Escaping the Delta uses Robert Johnson and his work as the center for a fresh look at blues in general, taking his music and the myths surrounding his life as the key to an exploration of the reality and evolution of the larger world of pop music.
Wald takes two questions as his jumping-off place: Why was Johnson's work ignored by the blues audience of his time, and why is he now considered the greatest figure in blues history
First looking at the birth of the blues boom, the range of other African-American music that went along with it, and the unique world of the Mississippi Delta, Escaping the Delta then turns to Johnson himself, presenting the story of his life and making the first thorough examination of his musical catalog.
Finally, Escaping the Delta then follows the history of the blues and Johnson's legacy to the present day, tracing what the genre meant to a black popular audience and how it was transformed by the white blues fans who turned Johnson from a talented but obscure Mississippi guitarist into the romantic legend we think of today.
Show more
Escaping the Delta uses Robert Johnson and his work as the center for a fresh look at blues in general, taking his music and the myths surrounding his life as the key to an exploration of the reality and evolution of the larger world of pop music.
Wald takes two questions as his jumping-off place: Why was Johnson's work ignored by the blues audience of his time, and why is he now considered the greatest figure in blues history
First looking at the birth of the blues boom, the range of other African-American music that went along with it, and the unique world of the Mississippi Delta, Escaping the Delta then turns to Johnson himself, presenting the story of his life and making the first thorough examination of his musical catalog.
Finally, Escaping the Delta then follows the history of the blues and Johnson's legacy to the present day, tracing what the genre meant to a black popular audience and how it was transformed by the white blues fans who turned Johnson from a talented but obscure Mississippi guitarist into the romantic legend we think of today.
Show moreElijah Waldis a writer and musician whose books include Escaping the Delta: Robert Johnson and the Invention of the Blues and How the Beatles Destroyed Rock "n" Roll: An Alternative History of American Popular Music. A respected expert on the folk revival, he collaborated with Dave Van Ronk on The Mayor of MacDougal Street, the inspiration for the Coen Brothers" film Inside Llewyn Davis. His awards include a 2002 Grammy, and he has taught blues history at UCLA and lectured widely on American, Mexican, and world music. He currently lives in Medford, Massachusetts.
"If you read only one book about blues...read this one." -- Starred Booklist on Escaping the Delta
"If you read only one book about blues...read this one." -- Starred Booklist on Escaping the Delta
In this combination history of blues music and biography of Robert Johnson, Wald, a blues musician himself (and author of Narcorrido), explores Johnson's rise from a little known guitarist who died in 1938 to one of the most influential artists in rock and roll. From the blues' meager beginning in the early 1900s to its '30s heyday and its 1960s revival, Wald gives a revisionist history of the music, which he feels, in many instances, has been mislabeled and misjudged. Though his writing sometimes reads like a textbook, and he occasionally gets bogged down in arcane musical references, Wald's academic precision aids him in his quest to re-analyze America's perception of the blues as well as in trying to decipher the music's murky true origins and history. Using a lengthy comparison of how white Americans and black Americans define the blues, Wald demonstrates how Johnson fit into the gray area between the two. Wald combines a short bio of Johnson with detailed analysis of his songs and the mysterious tales that are associated with him, giving a thorough account of Johnson's life, music and legend. The chapter on how white guitarists like Eric Clapton and Keith Richards interpreted who Johnson was and what he played really shows why he is not one of the many forgotten early 20th-century bluesmen. Wald's theories will no doubt cause passionate discussions among true blues aficionados, but the technical and obscure nature of much of his writing will make the book more of a useful reference resource. (Dec.) Forecast: Amistad is backing this title with a seven-city tour and 50-city radio campaign, with hopes of it becoming a crossover hit. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
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