Down In The
Delta Muds-With County Blues Man Son House In Mind
By Jack
Callahan
No question
the country blues guys, and here I am talking about the guys because you know
down in the Mister James Crow South where the blues came into royalty out of
the sweats of Mister’s planation, out of the Saturday night juke joint sweats
of another kind, it was the guys who bore the brunt of the blues tradition
although the blues women, your Bessie and a ton of other Smiths, Memphis
Minnie, Sweet Maybelline, Little Ida Simms got the big crowds in the cities and
on the circuit, carried a ton of baggage with them. Sang of those temptations
until their voices got sore. Talked code words about Captain this and Mister that
and their sweated suns which they would not utter short of a strange fruit tree,
talked about a two-timing woman who you just spent your last dime on going off
with your best friend, talked about taking the measure of that best friend out
of his hide if he ever caught up with him, or her, talked being on the
low-down, the old style low-down, talked about Mister’s prison too his James
Crow prisons all wrapped up in a bow.
The guys who
came out of the muds, out of that silted delta mud oozed out of the south-flowing
Big Muddy flowing to the sunless seas, the guys who made the first “race
records” that got recorded back in the 1920s, maybe slightly earlier and who to
a man had sorrow stories, or created sorrow. Yeah down in the muds a blues guy
like Son House did every kind of thing to keep himself afloat, and got the
miseries too. Of course it always, always involved, and this is no kidding in
his case women, booze, a jack-roll fight over some woman or the thought of some
woman, and fighting off the devil in horror of the lord in the sweated sulky night.
Now I would
have taken all of this story-telling about wine, women and song with the grain
of salt, would have dismissed it out of hand like a lot of stuff you hear in the
urban legend night about stuff that has absolutely nothing to do with cities, would
have brought it down to the level of some old-timer legend except I actually
saw this incident I want to tell you about. Want to tell you about Son’s burden,
about that fight with the devil that he lost more than won happen when I was a
kid, a kid back in the 1960s and I got caught up with the big folk explosion
that carried a lot of us along who were looking for roots music and if the
blues, the muddy Delta blues ain’t roots music then nothing in America is.
Of course
the day to day folk stuff, the hanging out at coffeehouses, hanging out at midnight
Hayes-Bickford where for the price of a cup of dissolute coffee you could listen
to guys and gals pound their energies out to the winos and weirdos who populated
the place checking out the next big thing as he or she tried to hone her art was
over in Harvard Square in Cambridge, one of Meccas. But if you wanted to
immerse yourself in the bigger picture then you had to head for Newport down in
Rhode Island about fifty miles from where I grew up in Carver. And the bigger
picture in say 1962, 1963 was the “discovery” of a lot of old-time country
blues guys by folk aficionados who headed South looking for those damn roots
that they would hear about when some white guys like Dave Van Ronk or Geoff
Muldaur would play something they heard from somebody who had “gone South” to
dig it out. In the process finding these old-time guys that guys like Harry
Smith and the Lomaxes, father and son, had recorded early on and who then fell
under the radar. And while they had fallen under the radar some of them, the
younger ones who had stayed in the South and had not gone to Detroit or Chicago
with the migration, were still very much alive. Not only alive but with some
skills still left and they were brought up to Newport to thrill the young urban
mainly college students who were crazy for the blues they had heard on records
or like I said the folk performers who were doing covers of their work. There
were some very famous sessions where guys like Son House, Bukka White, Skip
James and Mississippi John Hurt would, sweating pouring out of them with those
ancient National steel guitars, duel among themselves for the honor of being
the king of the country blues. And those sessions were great, a great karmic
energy time which you can actually still see on YouTube if you have the
inclination.
But there
was also a session that I attended, kind of fell into when I heard that one of
the younger guys who had headed north and got wrapped up in the electric blues,
Howlin’ Wolf, was playing in one of the small studios set aside to produce
stuff with some sidemen and the idea was they would record the stuff live and
see what happened. Well there were maybe twelve or fifteen of us, people kept
coming in and out so an exact number was hard to put a finger except a couple
of guys sitting there in awe (beside me) were James Montgomery and Big Bill
Timmons, when Wolf got his head of steam up to do How Many More Years practically eating the harmonica on the piece.
Wolf was a
perfectionist, a serious professional musician, and something in the
performance did not sit well with him so he wanted a retake. Just as they
started up again, Smokey Jim as it turned out blowing a big high white note sexy
sax to key the thing, Son House came walking in a little raggedy, a sway that
did not go with sobriety, and the deep red of his eyes betrayed him. Whiskey
drunk, whiskey sorrows for sure. He started to sing along slightly off-kilter in
that measured moaning voice of his when he was sinning and then Wolf stopped himself
in his tracks and started berating the legendary bluesman (legendary to all our
young white urban mostly student devotees eyes) for being nothing but a worn
out drunk who needed to get the hell out of the room if he knew what was good
for him. Started talking some Booker T. race pride stuff way before Malcolm came
fiercely on our horizons (we were still King boys and girls then in one person,
one vote days). Some guy, some friend of Wolf’s came and escorted him out. Gave him the boot really.
What did we
know of that Son House whose Dead Letter
Blues was all the craze in Cambridge who had had a life-long struggle with
booze, that it had at one point killed his career. Here’s the big point though
one time in the Village a couple of years later he told us, red in the eye that
night too that he had had a life-long struggle with the devil he called it, the
booze, and the devil won more often than not. Said it more in sorrow that anger
although he was just rambling along about his life, about the women who had
left him, some two-timing, some tired of the beatings, some just tired of the
smell of booze, about the preacher man declaiming in front of his congregation
that rolled their eyes when he would talk about this struggle between good and
evil. And his story wasn’t that unusual as we started getting the background of
these guys. James Crow, woman, booze, the Captain, the Mister, some back alley
street-fighting, name it. Yeah, they
carried some serious baggage.
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