Bukka White
Bukka White - Parchman Farm Blues(Download)
Bukka
White (true name: Booker T. Washington White) was born in Houston, Mississippi
(not Houston, Texas) in 1906 (not any date between 1902-1905 or 1907-1909, as
is variously reported). He got his initial start in music learning fiddle tunes
from his father. Guitar instruction soon followed, but White's grandmother
objected to anyone playing "that Devil music" in the household;
nonetheless, his father eventually bought him a guitar. When Bukka White was 14
he spent some time with an uncle in Clarksdale, Mississippi and passed himself
off as a 21-year-old, using his guitar playing as a way to attract women.
Somewhere along the line, White came in contact with Delta blues legend Charley
Patton, who no doubt was able to give Bukka White instruction on how to improve
his skills in both areas of endeavor. In addition to music, White pursued
careers in sport, playing in Negro Leagues baseball and, for a time, taking up
boxing.
In
1930 Bukka White met furniture salesman Ralph Limbo, who was also a talent
scout for Victor. White traveled to Memphis where he made his first recordings,
singing a mixture of blues and gospel material under the name of Washington
White. Victor only saw fit to release four of the 14 songs Bukka White recorded
that day. As the Depression set in, opportunity to record didn't knock again
for Bukka White until 1937, when Big Bill Broonzy asked him to come to Chicago
and record for Lester Melrose. By this time, Bukka White had gotten into some
trouble -- he later claimed he and a friend had been "ambushed" by a
man along a highway, and White shot the man in the thigh in self defense. While
awaiting trial, White jumped bail and headed for Chicago, making two sides
before being apprehended and sent back to Mississippi to do a three-year
stretch at Parchman Farm. While he was serving time, White's record "Shake
'Em on Down" became a hit.
Bukka White - Parchman Farm Blues(Download)
Bukka
White proved a model prisoner, popular with inmates and prison guards alike and
earning the nickname "Barrelhouse." It was as "Washington
Barrelhouse White" that White recorded two numbers for John and Alan Lomax
at Parchman Farm in 1939. After earning his release in 1940, he returned to
Chicago with 12 newly minted songs to record for Lester Melrose. These became
the backbone of his lifelong repertoire, and the Melrose session today is
regarded as the pinnacle of Bukka White's achievements on record. Among the
songs he recorded on that occasion were "Parchman Farm Blues" (not to
be confused with "Parchman Farm" written by Mose Allison and covered
by John Mayall's Bluesbreakers and Blue Cheer, among others), "Good Gin
Blues," "Bukka's Jitterbug Swing," "Aberdeen, Mississippi
Blues," and "Fixin' to Die Blues," all timeless classics of the
Delta blues. Then, Bukka disappeared -- not into the depths of some Mississippi
Delta mystery, but into factory work in Memphis during World War II.
Bob
Dylan recorded "Fixin' to Die Blues" on his 1961 debut Columbia
album, and at the time no one in the music business knew who Bukka White was --
most figured a fellow who'd written a song like "Fixin' to Die" had
to be dead already. Two California-based blues enthusiasts, John Fahey and Ed
Denson, were more skeptical about this assumption, and in 1963 addressed a
letter to "Bukka White (Old Blues Singer), c/o General Delivery, Aberdeen,
Mississippi." By chance, one of White's relatives was working in the Post
Office in Aberdeen, and forwarded the letter to White in Memphis.
Bukka White - Parchman Farm Blues(Download)
Things
moved quickly from the time Bukka White met up with Fahey and Denson; by the
end of 1963 Bukka White was already recording on contract with Chris Strachwitz
and Arhoolie. White wrote a new song celebrating his good fortune entitled
"1963 Isn't 1962 Blues" and swiftly recorded three albums of material
for Strachwitz which the latter entitled Sky Songs, referring to White's habit
of "reaching up and pulling songs out of the sky." Nonetheless, even
White knew he couldn't get away with making up all his material regularly in
performance, so he also studied his 78s and relearned all the songs he'd
written for Lester Melrose. Although Bukka White was practically the same age
as other survivors of the Delta and Memphis blues scenes of the 1920s and '30s,
he didn't look like someone who belonged in a nursing home. White was a sharp
dresser, in the prime of health, was a compelling entertainer and raconteur,
and clearly enjoyed being the center of attention. He thrived on the folk
festival and coffeehouse circuit of the 1960s.
By
the '70s, however, Bukka White couldn't help getting a little bored with his
celebrity status as an acoustic bluesman. White's tastes had grown with the
times, and he would have loved to have played an electric guitar and fronted a
band, as his old acquaintance Chester Burnett (aka Howlin' Wolf) and Bukka's
own cousin, B. B. King, had been already doing successfully for years. But he
only needed to look at what happened to his friend Bob Dylan's career for a
lesson on what happens to folk blues artists who try and "go
electric." So, Bukka White stayed on the festival circuit to the end of
his days, beating the hell out of his National steel guitar, and sometimes his
monologues would go on a little long, and sometimes his playing was a little
more willfully eccentric than at others. Patrons would wait patiently to hear
Bukka play "Parchman Farm Blues," although some of them were under
the mistaken impression that they had paid their money to hear an artist who
had originated a number that Eric Clapton made famous.
Blues
purists will tell you that nothing Bukka White recorded after 1940 is
ultimately worth listening to. This isn't accurate, nor fair. White was an
incredibly compelling performer who gave up of more of himself in his work than
many artists in any musical discipline. The Sky Songs albums for Arhoolie are
an eminently rewarding document of Bukka's charm and candor, particularly in
the long monologue "Mixed Water." "Big Daddy," recorded in
1974 for Arnold S. Caplin's Biograph label, likewise is a classic of its kind
and should not be neglected.
Bukka White
Reviewed by Tom
on
6:06 AM
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