The Blues Aint Nothing But Lucille On
Your Mind- With B.B. King’s Lucille In Mind
Here is the drill. I started out life
listening to singer like Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby (and his brother Bob), Miss
Patti Page, Miss Rosemary Clooney, Miss Peggy Lee, the Andrew, McGuire, Dooley
sisters, and all the big swing bands from the 1940s like Harry James, Tommy
Dorsey (and his brother Jimmy) as background music on the family radio in the
1950s which my mother had always during the day to get her workaday daytime
household world and on Saturday night when my father joined in. Joined in so
they could listen to Bill Marlowe on local radio station WJDA and his Memory Lane show from seven to eleven
where they could listen to the music that got them (and their generation)
through the “from hunger” times of the 1930s Great Depression and then when
they slogged through (either in some watery European theater or Pacific one
take your pick) or anxiously waited at home for the other shoe to drop during
World War II. I am not saying that they should not have had their memory music
after all of that but frankly that stuff then (and now although less) made me
grind my teeth. But I was a captive audience then and so to this day I can sing
off Rum and Coca Cola and Don’t Sit Under The Apple Tree from
memory. But that was not my music, okay.
Then of course since we are speaking
about the 1950s came the great musical break-out, the age of classic rock and
roll which I “dug” seriously dug to the point of dreaming my own jailbreak
dreams about rock futures (and girls) but that Elvis-etched time too was just a
bit soon for me to be able unlike my older brother, Prescott, to call that the
music that I came of age to. Although the echoes of that time still run through
my mind and I can quote chapter and verse One
Night With You, Sweet Little Sixteen, Let’s Have A Party, Be-Bop-a-Lula, Bo Diddley,
Peggy Sue and a whole bunch more.
The music that I can really call my
own is the stuff from the folk minute of the 1960s which dovetailed with my
coming of chronological, political and social age (that last in the sense of recognizing,
if not always acting on, the fact that there were others, kindred, out there beside
myself filled with angst, alienation and good will to seek solidarity with).
You know the mountain tunes of the first generation of the Carter Family, Buell
Kazell, Jimmy Rodgers, the old country Child ballads (Northwest Europe old
country), the blue grass music , and the protest songs by the likes of Bob
Dylan, Joan Baez, Tom Paxton, Dave Von Ronk and Phil Ochs. The latter songs being
what drove a lot of my interest once I connected their work with the Harvard Square
coffeehouse scene (and the adjacent hanging out at the Hayes-Bickford Cafeteria
which I have written plenty about elsewhere on poverty nights, meaning many
nights).
A lot of the drive toward folk music
was to get out from under the anti-rock and rock musical counter-revolution
that I kept hearing on my transistor radio during that early 1960s period with
pretty boy singers and vapid young female-driven female singer stuff. Also to
seek out roots music that I kept hearing in the coffeehouses and on the radio
once I found a station (accidently) which featured such music and got intrigued
by the sounds. Part of that search, a big search over the long haul, was to get
deeply immersed in the blues, mainly at first country blues and later the city,
you know Chicago, blues. Those country guys though intrigued me once they were “discovered”
down south in little towns plying away in the fields or some such work and were
brought up to Newport to enflame a new generation of aficionados. The likes of
Son House, Skip James, Bukka White and of course Mississippi John Hurt. But
those guys basically stayed in the South and it took a younger generation like
Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, and the guy whose photograph graces this sketch,
B.B. King, to move north, to follow the northern star to the big industrial
cities (with a stop at Memphis going up river) to put some electric juice in those
old guitars and chase my blues away just by playing like they had made their
own pacts with the devil. Praise be.
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