Re: [Harp-L] re: Review of Cadillac Records Movie
This is interesting Jim. I feel the same way. I was born a poor mine/
mill 'hunkey' in Pennsylvania. We were so poor that we couldn't
afford dirt floors. Soot was the best we could do. BUT Over the years
my father worked himself up to diplomat and we lived in Europe
several times. My father was Sicillian, my mother was Polish and
Calabrese. THEIR favorite musics were:
1....Fats Waller
2....Cab Calloway
3....Count Basie
Add Ethel Waters, Ella Fitzgerald, Nat Cole, Louis Prima, Guy
Lombardo, Louis Armstrong, and what do you have? I don't know. But
I'm sure we weren't alone.
As for the Czecz brothers, they left a country that was starting to
turn anti Jew and arrived at a country that was anti Immigrant. They
were HARDLY in any position to be discriminatory and I doubt they
were. Sure there will be times when someone in authority imposes
their will on another. Such as the Czecz brothers being the bosses
and the performers being the 'hirelings', disagreements may arise.
But this is true anywhere and it would be only too easy to write it
off as racism when, in fact, that may not be true.
smo-joe
On Dec 20, 2008, at 11:05 AM, James D Hoskins wrote:
In the 1950's/60's I grew up a germanic white farm boy in Iowa, in
our house I heard Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Wynonnie Harris,
BB King, a whole lot of Louis Jordan, and all the 40's/50's swing
and jump stuff, plus a great deal of jazz. (And of course, Lawrencw
Welk at Grandma's after sunday dinner!) This probably was a bit
unusual (not L.Welk), and maybe doesn't qualify as a "blues scene",
but I don't believe 'that music' ever went as unoticed and ignored
as so many seem to think. My take has always been that if my
parents, in Dallas county Iowa had 78's by these artists, there had
to be plenty of others. It wasn't unusual to pull in radio from
Chicago, Kansas City, St Louis, and even Texas, Ok, or Mexico at
night back then in the midwest. It was all AMERICAN MUSIC, and I
think many of us were listening, or it wouldn't be so ingrained in
us today. The Butterfield's and Bloomfield's certainly boosted the
attention, and popularized the music, much as Akroyd and Belushi,
or SRV, but as art, I've often had questions as to whether that was
a good thing or not. It was after seeing Butterfield in early 1967
that I bought my first marine band, but the seed had been planted
long before, you didn't have to be black, or even live in a city to
be exposed to the blues in the 50'/60's. That is just my take on
that 'blues revival' thing, JD
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