Blues Music Essay, Research Paper
Arts:
A Brief History of the Blues 2000-06-30
A Brief History of the Blues Joseph Machlis says that the blues is
a native American musical and verse form, with no direct European
and African antecedents of which we know. (p. 578) In other words,
it is a blending of both traditions. Something special and entirely
different from either of its parent traditions. (Although Alan
Lomax cites some examples of very similar songs having been found
in Northwest Africa, particularly among the Wolof and Watusi. p.
233) The word ‘blue’ has been associated with the idea of
melancholia or depression since the Elizabethan era. The American
writer, Washington Irving is credited with coining the term ‘the
blues,’ as it is now defined, in 1807. (Tanner 40) The earlier
(almost entirely Negro) history of the blues musical tradition is
traced through oral tradition as far back as the 1860s. (Kennedy
79) When African and European music first began to merge to create
what eventually became the blues, the slaves sang songs filled with
words telling of their extreme suffering and privation. (Tanner 36)
One of the many responses to their oppressive environment resulted
in the field holler. The field holler gave rise to the spiritual,
and the blues, “notable among all human works of art for their
profound despair… They gave voice to the mood of alienation and
anomie that prevailed in the construction camps of the South,” for
it was in the Mississippi Delta that blacks were often forcibly
conscripted to work on the levee and land-clearing crews, where
they were often abused and then tossed aside or worked to death.
(Lomax 233) Alan Lomax states that the blues tradition was
considered to be a masculine discipline (although some of the first
blues songs heard by whites were sung by ‘lady’ blues singers like
Mamie Smith and Bessie Smith) and not many black women were to be
found singing the blues in the juke-joints. The Southern prisons
also contributed considerably to the blues tradition through work
songs and the songs of death row and murder, prostitutes, the
warden, the hot sun, and a hundred other privations. (Lomax) The
prison road crews and work gangs where were many bluesmen found
their songs, and where many other blacks simply became familiar
with the same songs. Following the Civil War (according to Rolling
Stone), the blues arose as “a distillate of the African music
brought over by slaves. Field hollers, ballads, church music and
rhythmic dance tunes called jump-ups evolved into a music for a
singer who would engage in call-and-response with his guitar. He
would sing a line, and the guitar would answer it.” (RSR&RE 53)
The guitar did not enjoy widespread popularity with blues musicians
until about the turn of the century. Until then, the banjo was the
primary blues instrument.) By the 1890?s the blues were sung in
many of the rural areas of the South. (Kamien 518) And by 1910, the
word ‘blues’ as applied to the musical tradition was in fairly
common use. (Tanner 40) Some ‘bluesologists’ claim (rather
dubiously), that the first blues song that was ever written down
was ‘Dallas Blues,’ published in 1912 by Hart Wand, a white
violinist from Oklahoma City. (Tanner 40) The blues form was first
popularized about 1911-14 by the black composer W.C. Handy
(1873-1958). However, the poetic and musical form of the blues
first crystallized around 1910 and gained popularity through the
publication of Handy’s “Memphis Blues” (1912) and “St. Louis Blues”
(1914). (Kamien 518) Instrumental blues had been recorded as early
as 1913. Mamie Smith recorded the first vocal blues song, ‘Crazy
Blues’ in 1920. (Priestly 9) Priestly claims that while the
widespread popularity of the blues had a vital influence on
subsequent jazz, it was the “initial popularity of jazz which had
made possible the recording of blues in the first place, and thus
made possible the absorption of blues into both jazz as well as the
mainstream of pop music.” (Priestly 10) American troops brought the
blues home with them following the First World War. They did not,
of course, learn them from Europeans, but from Southern whites who
had been exposed to the blues. At this time, the U.S. Army was
still segregated. During the twenties, the blues became a national
craze. Records by leading blues singers like Bessie Smith and
later, in the thirties, Billie Holiday, sold in the millions. The
twenties also saw the blues become a musical form more widely used
by jazz instrumentalists as well as blues singers. (Kamien 518)
During the decades of the thirties and forties, the blues spread
northward with the migration of many blacks from the South and
entered into the repertoire of big-band jazz. The blues also became
electrified with the introduction of the amplified guitar. In some
Northern cities like Chicago and Detroit, during the later forties
and early fifties, Muddy Waters, Willie Dixon, John Lee Hooker,
Howlin’ Wolf, and Elmore James among others, played what was
basically Mississippi Delta blues, backed by bass, drums, piano and
occasionally harmonica, and began scoring national hits with blues
songs. At about the same time, T-Bone Walker in Houston and B.B.
King in Memphis were pioneering a style of guitar playing that
combined jazz technique with the blues tonality and repertoire.
(RSR&RE 53) In the early nineteen-sixties, the urban bluesmen
were “discovered” by young white American and European musicians.
Many of these blues-based bands like the Paul Butterfield Blues
Band, the Rolling Stones, the Yardbirds, John Mayall’s
Bluesbreakers, Cream, Canned Heat, and Fleetwood Mac, brought the
blues to young white audiences, something the black blues artists
had been unable to do in America except through the purloined white
cross-over covers of black rhythm and blues songs. Since the
sixties, rock has undergone several blues revivals. Some rock
guitarists, such as Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, Jimi Hendrix, and
Eddie Van Halen have used the blues as a foundation for offshoot
styles. While the originators like John Lee Hooker, Albert Collins
and B.B. King–and their heirs Buddy Guy, Otis Rush, and later Eric
Clapton and the late Roy Buchanan, among many others, continued to
make fantastic music in the blues tradition. (RSR&RE 53) The
latest generation of blues players like Robert Cray and the late
Stevie Ray Vaughan, among others, as well as gracing the blues
tradition with their incredible technicality, have drawn a new
generation listeners to the blues. There are a number of different
ideas as to what the blues really are: a scale structure, a note
out of tune or out of key, a chord structure; a philosophy? The
blues is a form of Afro-American origin in which a modal melody has
been harmonized with Western tonal chords. (Salzman 18) In other
words, we had to fit it into our musical system somehow. But, the
problem was that the blues weren’t sung according to the European
ideas of even tempered pitch, but with a much freer use of bent
pitches and otherwise emotionally inflected vocal sounds. (Machlis
578) These ‘bent’pitches are known as ‘blue notes’. The ‘blue
notes’ or blue tonalities are one of the defining characteristics
of the blues. Tanner’s opinion is that these tonalities resulted
from the West Africans’ search for comparative tones not included
in their pentatonic scale. He claims that the West African scale
has neither the third or seventh tone nor the flat third or flat
seventh. “Because of this, in the attempt to imitate either of
these tones the pitch was sounded approximately midway between [the
minor AND major third, fifth, or seventh], causing what is called a
blue tonality.
” (Tanner 37) When the copyists attempted to write
down the music, they came up with the so-called “blues scale,” in
which the third, the seventh, and sometimes the fifth scale-degrees
were lowered a half step, producing a scale resembling the minor
scale. (Machlis 578) There are many nuances of melody and rhythm in
the blues that are difficult, if not impossible to write in
conventional notation. (Salzman 18) But the blue notes are not
really minor notes in a major context. In practice they may come
almost anywhere. (Machlis 578) Before the field cry, with its
bending of notes, it had not occurred to musicians to explore the
area of the blue tonalities on their instruments. (Tanner 38) The
early blues singers would sing these “bent” notes, microtonal
shadings, or “blue” notes, and the early instrumentalists attempted
to duplicate them. (Kamien 520) By the mid-twenties, instrumental
blues were common, and “playing the blues” for the instrumentalist
could mean extemporizing a melody within a blues chord sequence.
Brass, reed, and string instrumentalists, in particular, were able
to produce many of the vocal sounds of the blues singers. (Machlis
578-9) Blues lyrics contain some of the most fantastically
penetrating autobiographical and revealing statements in the
Western musical tradition. For instance, the complexity of ideas
implicit in Robert Johnson’s ‘Come In My Kitchen,’ such as a barely
concealed desire, loneliness, and tenderness, and much more: You
better come in my kitchen, It’s gonna be rainin’ outdoors. Blues
lyrics are often intensely personal, frequently contain sexual
references and often deal with the pain of betrayal, desertion, and
unrequited love (Kamien 519) or with unhappy situations such as
being jobless, hungry, broke, away from home, lonely, or
downhearted because of an unfaithful lover. (Tanner 39) The early
blues were very irregular rhythmically and usually followed speech
patterns, as can be heard in the recordings made in the twenties
and thirties by the legendary bluesmen Charley Patton, Blind Lemon
Jefferson, Robert Johnson and Lightnin’ Hopkins among others.
(RSR&RE 53) The meter of the blues is usually written in iambic
pentameter. The first line is generally repeated and third line is
different from the first two. (Tanner 38) The repetition of the
first line serves a purpose as it gives the singer some time to
come up with a third line. Often the lyrics of a blues song do not
seem to fit the music, but a good blues singer will accent certain
syllables and eliminate others so that everything falls nicely into
place. (Tanner 38) The structure of blues lyrics usually consists
of several three-line verses. The first line is sung and then
repeated to roughly the same melodic phrase (perhaps the same
phrase played diatonically a perfect fourth away), the third line
has a different melodic phrase: I’m going to leave baby, ain’t
going to say goodbye. I’m going to leave baby, ain’t going to say
goodbye. But I’ll write you and tell you the reason why. (Kamien
519) Most blues researchers claim that the very early blues were
patterned after English ballads and often had eight, ten, or
sixteen bars. (Tanner 36) The blues now consists of a definite
progression of harmonies usually consisting of eight, twelve or
sixteen measures, though the twelve bar blues are, by far, the most
common. The 12 bar blues harmonic progression (the one-four-five)
is most often agreed to be the following: four bars of tonic, two
of subdominant, two of tonic, two of dominant, and two of tonic.
Or, alternatively, I,I,I,I,IV,IV,I,I,V,V,I,I. Each roman numeral
indicates a chord built on a specific tone in the major scale. Due
to the influence of rock and roll, the tenth chord has been changed
to IV. This alteration is now considered standard. (Tanner 37) In
practice, various intermediate chords, and even some substitute
chord patterns, have been used in blues progressions, at least
since the nineteen-twenties. (Machlis 578) Some purists feel that
any variations or embellishments of the basic blues pattern changes
its quality or validity as a blues song. For instance, if the basic
blues chord progression is not used, then the music being played is
not the blues. Therefore, these purists maintain that many melodies
with the word “blues” in the title, and which are often spoken of
as being the blues, are not the blues because their melodies lack
this particular basic blues harmonic construction. (Tanner 37) I
believe this viewpoint to be a bit wide of the mark, because it
places a greater emphasis on blues harmony than melody. The
principal blues melodies are, in fact, holler cadences, set to a
steady beat and thus turned into dance music and confined to a
three-verse rhymed stanza of twelve to sixteen bars. (Lomax 275)
The singer can either repeat the same basic melody for each stanza
or improvise a new melody to reflect the changing mood of the
lyrics. (Kamien 519) Blues rhythm is also very flexible. Performers
often sing “around” the beat, accenting notes either a little
before or behind the beat. (Kamien) Jazz instrumentalists
frequently use the chord progression of the twelve-bar blues as a
basis for extended improvisations. The twelve or sixteen bar
pattern is repeated while new melodies are improvised over it by
the soloists. As with the Baroque bassocontinuo, the repeated chord
progression provides a foundation for the free flow of such
improvised melodic lines. (Kamien 520) One of the problems
regarding defining what the blues are is the variety of
authoritative opinions. The blues is neither an era in the
chronological development of jazz, nor is it actually a particular
style of playing or singing jazz. (Tanner 35) Some maintain (mostly
musicologists) that the blues are defined by the use of blue notes
(and on this point they also differ – some say that they are simply
flatted thirds, fifths, and sevenths applied to a major scale
[forming a pentatonic scale]; some maintain that they are
microtones; and some believe that they are the third, or fifth, or
seventh tones sounded simultaneously with the flatted third, or
fifth, or seventh tones respectively [minor second intervals]).
Others feel that the song form (twelve bars, one-four-five) is the
defining feature of the blues. Some feel that the blues is a way to
approach music, a philosophy, in a manner of speaking. And still
others hold a much wider sociological view that the blues are an
entire musical tradition rooted in the black experience of the
post-war South. Whatever one may think of the social implications
of the blues, whether expressing the American or black experience
in microcosm, it was their “strong autobiographical nature, their
intense personal passion, chaos and loneliness, executed so
vibrantly that it captured the imagination of modern musicians” and
the general public as well. (Shapiro 13) Kamien, Michael. _Music:
An Appreciation_. 3d Ed. N.Y.: McGraw Hill, 1984.; Kennedy,
Michael. _The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music_. N.Y.: 1980.;
Lomax, Alan. _The Land Where the Blues Began_. N.Y.: Pantheon
Books, 1993.; Pareles, Jon and Patricia Romanowski, eds. _The
Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock and Roll_.N.Y.: Rolling Stone
Press, 1983.; Priestly, Brian. _Jazz On Record: A History_. N.Y.:
Billboard Books, 1991.; Salzman, Eric and Michael Sahl. _Making
Changes_. N.Y.: G. Schirmer, 1977.; Shapiro, Harry. _Eric Clapton:
Lost in the Blues_. N.Y.: Da Capo Press, 1992.; Tanner, Paul and
Maurice Gerow. _A Study of Jazz_. Dubuque, IA: William C. Brown
Publishers, 1984.
Bibliography
Press, 1983.; Priestly, Brian. _Jazz On Record: A History_. N.Y.:
Billboard Books, 1991.; Salzman, Eric and Michael Sahl. _Making
Changes_. N.Y.: G. Schirmer, 1977.; Shapiro, Harry. _Eric Clapton:
Lost in the Blues_. N.Y.: Da Capo Press, 1992.; Tanner, Paul and
Maurice Gerow. _A Study of Jazz_. Dubuque, IA: William C. Brown
Publishers, 1984.
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