From Out In The Maxwell Street Night –With
Blues Label Chess Records In Mind
“I’m going to get me one of those big
old pink Cadillacs just like Muddy, although if someone asked, if truth be told
I’m not sure Muddy had a such car but he could afford one which was the same
thing and it ain’t like they only made one like that so I am going to get me a
big old pink Cadillac, yeah” thought Sidewalk Sam as he entered the front door
of hallowed Chess Records on South Michigan Avenue in that year of our lord
1961 looking to make a name for himself in the recording world, in the music
world, and get the hell out of two-bit Maxwell Street.
[Sidewalk’s birth name Leroy Collins,
Miss Collins’ boy, white and black alike, white up at Mister Jackson’s
rope-making factory where Miss Collins worked six days a week, half a day on
Saturday and black in Negro-town down in the lowlands at the edge of town where
was Leroy was born and had come of age without incurring Mister Jackson’s
wrath, is what they usually called him down around Clarksville in Mississippi, down
in Mister James Crow’s country. That was before he skedaddled north, north
following the North Star just like his forbears in slavery times when black
folk headed to freedom whatever way they could. Leroy, Sidewalk lately now that
he was in north country, knew it was just a matter of time before Mister
Jackson, or worse, Mister Jackson’s Mister James Crow laws snagged him up and
sent him over to the sweated fields of Parchman’s Farm and while he might be
Miss Collin’s boy, might not rightly know who or where his father was, he knew
he had to get out of the Delta and fast once he began to seem a little too
uppity around town. So one night he headed north, headed with a bindle, some
smokes and some dreams.]
“And get myself some fine threads, nice silky
suits, half a dozen if I felt like it in six different colors would about do and
wouldn’t I be a sight, white cotton dress shirts, as if to mock the cotton that
drove Clarksville’s economy, with double
cuffs and links, a drawer full, shoes, finest leathers to die for and hats,
hats for every occasion,” he continued as he shut the door behind him. Just
then he froze, not freeze froze, not can’t do this damn thing froze, not what
am I doing here froze, he had come too far for that, had told too many people
over too many whiskey swooned drinks at Johnny Rabb’s Tavern that he was on the
way to stardom, no stopping him now but to think how far he had come since
those long ago days down in Clarksville.
Seemed like a long time ago although it
had only been five years since he headed north to Chicago to hallowed Maxwell
Street via Memphis up the old Big Muddy after that fist fight, flashing
brandished knife fight at end with Jimmy Jakes, whom he cut pretty badly.
Jimmy, the owner of the juke joint where he made his bones most Saturday
nights, had fired him or threw him out or just told him to get the hell out of
his establishment when he said his customers were saying Sidewalk’s playlist
was getting tired, had too much Muddy and Howlin’ Wolf, too much country three
chords and out stuff when they were looking for, after hearing the Memphis
radio station blast it out on nights they picked up the frequency down in the
Delta, something more upbeat like that
new rock and roll they were hearing guys from around Memphis and Saint Louis
play, white boys too, if they were going to spent their hard-earned money at
Jimmy’s eating his fired-up ribs and swilling his lightning corn liquor.
So Sidewalk fled Clarksville for his
life he thought (at nineteen he was just too young to know that around
Clarksville, around the whole damn state of Mississippi, around the whole of
Mister James Crow’s South nobody cared if one “Negro” cut up another, hell,
murdered each other for that matter. As long as they kept it in Negro-town.
Sidewalk also did not know that no way in hell was Jimmy going to call Sheriff
Blake to complain about his injuries since his place, his fucking place, would
be shut down, pay off or no payoff to keep it open after hours and keep his
customers supplied with the Sheriff’s brother’s high grade corn, no so high
grade once he cut the stuff but nobody complained and so there, and then where
would one Jimmy Jakes be. Probably sucking wind over at Parchman’s working Mister’s
sweated fields.
But Miss Collin’s was probably right
that Leroy’s time was done down South and that his flight was better than being found out in Mister
Williams’ back forty plantation where they all mostly worked the cotton fields
with some Jimmy Jakes knife in his back, case unsolved, case to the cold files
before he was even cooled out.
So that night, really the next morning
early Sidewalk, small satchel, his road bindle, with all his earthly belongings
mostly some ill-fitting clothing and toiletries and his harmonica inside for he
could not risk taking that old Sears& Roebuck’s catalogue guitar Miss
Collin’s had saved her rope-making money to get him one Christmas when he was
twelve. Had clamored for after he played one at Jimmy’s that a guy had left
behind to pay for his ribs and drinks since the guy was flush faded after
shooting some ill-fated dice. So provisioned Leroy headed north on the early
Greyhound bus. Headed first for Jackson then there to pick up another to
transport him to Memphis where he heard guys who could guitar and sing, play
guitar, sing and play the harmonica even better were the cat’s meow, were
treated like kings once they set up shop at some corner of Beale Street on
Saturday night and got discovered, got to play the legendary blues and jazz
places where they would make their nut.
Yeah, Sidewalk had that stardust bad, just
had to make his nut through his music. Once he got to Memphis he took a cheap
room over a gin mill off of Beale Street with some of the money that his mother
gave him to get on the road (he had made a mental note then to make sure to pay
her back although he never did). The next day Leroy set up at the park across
from Bill Bailey’s where a lot of new guys, according to a guy he met in the
rooming house, took their acts and tried to polish them up for the locals who
might throw a buck or two their way if they had some sound that interested
those passers-by. Sidewalk did not learn until he was leaving town for the
Windy City, for Chi town when he asked the rooming house night clerk for the
whereabouts of that guy with the advice, Mo, in order to ask for the twenty
bucks that he had lent him supposedly to pay his room rent that he had ducked
out since Mo had been black-listed on the strip as a guy with no talent and a
thief to boot.
For the next four years Sidewalk was
stuck in Memphis or so he thought as the days, weeks, years mounted. During
that time in town is when Leroy Collins picked up the name Sidewalk, got his moniker
since he worked, sometimes day and night, on the sidewalk in front of the
famous blues clubs looking for his lucky break and people would have to
practically go around him to get to their destinations. One night some flashy
black brother, probably a number’s runner from the look of his over- the-top
outfit that he was wearing trying to impress his lady, called out “sidewalk,
move over, sidewalk” and the crowd in front of Lenny’s Blues Palace picked it
up. So Sidewalk.
Sidewalk probably busted every door in
the town looking to get in front of a paying crowd, even a few places down at
the Bottoms which was the end of the road for any musician who had the sense to
come out of the rain. Sidewalk didn’t. Didn’t listen when even the few places
that would give him an audition told him this in chorus- “Sidewalk your
playlist is tired, had too much Muddy and Howlin’ Wolf, too much Son House,
Magic Jack, Charley Patton country three chords and out stuff” In chorus they explained as if by agreement
that “their customers, moving up in the world with jobs better than those old
sweaty planation jobs and if white they already had good jobs, were looking
for, after hearing the every Memphis radio station blast it out, something more
upbeat like that new rock and roll they were hearing from Elvis and Chuck Berry
if they were going to spent their hard-earned money at the clubs sucking up
high-priced fine liquors and whatever their ladies wanted.”
One day, one night actually, Sidewalk
having only made three dollars all day, a twelve hour day, working the sidewalk
in front of Bill Bailey’s, stopped into the Old Oak Grille where he drank his
club liquor and got rip roaring drunk and wound up on the sidewalk, literally
(not an unusual occurrence for him of late then) after Billy the bartender
threw him out. Sobered up later he decided that he needed to get to a new town,
get a fresh start. So naturally he headed north to Chi town, the place that he
had expected to be already. Yeah, Chi town with all the places and with famous
Maxwell Street where new talent was discovered every day and where the “max
daddy” of blues labels, where the Wolf, where Muddy and Magic got their cakes
from, Chess Records was always looking for new talent, a new sound to keep the
hungry audiences well-fed.
Skipping out without paying his late
room rent in order to save money for the big show he took yet another early
morning Greyhound, complete with that same small satchel carrying almost the
same clothes that he had left Clarksville with those few years before, and this
time with his guitar which he had purchased at a pawn shop after he made enough
money with his solo harmonica to get the thing (although it was always hellish
to tune since it was a little warped around the frets), to Chicago.
Same routine, always the same routine,
as soon as Sidewalk got into town he got a cheap room off of Maxwell Street to
be close to the action (one sign he was in a big city now was that the rooming
house clerk made him pay a week’s security deposit in advance along with that
week’s rent which almost tapped him out). That afternoon he hit the street
setting up near Jacob’s Clothing Store. He had heard in Memphis that the
merchants, mostly Jewish although he was not sure what Jewish was, liked blues
singers to congregate in front of their stores to draw in customers, black and
white although increasingly black in that section of Maxwell Street, to
purchase their goods.
And so Sidewalk started, started
drawing little crowds too once Two-Foot Davis (the genesis of that moniker
unknown), an old hand on Maxwell took him under his wing. Took him to the
confines of Johnny Rabb’s Tavern where there was an older crowd of blacks from
the South who were nostalgic for the old time three country blues every now and
again. Based on that push from Johnny’s crowd Sidewalk he began to get ideas
about hitting it big, getting a big record contract, complete with pink
Cadillac although he didn’t really care about the color if it came to that.
Pushed on too by Too-Foot who had some secondary connections with Chess
Records. Pushed on too by a little reefer and a lot of low-shelf whiskey
(rotgut if he was low on funds).
Sidewalk unfroze, it was “now or never”
he said to himself. Had kept himself sober three days running in order to do
this gig, to make a record if the Chess’ liked him. (He had sneaked a little
reefer madness from the Be-Bop Kid to keep his nerves steady.) After checking
in with the receptionist about five minutes later Leonard Chess came out and
said to follow him. They went into a recording studio out back where Chess told
him he wanted to hear what he had, wanted to know if he hadn’t been wasting his
time doing Two-Foot a favor. So Sidewalk set up as Chess left to go to the
sound room, took a seat and started playing Wolf’s How Many More Years. About a minute in, even before he got to the
harmonica solo Chess waved his hand in a non-committal way to stop.
Sidewalk had a few seconds of
excitement while Chess made his way to the studio from the sound room. Here is
what Chess, the big record producer had to say-“ Sidewalk’s, that’s your name
right, your sound is tired, had too much Muddy and Howlin’ Wolf, too much country three chords and out stuff when our
customers, moving up in the world with money to spent on music, on records, especially
the kids, white kids or Negro are looking for, after hearing the every Memphis
radio station blast it out for something more upbeat like that rock and roll
they have been hearing and if they were going to spent money one records rather
than go to the drive-in or go grab a burger you had to hit them where they
jump. You don’t, you never will, sorry.”
So Sidewalk walked back to cheap
street, back to Maxwell Street to nurse his act another day and dream about
that big pink Cadillac he almost had within his reach.
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