An Introduction to America’s Music

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

CHAPTER 14 | COUNTRY BLUES 333


now music retailers throughout the South began acting as paid talent scouts
for record companies. The most successful of these men was Henry C. Speir of
Jackson, Mississippi—the same dealer who boasted of selling fi fty records to black
customers for every one sold to a white customer (see chapter 11). The list of musi-
cians “discovered” by Speir reads like a who’s who of Delta blues: Charlie Patton,
Son House, Tommy Johnson, Willie Brown, Skip James, and the most legendary
of all Delta bluesmen, Robert Johnson.
Many tales have surrounded Robert Johnson’s short life—he died in 1938 at the
age of twenty-six. In the decades since his death, researchers have combed the
South seeking out birth and death certifi cates, retracing Johnson’s travels, and
interviewing anyone who knew or claimed to have known the elusive bluesman.
The contradictory stories they have unearthed only add to the mystery of Robert
Johnson. For starters, it is not easy to collect accurate data for a poor, southern
African American of the early twenti-
eth century with such a common name.
Adding to the diffi culty is Johnson’s
penchant for using assumed names and
never staying long in one place. As his
fellow blues musician Johnny Shines
attested, sheer wanderlust may have kept
Johnson on the move.
Johnson himself may have originated
or at least encouraged the most famous
legend about his life. As the story goes,
Johnson was an inept would-be guitarist
until one fateful midnight when he met
Satan at a crossroads and sold his soul in exchange for musical prowess. Those
who had once derided him were now amazed by his abilities, and for a few years
Johnson traveled widely, displaying phenomenal creative powers, until the
moment in August 1938 when he suddenly and dramatically took ill, crawling on
the fl oor and howling like a dog until the devil claimed his soul. By hinting that
his music had otherworldly overtones, Johnson ascribed to himself the mystery
and power of the supernatural. But a more mundane explanation of Johnson’s
early death is no less colorful: he was poisoned by the husband of a woman to
whom Johnson was paying too much attention.
As for his attainment of musical abilities, the music offers proof of Johnson’s
self-teaching method: he developed his techniques by listening to race records
and imitating them. His wide stylistic palette shows the infl uence of not only
local Mississippi bluesmen but also other, more distant artists that Johnson was
likely to have heard only through recordings. In other words, Robert John-
son was part of the audience for race records before he was a recording artist
himself.
“Walking Blues” (LG 14.1) displays Johnson’s dexterity as a singer and gui-
tarist. His voice croons, growls, moans, and yodels, with the occasional spoken
aside. The vocal line exercises great rhythmic freedom, now rushing ahead, now
pulling back, always against the steady backdrop of the guitar’s lower strings,
which lay a rock-steady rhythmic foundation while the upper strings provide
melodic fi ll, Johnson plays slide or bottleneck guitar, gliding a metal or glass
object along the strings, thus allowing the guitar to imitate the swooping vocal

Johnny Shines on Robert Johnson


R


obert was a guy, you could wake him up anytime and he
was ready to go.... You say, “Robert, I hear a train, let’s
catch it.” He wouldn’t exchange no words with you; he’s just
ready to go.... It didn’t make him no difference, just so he
was going. He just wanted to go.

In their own words


Robert Johnson

LG 14.1

172028_14_332-360_r3_ko.indd 333 23/01/13 8:37 PM

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