***Out In The Be-Bop 1960s Folk
Blues Revival Night- The 1964 American Folk Blues Festival- A CD Review-Take Two
A YouTube film clip of the
Robert Johnson/Elmore James electric blues classic, Dust My Broom.
Howlin’ Wolf holding forth on Little Red Rooster
The Rolling Stones sitting at the
feet of the master playing How Many More Years
CD Review
American Folk Blues Festival ‘64, various artists, Optimism Records, 1982
American Folk Blues Festival ‘64, various artists, Optimism Records, 1982
Let’s go by the numbers, the musical
year numbers for my generation, the generation of ’68. We all came of musical
age, more or less with Elvis, Carl Perkins, Chuck Berry and Jerry Lee in the
mid-1950s when the music was hot, we were naïve (or worst), just kids trying to figure stuff
out, mainly sex stuff, or rather boy-girl stuff mostly, but also, for some of
us anyway our place in the sun, small
dream stuff, and let’s just let it go at that. The music, that music “spoke” of
jail-break, or the tip of it, from our parents’ mushy music, and maybe from a
lot more things but that was later. Later after a musical counter-revolution in
the late 1950s engineered by those very same parents. In collusion, there is no
other way to put it, with the record company executives who were freaked out,
cut off junior and missy’s record-buying allowance freaked out, by their
negative response, to the jungle music, devil’s music, degenerate music and you
can fill in whatever your own parents labelled it. We had to put up with some
awful Bobby Vee/Fabian/Johnny Somebody stuff, stuff that today is totally
forgettable, bobby-soxer, teary-eyed lost guy stuff, and worst, before we
stepped right into back into hard rock and roll, The hard beat of the Rolling Stones and later groups, the British
invasion of the 1960s groups plus American groups that finally got hip to one
of the key roots to rock ‘n’ roll’s development, that early work on the blues,
the American- etched blues. You cannot listen to early Stones with thinking
about Little Red Rooster, Baby Don’t Go, Hoochie Goochie Man, and a
million other Chess Record classics. Hell even the Beatles were crazy to cover
some of that music. Go figure.
Yes, go figure. Go figure that much
of early rock and roll was derived from the blues, city blues mainly, meaning
electric blues, Chicago mainly (Kansas
City and Detroit some too, wherever blacks and white hipsters were looking for
up-to-date music and not that down home stuff. Not knowing, or conveniently
forgetting that those self-same city blues were derived from you guessed it,
the old country blues from down in the Mister James Crow Delta, the North
Carolina Piedmont and the hills and hollows of Appalachia where all the hip
Chicago cats (Muddy, Howlin’ Wolf, Junior Well, etc.,) and white poor boy
players came from. It is not until the next generation that the guys were born
in northern cities.
All of this is just around about way
to pay tribute to the roots, or one of the significant roots, of our generational
genre. Hell Elvis, Jerry Lee, Carl, and you know for sure that Chuck, Ike and
Bo were listening, listening hard, at the juke joint doors when Saturday night liquor
and women turned into Sunday righteousness. And then they listened to the
sanctified music that was meant to wash away that Devil’s music blues. But
never quite did.
But more than that search for the roots
of rock business it was a question of revivals, here the American Folk Blues
Festival of 1964, which was indirectly brought about by our generation of ’68’s
search for meaning to explain our angst and alienation, including the search
for authentic roots music. See once rock and roll hit our mid-1950s brains like
an, well like an atomic bomb, we lost sight of where the music had come from.
We just wanted to dance, or think we could dance so we could more smoothly be
around that certain she (or he for she) without having to learn the fox- trot
or some old fogey dance. And not have to get sweaty-palms, strange-smelling
breathe close and be cool at the same time.
More importantly we didn’t “hit the
books” back then, probably didn’t enough knowledge or concern to ask the
questions, unlike later, to find out what happened to those who created the
music that once was the staple of hip music. It was only after we figured out
the social graces stuff and needed to do more than dance cool with that certain
she (oh yes, and he for she) that we went roots hunting. And guess what? Some
of the boys (mainly) were still around in places like Maxwell Street in Chicago
or down picking cotton in the Delta or holed up in some skid row hotel just
waiting to be “discovered,” or really rediscovered.
That may not be the exact genesis of the folk blues revival
when that movement hit high stride in the Newport folk festivals of the early
1960s reintroducing a young audience to the likes of Sleepy John Estes,
Mississippi John Hurt, Skip James and Son House but it will do here. And of
course the artists on this CD-the likes of Muddy Waters, Sonny Boy Williamson,
the legendary producer and writer Willie Dixon, and the “max daddy of them
all,” Howlin’ Wolf. This is history, maybe not world-shaking, change-the
course-of civilization history but a very important slice of the people’s
history. Listen up.
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