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1973 Yank Rachell Art Rosenbaum Naptown Blues Party 2-Page Vintage Music Article

$ 9.31

Availability: 15 in stock
  • Genre: Blues
  • Industry: Music
  • Original/Reproduction: Original

    Description

    1973 Yank Rachell Art Rosenbaum Naptown Blues Party 2-Page Vintage Music Article
    Original, vintage magazine article
    Page Size: Approx. 8" x 11" (21 cm x 28 cm)
    Condition: Good
    Art Rosenbaum's brick house is a half dozen blocks from
    the University of Iowa campus where he teaches painting.
    The walls are covered with the creations of Art and his
    students. The living room also serves as the storehouse for a
    piano, acoustic guitars, the banjos he used for the Cool Hand
    Luke soundtrack, a dobro hanging on the wall, fiddles in beat-
    up cases, an old mandolin and a jug.
    The Friends of Old Time Music were having a party in
    Rosenbaum'shouse. Some people sat and stared at the walls.
    Others were slicing cheese and mixing punch in the kitchen;
    getting the reception set for Yank Rachell, J. T. Adams and
    Shirley Griffith of Indianapolis. They had come from Nap-
    town to play the blues at a university concert sponsored by
    the Friends.
    The party was a far cry from the gatherings where the old
    bluesmen got their starts; the country suppers of 40 or 50
    years ago where the hosts sold catfish and moonshine, the
    men shot craps in the barn and young musicians like Yank
    walked miles in order to play. The lights got shot out in the
    old days. This, in turn, was a gathering of professors and
    students having wine and cheese after a concert.
    The bluesmen were the last to arrive. J.T. made a quick
    circle through the kitchen to get some punch and then headed
    for a corner in the living room. He didn’t want to talk to
    anyone. At the concert he hadn’t wanted to sing. “J.T., sing
    something for us. If you can eat you can sing, and you sure
    been eating all day long.” Yank’s taunting didn’t work.
    Without his teeth, J.T. refused to sing. He found a chair out of
    the way and settled down to drink.
    Shirley stayed in the hallway and a rock ‘n’ roll drummer
    brought him some punch. They talked about making records.
    Shirley had been playing for more than 40 years but had been
    recording only since the early 60’s.
    “I had my chances. Ishman wanted me to record in
    Mississippi but I was a wild boy and didn’t pay him no mind.
    Leroy, he died before me and him got a chance to record
    together. I wanted to but things didn’t work out for a long
    time after that.”
    The drummer asked about young blues musicians. Shirley
    liked them but didn’t mention any favorites. “These boys
    don’t play like we do. We didn’t have no big group when we
    played so you had to do it all. You sang all your songs and
    played and stamped your feet for a beat. Boys don’t do that
    now. They got an easy way of playing. I don’t do it myself,
    can’t get used to it.”
    Shirley liked to sing and didn’t mind talking but he left the
    bulk of the story telling and the crowds to Yank. Yank had
    moved right into the living room, sent someone for some
    punch and launched into some stories. Even though he was
    tired, he liked having people around to listen to how he traded
    a pig to Augie Rawls for his first mandolin or about the time
    he and Sleepy John Estes and Jab Jones spent the 0 they
    got for their first record on two suits each and a good time in
    West Memphis. Yank pawned his watch to get home the next
    afternoon.
    “Yank, have you had any songs stolen?”
    “Well, I had some. Joe Williams stole some and John Lee
    Hooker, he took some of mine. But, you kjsow, everybody
    wrote their own songs and played them their own way. Then
    some other guy come along and play them his way. I
    borrowed some that way myself.”
    Someone asked Yank how he turned professional. The
    answer would have been the same for almost any of the old
    bluesmen. After he got well known at the suppers he would
    get paid cash instead of just a meal. He’d play weekends and
    pick cotton or lay tracks during the week. And if he got really
    good at his music he left for the taverns and whorehouses and
    even the sedate white dance parties in Memphis or New
    Orleans. If he was lucky he met Ralph Peer at the big
    auditorium on Front Street and made records. That was how
    Yank got the 0.
    “I didn't come north till the 50’s,” said Yank. “My wife’s
    folks died and we moved out of Brownsville. I’d quit playing
    by then. My wife asked me to stop so I stopped. So ’61, she
    passed. I was so lost and blue and everything I had to start
    playing again.”
    The rediscovery of Sleepy John sparked the search for
    other country bluesmen. About the time he started playing
    blues again, Yank was found by album producers, club
    owners and the sponsors of folk music festivals. But, the jobs
    tend to be few.
    Shirley had come to Naptown much earlier. In 1928 he
    brought his brash delta style to the blues team of Leroy Carr
    and Scrapper Blackwell. But they died and Shirley took a job
    at the Chevrolet body plant. He plays in public only oc-
    casionally: a tavern, birthday party or college concert.
    J .T. came next; he arrived in 1941 after he had been laid off
    his railroad job in Kentucky. He looked up Scrapper to learn
    the Trouble Blues that he and Leroy had made famous.
    Scrapper and J.T. played off and on in local taverns and
    clubs. His steady job was at theChrysler plant.
    And yet after 40 years and the black exodus north and the
    days in the car plants and the nights in the bars and the
    English invasion of the 60’s and the young whites playing the
    blues like they invented them, things hadn’t really changed
    from the days in the south. Folks getting together to play,
    their music, people having a party on a Saturday night, and
    the older men talking to the young musicians just as Ishman
    Bracey had talked to Shirley in the early 20’s.
    Art started to play. He had brought out a fiddle, and while
    the drummer kept time with two spoons and the Welshman
    who had mixed the wine punch whistled into a jug, Art played...
    13803-AL-73sum-35