballads and originals. Which is why I kept the bit about kid Robert and his sister listening to the radio in the above quote re her memoir.

dow, Saturday, 27 February 2021 20:07 (three years ago) link

The Cream version of "Crossroads" (also cut in the studio by Clapton as part of his 'Powerhouse' w/Stevie Winwood singing) is a lyrical mashup of "Crossroads Blues" and "Traveling Riverside Blues".

"what are you DOING to fleetwood mac??" (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 27 February 2021 20:25 (three years ago) link

Dylan writes in Chronicles about getting his mind blown by hearing an advance acetate of King of... around the time of his own debut.

"what are you DOING to fleetwood mac??" (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 27 February 2021 20:28 (three years ago) link

"Crossroads" also works as an old tymey/early bluegrass/folk stomp reimagining by the Turtle Island String Quartet, recorded in 1989.

dow, Saturday, 27 February 2021 20:39 (three years ago) link

The one Robert Johnson song that really strikes me as extraordinary is "Preaching Blues", which despite the downcast lyrics seems a lot more high-spirited and rhythmically startling than a lot of his other stuff.

Halfway there but for you, Saturday, 27 February 2021 20:46 (three years ago) link

Because John Hammond, no?

The Ballad of Mel Cooley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 27 February 2021 21:01 (three years ago) link

That was xpost to Dylan comment

The Ballad of Mel Cooley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 27 February 2021 21:02 (three years ago) link

I believe so.

"what are you DOING to fleetwood mac??" (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 27 February 2021 21:09 (three years ago) link

parts of this have been discussed already in this and other threads and i haven't read that elijah wald book which probably has some answers but... taking for granted that so much received mythology about "The Blues" comes from the 60s folk and rock scenes- why was this specific style already, decades earlier, considered the only thing worth documenting from the musicians who have come to be known as bluesmen? (and women but it seems they were written out of the story almost as soon as it became a story) - since we know basically all of them had far more diverse repertoires? it's tragic how such a huge part of their music- and of pop/folk history- has been lost for commercial? or ideological? reasons (did "the blues" sell better than anything else at the time? or was it considered the only authentic black folk style by archivists?)

no (Left), Saturday, 27 February 2021 21:32 (three years ago) link

"Trampled Underfoot" ("Terraplane Blues")

Where is this quoted? I can see more of a connection to Stevie Wonder's "Superstition" tbh.

to party with our demons (Sund4r), Saturday, 27 February 2021 22:07 (three years ago) link

Left: blues singers were discouraged from recording pop or Tin Pan Alley songs at the time for publishing/copyright reasons. The record companies weren't giving publishing royalties to the blues songwriters, of course, but if their artists were recording published songs, the onus would have been on the companies to pay royalties to the songwriters. They preferred to encourage the blues singers to perform "original" songs, so the paying of royalties was irrelevant (most were just paid flat fees per song recorded).
There may well have been questions about whether the audience for blues records at the time would have bought songs in other styles, as well.

Halfway there but for you, Sunday, 28 February 2021 00:25 (three years ago) link

it's tragic how such a huge part of their music- and of pop/folk history- has been lost for commercial? or ideological? reasons (did "the blues" sell better than anything else at the time? or was it considered the only authentic black folk style by archivists?)

these are unsurprisingly large questions but, as a vast oversimplification, i would posit:
1) racism
2) capitalism
3) a bespoke and smaller distribution system than you might presume
4) the fragility of shellac
5) racist capitalism, just to make sure we've got that covered

without being too presumptuous, I'd suggest you look into the work of the alan and john lomax or this collection of books:
https://www.upress.state.ms.us/Contributors/A/Abbott-Lynn

That's not really my scene (I'm 41) (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 28 February 2021 16:10 (three years ago) link

"They're Red Hot" seems like the one surviving recording of the other side of Johnson's repertoire

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 28 February 2021 16:22 (three years ago) link

One of the worst things about the Lomaxes is how they claimed publishing credit on songs they recorded. Pretty fucked up.

But didnt leadbelly record a lot of non blues songs? I can't be sure if they were written by others or his own, but theres def a lot he recorded that wasnt blues.

candyman, Sunday, 28 February 2021 16:30 (three years ago) link

I guess I don't really think of Leadbelly as a blues musician, he's more folk to me

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 28 February 2021 16:32 (three years ago) link

Obv, not trying to downplay the focus on 'authenticity' by those marketing and selling the blues. As well as a kind of 'purity' that presumably means anything not done sufficiently authentic would get nixed.

candyman, Sunday, 28 February 2021 16:34 (three years ago) link

*not deemed

candyman, Sunday, 28 February 2021 16:34 (three years ago) link

I guess for many of these artists you need to weigh up what they recorded vs what they performed or had in their repertoire.

candyman, Sunday, 28 February 2021 16:36 (three years ago) link

I can't remember the book, driving me nuts but can't place the name right now, but it dealt with a lot of those issues, but also acknowledged that the old bluesmen were canny themselves and they instinctively knew what an audience wanted, so they played up the aspects of their work they knew the white guys from New York wanted, just like when they played a bar where everyone was partying they didn't play the doomy stuff they played fun music

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 28 February 2021 16:38 (three years ago) link

Right, yeah. Same way I'm sure when muddy or whoever is being asked about RJ for the umpteenth time, he prob knows what they want to hear. But... who knows, with a diff audience, how it might have gone. But i tend to think that most of these artists who got a second life in the 60s had already had one career life, and if you're looking for something resembling "authenticity", that would prob the period to look at.

candyman, Sunday, 28 February 2021 16:43 (three years ago) link

is it the elijah wald book mentioned upthread? the abbott & seroff books on that link also look v informative

no (Left), Sunday, 28 February 2021 16:55 (three years ago) link

There's a book called Fakin it from 10 or 15 years ago that looks into various forms of authenticity probabl includingthe area of lomax and the definition of blues .

Stevolende, Sunday, 28 February 2021 17:07 (three years ago) link

Interesting

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2007/apr/15/music

candyman, Sunday, 28 February 2021 17:52 (three years ago) link

Interesting to think that the blues in the Mississippi Delta were actually pretty massively hip at teh time they were being recorded. Since they are seen as this archaic embodiment of ancient soul and history and all like that

Stevolende, Sunday, 28 February 2021 18:09 (three years ago) link

folk prob also had something to do with the premium being placed on authenticity as being a guy with his guitar in overalls/sharecropping clothes, rather than urban guys using amps, etc.

candyman, Sunday, 28 February 2021 18:14 (three years ago) link

not trying to be a jerk here but a lot of these questions about authenticity were simply not relevant/obviated by larger inequities in their time

That's not really my scene (I'm 41) (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 28 February 2021 19:00 (three years ago) link

as are questions of genre, which were much muddier waters (so to speak) in the year before this music had radio airplay

That's not really my scene (I'm 41) (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 28 February 2021 19:01 (three years ago) link

(and if you wanna hear musical diversity, search the Document label catalog - which is blessedly available on streaming services - and just click around)

That's not really my scene (I'm 41) (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 28 February 2021 19:04 (three years ago) link

have been doing a bit of reading lately about how many of those early delta slide guitar guys likely picked up their slide techniques from touring Hawaiian players. there was a massive fad for hawaiian slide guitar music in the late teens, in 1916 it was the #1 selling genre of record, and hawaiian slide players were touring all over the south in those years. a lot of the midcentury scholarship that ties those delta slide techniques back to west african instruments is actually thinner than you'd think, and likely influenced by popular received ideas about the primal, ancient folk-culture Authenticity of those delta blues guys. when in reality there are interviews with a bunch of them where they plainly describe themselves as playing 'hawaiian style' or mention getting the idea from seeing touring hawaiian guitarists, and never refer to things like the diddley-bow or other african folk instruments or styles.

nobody like my rap (One Eye Open), Sunday, 28 February 2021 20:40 (three years ago) link

Cool. Did you read the John W. Troutman book?

The Ballad of Mel Cooley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 28 February 2021 20:44 (three years ago) link


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