Friday 20 March 2015

SAM CHARTERS, THE MAN WHO INVENTED THE PHRASE "COUNTRY BLUES"

I'm very sorry indeed to learn of the death of Samuel Barclay Charters. He died at his home in Sweden on Wednesday this week, at the age of 85.


His 1959 book The Country Blues was as important as Harry Smith's anthology American Folk Music had been earlier the same decade - because it inspired people to action: to the seeking out of blues giants of the pre-WWII age. He also played a significant part in the story of creating album releases of Blind Willie McTell's work.

I interviewed Sam Charters by telephone when I was researching Hand Me My Travelin' Shoes, and he was friendly, helpful, informative and lively-minded. This is from my book, and is looking at 1956 (just when Willie is making his last recordings in Atlanta):



At the same time, 375 miles away in Memphis, Tennessee, another enthusiast, a Pittsburgh-born 30-year-old called Samuel Barclay Charters, is traveling around with his first wife, Mary Lange, and recording old blues singers a bit more systematically.
            Anyone else with a keen interest in music who finds themselves in Memphis in 1956 is in the thrall of rock’n’roll. Memphis is the place to be in 1956. Here is the home of the wondrous Sun Studios, where Sam Phillips has just been producing Elvis Presley’s revolutionary first records, in one small, dark room that is now also capturing on tape the early golden exuberance of Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Roy Orbison, and more. In the same room Phillips has also been commissioning pioneering modern electric blues records since 1951, when he had glued the little white baffle tiles up on the walls and ceiling himself to make the room a studio. Howlin Wolf had started here, right then and there. Phillips said later, “When I heard him, I said, ‘This is for me. This is where the soul of man never dies.’”
            But that’s not how Samuel B. Charters feels. He’s not in Memphis for this stuff at all. He doesn’t even notice it. Decades later, when I interview him, I say “You were in Memphis in 1956?! What a wonderful time to be there!” and he replies: “It really was, yeah. They were all there,”  -  and the people he means are old, pre-war blues singers, and street musicians from Memphis jug bands: the very people that everyone else in Memphis has forgotten.
            These are the people he finds and records: “Gus Cannon and Will Shade and everybody with the jug bands.” Gus Cannon and friends, under various names but mostly as Cannon’s Jug Stompers, had done a slew of recordings between 1927 and 1930, and never been back in a studio since. Will Shade had led the rival outfit the Memphis Jug Band, and they had recorded prolifically between 1927 and 1934.
            When Charters finds them, and records them again for the first time in over twenty years, it makes him realise something simple and powerful: “the revelation that these people weren’t from another planet, they were part of our life and some of them were still alive.”
            Three years later, in 1959, Sam and Mary are divorced and in March Sam marries his second wife, Ann Danberg, whom he’s met in music classes at the University of California years earlier, and who will later write the first biography of Jack Kerouac and edit his letters. Sam and Ann Charters live in a basement apartment in Brooklyn, but that fall they’ve driven all the way across the States to stay with Ann’s parents in California before embarking on a year-long trip to Europe.
            That November, the New York publisher Rinehart publishes Sam Charters’ book, which is called The Country Blues  -  and it proves to be one of those rare books that actually makes something happen out in the world. Effectively it kicks off the blues revival that becomes a shaping force within the whole burgeoning scene that encompasses the New Left, the civil rights movement, the Greenwich Village folk phenomenon, the rise of Bob Dylan and more.
            The blues that Charters draws to people’s attention, and which he invents the phrase “country blues” to describe, is neither the vaudeville-jazz sort they’ve heard by Bessie Smith nor the electric post-war blues they’ve heard by Muddy Waters and Sonny Boy Williamson and Howlin’ Wolf. It is pre-war, mostly downhome, southern and unamplified, and as richly diverse as life under the sea.
            On the LP that he issues alongside the book, Charters’ compilation of a few of these old records includes an elegant but restless, exhilarating track made in 1928, ‘Statesboro Blues’, written and recorded by Blind Willie McTell. (Statesboro, Georgia, is the quirky town Willie grew up in, 49 miles northwest of Savannah.) The LP is, in effect, a bootleg, since the companies that really own the rights and the masters to these recordings have no interest whatever in releasing them officially while at the same time their procedures for allowing others to lease them make it prohibitive for any blues enthusiast to compile such an album legitimately. Charters deals with this matter head-on in his sleevenotes to this “bootleg” LP.
            He has acquired the mint-condition 78rpm record of Willie’s ‘Statesboro Blues’ that is copied onto his LP from a cache of ancient but never-played Victor Records found somewhere in New York State by another key figure on the scene at the time, Len Kunstadt, who edits the tiny, amateur-looking magazine Record Research (which Charters writes for) and acts as the manager of one of the known surviving grandes dames of the pre-war blues, the redoubtable Victoria Spivey, who now lives in Brooklyn and is just about to re-emerge from semi-retirement. Len will also prove to be her last husband.
            The 78s that Len Kunstadt finds are of course regarded as riches, among the interested few, but their monetary value is derisory, and will be slow to rise. Paul Garon, writer and blues-specialist Chicago bookstore owner, recalls the prices when, back here when the 1950s were just giving way to the ’60s, some Robert Johnson 78s were put up for auction by another enthusiast, Chris Strachwitz: “I stretched my budget enormously and bid $2.50 each. I lost. When I saw Chris later that year, I bemoaned losing the RJs (he was auctioning three of them), and he said, ‘Oh,  you lost by a mile. They went for $7.50 each!’” In December 2004 a Robert Johnson 78rpm of ‘Come On In My Kitchen’ coupled with ‘They’re Red Hot’, recorded in late 1936 and issued on the Vocalion label soon afterwards, in only fair condition, sold on eBay for $4,495.

When his book comes out on 5 November 1959, Charters is working for Minke’s Closet Shop in Beverly Hills, putting up wall cupboards for the Hollywood actress Cyd Charisse. In his lunch hour he stands around in a little Beverly Hills bookstore, holding a copy of his own book so that people might see the photograph on the back and realise that he’s the man who wrote it.
            Charters’ book doesn’t impress everybody. He pips to the post the rather more precise and thorough blues scholar and British architect Paul Oliver, whose book Blues Fell This Morning would arrive in 1960, as would American jazz writer Frederic Ramsey’s Been Here and Gone, a richly photo-loaded account of travels through the 1950s South in search “of what might still remain of an original, authentic African American musical tradition”.
            There is much carping too from some of those who feel they already know about all this music but haven’t troubled to write books about it. They feel that despite all the fieldwork Charters has done, in Alabama, New Orleans, Memphis and even the Bahamas, he doesn’t have a proper folklorist’s interest in “the tradition”, but rather has the sort of flighty interest in “originality” and “creativity” that is just what you might expect from a literary person with an inclination towards Beat poetry.
            Charters’ critics also complain that there are far richer seams of pre-war blues than those he looks at and that he gives too much attention to lightweight hokum at the expense of heavier, superior material born in the Mississippi delta.
            Actually this remains the main divide in the world of blues appreciation  -  among the enthusiasts who start up small record-companies, the fieldworkers and scholars who persuade the subject into academic legitimacy and the writers on small magazines. Most of the white post-war champions of this black pre-war music are predisposed to find heaviest best. Dark, smouldering, Mississippi blues good; lighter, cheerful, South-Eastern blues much less good.
            When we come to ask how and when, after his death, Blind Willie McTell becomes famous, we find that the answer is slowly and moderately  -  and part of the reason is precisely because he isn’t Mississippi, he isn’t raw and dark.
            In any case, Sam Charters’ The Country Blues spreads the news of this music to a larger number of people. It also prompts many a young urban white to take a trip down to the Deep South in search of the old rural blacks whose records from decades earlier are just beginning to be issued for the first time on 33rpm vinyl by like-minded young enthusiasts  -  records that reveal to them this other, more magical music universe.
            Some successes are scored. The frail, eerie recordings of Skip James from 1931 are all people have to go on, but he is found, alive, back where he’d started from, in a tiny town in Mississippi. He will appear like a ghost on stage at the Newport Folk Festival in 1964, having never recorded in the intervening 33 years. Mississippi John Hurt, a kind and gentle man whose last foray into a recording studio was in 1928, is descended upon similarly and plucked back into the world of public performance  -  a world where that public has changed out of all recognition.
            Son House, another once-towering figure, is rediscovered, not in a shack in a field in Mississippi but in a rough part of Rochester, New York  -  and he too finds himself up on stage for the first time in decades, playing to young white audiences in the coffee-houses of Greenwich Village and Boston, Philadelphia and Washington D.C..
            Blind Willie McTell is one of those sought out  -  but too late. Nobody knows it yet but he is already dead. He dies eleven weeks and a day before the release of his ‘Statesboro Blues’ on the Sam Charters LP.
 



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