[Harp-L] blues, again



Wow, it seems that despite all the attempts to put the blues and blues harmonica in perspective, it hasn't sunk in. So, here's another one.

But first, I apologize for going too far out on a limb in my bar-be- que metaphor--I really know very little of the history. What I should have commented on was the cultural mix in the South between black and white bbq styles across regions as being similar to the musical mix without bringing up the origin of either.

Now, Harri writes:

"Country music contains lots of harmonica but who can name really prominent C&W harp players in the same sense as blues harp players. In other words, who might be the country music equivalents of Little Walter and Sonny Boy Williamson? Or masters of today like Rod Piazza, Kim Wilson, R.J. Mischo, Rick Estrin, Charlie Musselwhite, Mark Hummel and lots of other blues harp players?"

Let's ask a few questions first. How many blues fans know these names? I know, a lot of people here do, and probably most of the blues fans we all talk to. But outside of us, how many of the casual blues fans do? This is just a guess, but I'd be willing to bet most people who buy a Muddy Waters CD don't have a clue who the harp player is.

Next, I am always amazed at how someone immersed in one small sub- culture (here the Blues) are so oblivious to their own immersion as to not recognize that other sub-cultures probably have the same effects. I'd bet country fans before the pop-country of the late 80's (when it was still much more popular than the Blues, but not as mass-market) could have named most of the big country harp players just as easily as blues fans the blues players. It's the nature of getting involved in sub-cultures--you know things that most people don't. What shocks me is that people then (a) assume everyone else should share their knowledge of the trivia of the genre ("wow, I can't believe you've never heard of X") and (b) almost never recognize that other sub-cultures are probably the same in terms of the level of immersion and knowledge shared by the sub-culture but not those outside of the sub-culture. It's like a Trekkie assuming that everyone else knows who Tuvak is and then doubting anyone would know who Jar-El is.

And if you know either of those references you are officially a member of geekdom. Welcome, it's a large and pathetic kingdom.

The point? It seems that people who don't know much about country harp are making vast assumptions which only go to show their lack of knowledge. If someone who didn't know blues harp were to ask the reverse in such a dismissive manner, ie, "the blues has no Charlie McCoy, no Mickey Rapheal, etc..." I can just imagine the uproar from those posting "in defense" of the Blues here.

"You are absolutely right, John. Without prejudice against other genres where harmonica appears and shunning off the label of being a "blues nazi" the simple fact remains that the most influential harp players are blues players."

This is no fact. It's your opinion. For the (primarily white) generation in their 60's and 70's the most influential harmonica players were chromatic players like Adler and the 'Cats--go to a convention and see the influence these players had. The blues players are probably the most influential on those under the age of 60, but that's temporary and transitory--as is the nature of influence. I'd say Levy and Popper have been the two biggest influences of the generations under the age of 35 or so--probably moreso than the blues players. Of course, that's my view from this list and the conventions. I'm almost definitely showing a large bias. The most influential player since 1960 is probably Dylan--I bet more casual players were influenced by him than both Walters combined. And there are probably tons of East Asian players who influenced more people than the above combined over the same period who I just don't know about, sadly.

"For comparison, look at other instruments. Take, for example, the violin. Probably all would agree that the most influential players come from classical music. Clarence Gatemouth Brown played the instrument occasionally and Papa John Creach even more devotedly but still no one would say that the violin as an instrument owes much to the blues."

Again a wonderful example of how quickly you are making judgments based on your own tiny frame of reference. The fiddle/violin is one of the most common instruments in the world today, and certainly over the last two-hundred years. Classical players influence each other, but there have been many important influences over the years in hundreds if not thousands of other genres--indeed, let's go back to country where fiddle was a big part of the Western swing sound (though one could call that jazz--but it's really part of the larger Swing sub-set, of which jazz at the time was a part). These players weren't massively influenced by classical music, but by the traditional fiddle playing of the South--which included African- Americans, of course. And they can't be said to be influenced by the "Blues" as it didn't yet exist as a separate genre.

To the other point, I just don't understand the concept of an instrument "owing" something to a genre. The harmonica existed before the blues, was played in a wide range of styles before the blues and while what we know would call the Blues was evolving was played in things which both relate and don't relate to the blues (and using bends, 2nd position and the like outside of a strict "Blues construct--which is natural, as "The Blues" wasn't strictly defined before the 1940's, IMO). True, the saxophone is most prominent in jazz--but it was a classical and marching instrument before it became the main jazz instrument, and can still be found there. I don't see how it "owes" anything to jazz--again, I just don't understand the concept here.

"There are many genres where the harmonica plays an important role, which is great, but these cases are an exception to the rule "

The false assumption is that the harmonica plays an important role in the Blues as different from the role it might play in other genres. I'll say it more plainly: since 1950 the drums are more important to mainstream blues than the harmonica. The harmonica is featured more often in the blues than rock, for instance, but that doesn't really mean it's more important to the blues. I think you are overstating the importance of the harp in blues significantly. The harmonica is a side-instrument to the all-encompassing guitar and then after the 50's to the drums and bass as well. It's like a cherry on a sundae-- it's still a sundae without a cherry. You might not like it as much, but to say that the cherry plays an integral role in the sundae is massively overstating the importance of the cherry. I'd say that the harmonica has played at least as important a role in many genres through the years: Harmonica ensembles (maybe--I'm just not sure about the importance of the harmonica here); jug bands; folk duos (not always blues); old-time. That's three off the top of my head where the harmonica is found as often and as noticeably as in the blues.

"As to the blues inventing the light bulb, it's pretty much true. To put a long story short, most of the greats have been influenced by the blues. Elvis, Beatles, Rolling Stones, Aretha, James Brown, Dylan etc etc. "

Elvis was influenced by early country, Western swing, what might be called "hillbilly music" of the mid-South and a lot more as well as the delta blues which we would know tend to call "the Blues" (in hindsight, of course--back then it was just "race music"). To just hear the blues in Elvis and assume that it is the overwhelming influence is missing out on all the rest that went into that mix. The same with Little Richard, Aretha (gee, any gospel there? How about some sax-based r&b as descended from Louis Jordan?) and especially someone like James Brown, whose on-the-one funk was worlds away from the rhythmic identity of traditional African-American music of all genres, including the blues. The Beatles were influenced by everyone, but their primary influence was the British skiffle craze which was influenced by Buddy Holly and from what little I've heard, ragtime. The blues was there, but not the delta blues which became the genre we would today call "the Blues"--at least not noticeably. The Stones are another matter, of course--they actively claimed blues influence. But bands like the Who or the Kinks really weren't nearly as influenced by the Blues a la Muddy et al as by early rock (which was simultaneous with what is now the Blues) and such. In any event, so what? I don't see anyone saying the blues or the Blues isn't an influence on American popular music--just that it's not the only influence, nor always the most important one--it depends on the case in point.

"Rap-artists of today sample blues. "

Very, very rarely. They also sample Javanese gamelan music, French musette and other genres. I don't think anyone would argue that these are massive influences on hip-hop or rap.

"Looking at a list of most popular music today, it's pretty hard to find anything that owes nothing to the blues."

The entire electronica genres. Most hip-hop. Almost all of the bubble-gum-pop singers. Punk shares little besides a chord-structure and instrumentation--the former predates the Blues, the later not exclusive to it. Do I really need to go on. Maybe "nothing" is an exaggeration, but they owe a lot less to the Blues than they owe to many, many other genres. And that's in the US. If we were to go overseas I'm sure I could come up with more (actually, I wouldn't have to--the various electronicas are so huge as to not need another example).

And note, we really do need to make a distinction between the Blues as a genre itself and the blues as a song form and also from early African-American musics in general. These are three criss-crossing things which are not exclusive of each other.

The blues (and the Blues) are very large influences on most of American music in the last half-century, and the things from which the blues rose (and from which jazz, country, bluegrass, etc... arose as well) have really been massively influential around the world. But there is no need to overstate either this influence or the importance of the harmonica in the blues in order to make the first sentence here any more valid.

This reminds me of a memory of Artie Shaw I read in Downbeat. It was during their year-end, "here's who died" issue and the writer felt the need to raise Shaw up by denigrating Benny Goodman. In the end, it really didn't do Shaw much justice--he was significant in his own right and didn't need the comparison to shine, especially because it ended up making his fans seem bitter and as if they needed to denigrate someone else just for being more successful. I feel the same way here with the ridiculous exaggerations about the blues--it's important enough to stand alone without any false claims of overwhelming greatness.



 ()()    JR "Bulldogge" Ross
()  ()   & Snuffy, too:)
`----'







This archive was generated by a fusion of Pipermail 0.09 (Mailman edition) and MHonArc 2.6.8.