When you hear
Dem a bells go ding ling ling,
All join ‘round
And sweetly you must sing,
And when the verse am through,
In the chorus all join in,
There’ll be a hot time
In the old town tonight.
This book is about hot music. We all know what that means, or at least what it sounds like when we hear it. We grew up knowing. The Rolling Stones are hot, at least through Exile on Main St. The Beatles are usually not, and often anything but (“When I’m Sixty-Four”). James Brown is very hot, James Taylor is not at all. Jimi Hendrix is hot, Pink Floyd is cool for a while, and then just uncool. Nir vana is hot, despite its cool name. Merle Haggard and George Jones are hot, Alabama and the entire cast of the CMA are not. Louis Armstrong is hot, always; Benny Goodman usually is, Glenn Miller rarely if ever. Bessie Smith is hot, Billie Holiday tries very hard not to be, not always successfully. Some kinds of music are hot in general: fifties rock ‘n’ roll is almost always hot, fifties jazz is clearly not, which is why they call it cool jazz (hot is usually cool, but cool isn’t necessarily uncool, it’s just not hot—Miles Davis is, of course, both cool and cool). Hip-hop is hot, ambient is most defiantly not. Techno is sometimes hot, but usually not. Punk is hot, new wave . . . etcetera. Pretty obvious—unless you’re dealing with music over a century old, with no pumping bass or booting solos to tip you the nod.
If we’re going to put our enterprise on a sound scientific footing, we’ll need a theory. This isn’t easy, since hot music at first appears to be one of those phenomena beyond definition, subject to Armstrong’s Paradox (“If you gotta ask you’ll never know”). You know and I know it’s got something to do with sex, but saying that doesn’t help much. The standard New Grove Dictionary of Jazz tells us that “in jazz parlance, the term is used to suggest the qualities of excitement, passion, and intensity,” which doesn’t help us much either, and that “hot solos were generally performed at considerable speed and were characterized by a frenetic quality, an urgent sense of rhythm, agitated syncopation, eager anticipations of the beat, and an earthy or ‘dirty’ tone.”
This gives us a little more to work with, although it’s only part of the story. Louis Armstrong’s “Alligator Crawl” from 1927 (Ok. 8482; wherever possible, I shall identify any recording mentioned in these pages by its original catalog number: reissues come and go, but the original release remains constant) is a slow grind without frenzy or agitation, and it’s so hot that it seems to melt the grilles on your speakers. And what if our ears tell us that “Possum in the Hayloft” by a cracker fiddle band from Georgia, “Nichts Bei Mir” by a Yiddish clarinet combo from Hester Street, and “Peephole Drag” by a black cornet blower from the South Side of Chicago are equally hot, although they seem to have nothing in common? Any theory that would cover all three musicologically—that would explain what they’re all doing in terms of rhythm, timbre, harmony, melodic development, etc.—would have to be impossibly complex. Luckily, for you and me both, I’m not a musicologist. And there are other ways of approaching this question. We don’t need musicological exactness here (we just want to listen to the stuff, not vivisect it), we need what the thought gang likes to call a heuristic: a simplified way of making sense out of a complex situation, of enabling the mind to grasp it sensually, rather than rationally. A model, in other words.
The model I propose for hot music has just two parts, both fairly commonplace: let’s call them “drive” and “swerve.” Without either of these, a record can’t be hot; with just one, it may be hot; with both, in various combinations, it will be scorching.
Since drive is fairly obvious, we’ll start there. We can define drive as the quality that gives a piece of music momentum, that pulls you in and makes your body want to move with the music (and I mean move, not swing and sway); drive is what gets your toe tapping, your foot pounding, your fingers drumming, your head nodding. It’s purely physical, purely unconscious. Drive isn’t the same thing as speed— “The Flight of the Bumblebee” is fast indeed, but it doesn’t drive you (even when some mook turns it into the Green Hornet theme), while Bessie Smith’s seminal 1925 version of “St. Louis Blues” (Col. 14064-D) isn’t particularly fast, but it drags your body along with every beat. Drive demands repetition: rhythmic and/or melodic figures have to be played over and over, and off against each other; this usually lets out the Paganiniesque violin breakdown as well as much of free jazz. Now, this repetition can’t help but instantly remind those among us whose hormones are at spring tide of the act of generation, a fact that has never failed to cause paroxysms of hand-wringing and tut-tutting in the custodial classes; but more on this later.
Usually, drive involves some kind of syncopation, whereby the accent is shifted off the strong beats of the measure without losing them altogether. So if you have a piece of music where the first and third beat of each four-beat bar are supposed to be accented, you might hold those notes just a little too long or hit them just a little too late, stretching them into the spaces where two and four are supposed to fall; this makes it seem like the beat is being pulled forward headlong. Or you can lay another pattern on top of the 1-3, accenting those other beats (this is how ragtime works). Or you can do both (think boogie-woogie). No matter how you do it, and myriad are the ways, syncopation is the key to every kind of hot music from the nineteenth-century minstrel walkaround to Jay-Z and beyond.
There are different kinds of drive. The brilliant (if stiff) musicologist and jazz historian Gunther Schuller draws a distinction between “horizontal” and “vertical” momentum. Vertically oriented rhythms feature accents where the whole band comes in at once: they stomp rather than swing. Drive is difficult to annotate: before there were records, we can’t really tell how it was handled. But in the 1890s, at least—judging from the earliest surviving records—the brass bands and ragtime orchestras would take their 2/4 rhythm and goose it up so that everyone would come down on the one like a steam hammer, lay off a little on the two, and then whomp on the one again. The rhythm sections tended to feature tubas and banjos, both of which add a percussive pop to the beat.
You swing, on the other hand, horizontally—the various members of the band place their accents at different places in the measure. The band may stand on the one, but they won’t whomp it. Swing is in an even 4/4 time, a smoother measure but still powerful—a rushing steam locomotive to the two-beat’s washing machine rocking in place. Since the turn of the century, New Orleans musicians tended to give their rags and marches a 4/4 feel. They also relied on string bass and guitar in the rhythm section, instruments with less punch than tuba and banjo, but more sustain—you could hold a beat longer, drag it out through the measure. Ultimately, their way prevailed.
That doesn’t mean it’s “better.” Unfortunately, Schuller and his fellow jazz critics tend to use this distinction between vertical and horizontal movement to put down anything that doesn’t swing, or at least to imply that swinging is the higher musical development: as far as they’re concerned, all kinds of rhythm music (ragtime, marching band, stomp) inherently want to swing, if only they can—as if all those thousands of stompers were just waiting around pogoing up and down until someone could figure out how to get off the dime. Any who underlaid their 2/4 stomps with a 4/4 beat were of course ahead of their time, a couple rungs higher up the evolutionary ladder. This is bilge, although the basic distinction is nevertheless a useful one.
But enough about drive. What about this “swerve”? Let’s go back a bit. In the course of sorting out the physical composition of the universe, the Roman poet Lucretius talks about the origins of the phenomenal world—that is, the world of things that we can see and touch, taste and smell and hear. In the beginning, he says, the universe was nothing but a steady rain of minute and indivisible atoms falling—driving—through an infinite void. Their trajectories were strictly parallel: no one atom could possibly cross paths with another, interfere with it in any way. Then,
. . . incerto tempore ferme
incertisque locis spatio depellere paulum,
tantum quod momen mutatum dicere possis (II, 218–20)
At some uncertain place in space and time
They deviated from their given course
By just enough so you could say it changed.
The swerve is what makes life possible—without it, all is static, permanent, sterile. One little bend, completely without premeditation or plan, just because—call it God, love, free will, anarchy, whatever your name for the unknowable. Then POW! The universe as we know it: the willful atom swerves into its straight neighbor’s path, the neighbor gets bent and crashes into a few others; soon you’ve got a cosmic pool table. Then the atoms begin sticking together in clumps and the next thing you know you’ve got Carteret, New Jersey (so the process isn’t perfect; what is?).
But what in the name of all that is holy does any of this have to do with music? In an article wistfully titled “James Taylor Marked for Death,” the enfant terrible of rock criticism Lester Bangs lays it out: “It always begins with that glorious ‘mistake,’ the crazy unexpected note kicking out sideways to let us loose again no matter what you call it. It reappears periodically every few years, the next new absurd and outrageous squeak that no one could calculate till ten years after it molders buried under wretched excess in the slowdown twilight, but the Craze will come again in new clothes!”
So every time music starts to follow its natural tendency to sink and begins to fall like those atoms, zip! something swerves. Or rather, somebody. When Billie Holiday starts slurring her notes, bending away from the melody and then rushing ahead to catch it up, she’s working the swerve. The swerve is ragtime-obsessed trombonist Arthur Pryor smearing and blatting his way through “Trombone Sneeze,” back in 1902 (Vic. 1223). It’s the keening, free-falling elevator wail of Johnny Dodds’s clarinet at the beginning of his 1926 “Perdido Street Blues” (Col. 698-D). It’s Lester Young, ten years later, walking his tenor dreamily away from the chords he’s supposed to be riffing on. It’s Rock ‘n’ Roll Trio guitarist Paul Burlinson figuring out, one day in 1956, that the weird fuzzy sound his Telecaster is making is due to a loose tube in his amp, and not fixing it.
Whenever there’s a proper, legit, “dicty” way of phrasing the tune in question and a musician plays something arbitrary, irrational, spontaneous, unexplainable, that’s the swerve. Here’s where we’ll find those “eager anticipations of the beat,” that “earthy or ‘dirty’ tone” that the Grove Dictionary calls hot. But they’re only part of the story: melody, harmony, tone, timbre, rhythm can all be swerved. Bends, slurs, growls, rasps, howls, moans, slides, stretches, takeoffs, inversions, fits, starts, even stomps and syncopations—all ways of swerving. Country music scholar Robert Cantwell has a beautiful paragraph in his Bluegrass Breakdown on what the European ear hears when Africa is in the house:
. . . tones grow hair, go blind, or explode; notes bend, break, weaken, collapse or leave home; melodies compulsively juggle handfuls of notes or fling them wildly away; rhythms spill over in syncopations . . . horns growl, hiss, cough and squeak; banjos snarl, snap and bite; fiddles cry and wail; singing voices shout, holler, call, moan and weep, fill with gravel, smoke or weeds, cower in the nasal cavities or in one corner of the mouth and sink luxuriously into some lower region of the anatomy, and sometimes even slip into mere speech or something worse, like nonsense syllables.
That’s the swerve.
Some kinds of music institutionalize the swerve, build it into the basic structure—into the rhythm, the harmony, the melody. Thus the springy spaces between notes in a Scott Joplin rag; the poignant harmonies of a Duke Ellington tone poem; the searching melodic surge of a Beethoven symphony. Some seek to exclude it entirely—manifesto by Maurice Ravel: “the work of art appears only in mature conception where no detail has been left to chance.” The impulse to want to turn Carteret back into atomic rain is understandable, a natural reaction to the chaos of the physical world, but. . . . Some kinds of music vigilantly keep it out of one door only to let it in through another (the straight melodies and wild voices of hillbilly music). Many try to carve it in stone, at which point it ceases to be a swerve. In 1958, fuzztone guitar was frightening; in 2003, it’s cute: they’re using it in kiddy cartoons and car commercials.
Applying rigid logic to this system, we realize immediately that drive and swerve in their purest forms have to be antithetical, like yin and yang or gin and tonic. If a musician’s following the wisp of his fey Muse, note leading note hither and yon into the rarefied aether of pure invention, he can’t at the same time fix the rigid patterns and earthy repetitions that cement a groove.
The same goes for groups: when you get everybody doing the same thing at the same time over and over again—oom-PAH oom-PAH oom-PAH—you get maximum drive, but it’s powerful dull. When everybody does her own thing, each avoiding any kind of overlap with the character in the next chair, you get a circus of swerve, but it sure ain’t gonna be a toe-tapper. Drive demands repetition, swerve surprise. It’s big band versus free jazz, Glenn Miller versus Archie Shepp. Neither one of these is hot; heat demands compromise—paradoxically, the hottest music is the most thoroughly compromised.
Now, a little reflection will lead to the conclusion that drive and swerve are relative: if it’s only a swerve until everybody gets thoroughly used to it, then it’s only drive until something louder or punchier comes along and folks get with the new groove. But you can go home again: after a while, old swerves and worn-out drives fall out of the popular consciousness. Then some big-eared types, bored with the modern wave, will start digging for something new to dig. The old bones get polished up and joined together in new and fanciful ways, and the old swerve bends a new drive, the old drive pushes a new bend.
This model isn’t perfect; no model is. At least it gives us a way to approach the barely comprehensible chaos that is the real world with a little more confidence. Yet lest we be slaves to a theory that is in itself imperfect, let us you and me remind ourselves that not all music can be plotted with two vectors, that there are hundreds and thousands of ineffably hot performances that will somehow fall off the axes of our little graph. Some of these we’ll deal with; others remain hovering on the edges of our consciousness, tantalizing us with faint echoes of harmonies unfathomable and rhythms beyond quantification.
In weakness we create distinctions, then
Believe our puny boundaries are things
Which we perceive, and not which we have made.
William Wordsworth said that, back before his brain turned to muesli. On to American music. Hot music.
A country’s music isn’t the same thing as the music that exists in that country; it’s not the sum total of every note that is played and sung within its territorial limits. Just because, say, Buenos Aires has an opera house where you can hear Verdi, that doesn’t mean that Rigoletto is Argentine music (I would, however, be the first to agree that it says something about the people of Argentina that they’re staging Italian opera). No, a country’s music is born of its earth and partakes of the character of its inhabitants—although precisely how can be far from obvious. Like a dialect, it’s a vessel into which people pour their most unguarded emotions, a first means of expression that, at its most basic level, isn’t studied so much as absorbed from the earliest age (which of course means studied very intently, as only small children can). When I say that this book is about American music, therefore, I don’t mean that it’s in any way a survey of musical activity in America. It’s about one, enduring, musical dialect.
America has had more than one such dialect in its history, of course. Before the Europeans came, there was music. That was truly American music, but it’s not what this book is about. Nor is it about the Spanish music of the Southwest, the French music of the Mississippi Valley, or even the ballads brought here by the English and nurtured in the hollows and hills of Appalachia. Neither is it about the various species and genera of music that followed the waves of immigration of the mid-nineteenth century, at least not directly—American music was already a done deal by then. And it’s certainly not about the composed, pan-European art music that you had to go to school to study, and still do.
This book is about the music that two subject peoples, brought here by the English and often—if not generally—antagonistic to each other, created between themselves, and, with one of the supreme ironies in cultural history, thrust burning into the American heart where it remains to this day; the music from which jazz and R&B, honky-tonk, country, and bluegrass, have all descended, not to mention soul, rap, and all the various subspecies of rock ‘n’ roll.
I won’t get into the sordid history of African slavery in the Americas, much; for that, see Hugh Thomas’s magisterial The Slave Trade. By the mid-1700s, suffice it to say, Africans were present in large numbers in just about every corner of the Americas, and in many cases had been there for two hundred years or more—the first African slaves had arrived in the New World in 1510. They were in English North America by 1619. Now, everybody knows what happened when these Africans, their children, and their descendants, encountered European music; how they began to blend their extraordinarily complex concepts of rhythm with European developments in harmony. The evidence is strewn all about the Americas. In Argentina, it’s the tango, in Uruguay, the candombe. Brazil has all kinds of African-inflected music, none more famous than the samba (although the maxixe used to be quite popular in the States, back before the Great War). Colombia has its loopy, driving cumbia. The Caribbean is stuffed to the gills with Afro-beats, from the Trinidadian calypso to the Martiniquaise beguine, the Haitian konpa, the Jamaican mento, the Puerto Rican bomba and, of course, all the multitude of Cuban genres—the rumba, guaguancó, mambo, danzón, and all the others that extraordinarily musical island has produced. Even Mexico’s mariachi has African roots. And, of course, the United States has gospel, ragtime, jazz, the blues—and, as I shall make clear below, so-called “hillbilly music.” And those are just the traditional types.
Yet if you had to take one of those “which of these objects doesn’t belong” tests about the music of the African diaspora in the Americas, the answer would be obvious. Something happened to African music in Anglo-Saxon North America that didn’t happen to it anywhere else. If you were to collect representative samples of all those other musics, and even of the indigenous musics of West Africa— preferably samples from the beginning of the twentieth century, before cross-pollination via phonograph record had time to occur—you’d find they share a loping, lilting sense of rhythm that’s very different from the harder-edged, more urgent beat that underlies their North American analogues. Both are hot; both have plenty of drive and that African swerve built into the bones of the music. But at their most animated—when everybody’s going flat out—theirs trot, ours run. Whenever North American musicians approach the edge of chaos, they’ve got a distinct tendency to want to lean over it as far as they can go.
This difference has to do with the particular origins of the men and women transported to the British colonies of North America, with the peculiar conditions of servitude they met with here, with the people whom they served and the people they served with. Of the roughly 11,000,000 African slaves who survived the horrors of the Middle Passage (following Thomas’s statistics), only 500,000 came directly to our shores. A number more were taken here indirectly from the Caribbean, but the total is still small in comparison to the 4,000,000 that went to Brazil alone, the 2,500,000 sucked up by the Spanish Empire, the 2,000,000 by the British West Indies. Here in North America, to a far greater degree than elewhere in the Americas, the Africans were scattered, often even deliberately dispersed, among the European population. According to the first census of the United States, in 1790, of the 3,898,874 new Americans, 694,207 were slaves. Even if you assume that every single one of the 59,196 free persons left over after you deduct all the white folks was of African descent and add them to the total, that’s still just over 20 percent of the population. Nowhere in the colonies was the concentration above South Carolina’s 43 percent. Compare that to the situation prevailing in Brazil, according to figures from 1798: 1,986,000 Africans (about 25 percent free) out of 3.25 million people; some parts of Brazil were over 70 percent African.
What this means, of course, is that the Africans in North America were forced into much closer contact with the Europeans. There were exceptions, where you’d find the massive plantations characteristic of the Caribbean and Brazil; places like the rice-growing areas of the Carolinas. But they were far from universal. In many areas, particularly on the southern frontier, a slaveowning family would rarely have more than five slaves, and often just one or two. Imagine the difficulty of preserving your native language, culture, music under those circumstances, impossibly far from home, stuck among a hard, often cruel people in a vast, dangerous, and above all alien land. And yet African music persisted in North America, if in a form less “pure” than one finds in other lands of the diaspora.
Almost from their first arrival in North America, the Africans would have encountered representatives of another group of exiles, often as unwilling as they were; a people the English regarded as just as barbarous, savage, uncivilized (and, I should point out, musical) as the Africans. I refer, of course, to the Celts. When Oliver Cromwell, regicide and Lord Protector (i.e., dictator) of England, landed his armies in Dublin in 1649, it was with no kind intentions toward the Irish people. The campaign that followed was savage and ended with much of eastern Ireland cleared of its population and distributed to Englishmen, who in turn leased much of it out to their Lowland Scottish Presbyterian allies. Some fifty thousand Irish slaves were sent to work the plantations of Virginia and Barbados, to live side by side with England’s other slaves. In the early eighteenth century, it was the allies’ turn—their dour brand of Protestantism was no longer in favor with the English, and the cheap leases started drying up. Between 1718 and 1746, a third of the so-called Scots-Irish left Ulster for America, many as indentured servants (who often lived with and served alongside slaves). In 1745, Bonnie Prince Charlie led the assembled clans of the Scottish Highlands against England to claim the throne that was rightfully his; after his defeat the next spring at Culloden, the English moved to pacify the Highlands (“solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant”; “they make a desert; they call it peace”—Tacitus). The Highlanders decamped to America, in droves. The 1790 census lists a hair under two hundred thousand Americans who claimed themselves as Scottish or Irish.
The Celts and the West Africans were both particularly musical peoples, peoples who liked to sing and, especially, to dance. The English thought so, anyway. In 1623, Richard Jobson, an English sea captain, published an account of what he saw in Senegambia, at the very western tip of the Dark Continent. He was a keen observer:
I would acquaint you of their most principall instrument, which is called a Ballards [the balafon, or gourd-resonated xylophone], made to stand a foot above the ground, hollow under, and hath uppon the top some seventeene woodden keyes standing like the Organ, upon which hee that playes sitting upon the ground, just against the middle of the instrument, strikes with a sticke in either hand, about a foote long, at the end whereof is made fast a round ball, covered with some soft stuffe, to avoyd the clattering noyse the bare stickes would make . . . the sound that proceeds from this instrument is worth the observing, for we can heare it a good English mile, the making of this instrument being one of the most ingenious things amongst them: for to every one of these keyes there belongs a small Iron the bignesse of a quill, and is a foote long, the breadth of the instrument, upon which hangs two gourdes under the hollow, like bottles, who receives the sound, and returnes it againe with that extraordinary loudnesse.
There are not many of these, as we can perceive, because they are not common, but when they doe come to any place, the resort unto them is to be admired; for both day and night, more especially all the night the people continue dauncing, untill he that playes be quite tyred out; the most desirous of dancing are the women, who dance without men, and but one alone, with crooked knees and bended bodies they foot it nimbly, while the standers by seeme to grace the dancer, by clapping their hands together after the manner of keeping time; and when the men dance they doe it with their swords naked in their hands, with which they use some action, and both men and women when they have ended their first dance give somewhat unto the player.
The Celts, too, had their popular musicians and indefatigable dancers. In 1845, Charles St. John, an English gentleman hunter, was stalking a stag in the Scottish Highlands, attended by his local ghillie, Donald. Night fell, and it was raining. Then they heard a fiddle, wild in the darkness. “ ‘It’s all right enough,’ “ St. John recalled Donald saying, “ ‘it’s that drunken deevil, Sandy Ross; ye’ll never haud a fiddle frae him, nor him frae a whisky still.’ “
They followed the music to a “whisky bothie”—an illicit still house—where they witnessed an extraordinary scene:
On a barrel in the middle of the apartment—half hut, half cavern—stood aloft, fiddling with all his might, the identical Sandy Ross, while round him danced three unkempt savages; and another figure was stooping, employed over a fire in the corner, where the whisky pot was in full operation. . . . We got rest, food and fire—all we required—and something more; for long after I had betaken me to the dry heather in the corner, I had disturbed visions of strange orgies in the bothie, and of my sober Donald exhibiting curious antics on the top of a tub . . . when daylight awoke me, the smugglers and Donald were all quiet and asleep, far past my efforts to arouse them. . . . From the state in which my trusty companion was, with his head in a heap of ashes, I saw it would serve no purpose to wake him, even if I were able to do so.
Small wonder the fiddle was nicknamed “the devil’s box.”
As far as I know, unlike the devil’s box, the ballards didn’t turn up in American music until the vaudeville era, when the xylophone became a popular novelty instrument (although it was much used in Central and South America). For a population as dispersed as the Africans in North America, one that had to travel to congregate (if at all), it would be cumbersome. Worse, anything whose sound could carry “a good English mile” would be, let’s say, problematic for the overseers. That went for the big drums that the Africans used for communication, and it would’ve gone for this as well. In 1764, James Grainger, a cohort of Samuel “Dictionary” Johnson’s who had spent some time on the island of St. Kitts, published a poem on the art of cultivating sugarcane, titled Sugar Cane, a Poem (the eighteenth century isn’t known for the imagination of its poets). Much of it is occupied by the care and feeding of slaves. Though Grainger imagined himself humane and benevolent in this regard, he nonetheless warns the would-be planter:
But let not thou the drum their mirth inspire;
Nor vinous spirits: else, to madness fir’d,
…
Fell acts of blood, and vengeance they pursue (IV, 602–5).
Exactly.
What the slaves needed was something more portable and less threatening to their uneasy captors—like another instrument Jobson saw:
. . . that [instrument] which is most common in use, is made of a great gourd, and a necke thereunto fastned, resembling, in some sort, our Bandora [a species of lute]; but they have no manner of fret, and the strings they are either such as the place yeeldes or their invention can attaine to make, being very unapt to yeeld a sweete and musicall sound, notwithstanding with pinnes they winde and bring to agree in tunable notes, having not above sixe strings upon their greatest instrument.
This wouldn’t cause nearly such a problem with the powers that be. Grainger again:
Permit thy slaves to lead the choral dance,
To the wild banshaw’s melancholy sound (IV, 583–4).
He adds a note to this: “Banshaw. This is a sort of rude guitar, invented by the Negroes. It produces a wild pleasing melancholy sound.”
Somewhere along the way, the music the Celts brought with them began to get tangled up with the music the Africans had brought with them. (While some of the Scots and Irish pushed themselves up on the backs of their African fellow-chattel, shunned them and hated them, others did not; Maryland was passing antimiscegenation laws as early as 1661.) Whether this tangling happened first in Virginia, during the days of Cromwell; on the western frontier of Pennsylvania or North Carolina, where the Scots-Irish betook themselves; or elsewhere, we don’t know. I like to think it took place exactly as in William Sydney Mount’s 1845 painting Dance of the Haymakers: in an open barn, two men, clearly Irish, dance a jig to a third’s fiddle, while a young black boy beats time on the barn door with a pair of sticks.
In any case, there are certain affinities between the two musics that would’ve expedited the process. In the western bulge of Africa, where the bulk of the slaves transported to North America came from, Arab Africa and black Africa met, mixed, and brought forth a music that (as Robert Palmer points out in his classic Deep Blues) was string-oriented, with long, twisty melodies and plenty of rhythm— not entirely unlike Celtic music, in fact.
There were also some key differences, polarities that have shaped all American music since. Consider how two performances captured during the early days of ethnic recording, one Irish, one African, handle something as basic as the beat. In October 1921, the fiddler Michael Coleman—a slender, intense thirty-year-old native of County Sligo, where the Celtic traditions of Irish music were particularly strong—went into Columbia Records’ New York studio and recorded “The Monaghan,” a jig dating back to at least the 1840s (Col. E7470). As a dimly recorded piano clomps away briskly in the background, Coleman’s fiddle starts off slowly, carving out a set of rather monotonous, relentlessly regular minor-key figures. With each repetition, however, he grows more insistent, darting slightly ahead of the beat and then falling back right on top of it; riding it, pushing it, tacking it down to the ground. His playing, skirting as it does the very edge of chaos, threatening to break free and skitter away, is nonetheless absolutely fluid, confident and, ultimately, controlled. “The Monaghan” is no anomaly; on record after record, Coleman—the most celebrated Irish fiddler of his generation, if not all time—demonstrates the same fierceness, the same implicit violence.
There’s no one record as typical of West African music as a Coleman disc is of Irish music. This is especially so for the twenties, when the cross-pollination and homogenization that invariably occurs when outside music is introduced had not yet had much of a chance to occur. West Africa is a complicated and very, very diverse part of the world. That said, “Yaw Donkor” by the Kumasi Trio (not to be confused with the Nairobi Trio) at least covers many of the most common elements (Zon. 1008). Recorded in London in 1928 for Zonophone Records’ new West African series—an attempt by its parent company to squeeze a few more shillings out of the colonies— the record features the virtuoso Ghanian guitarist Jacob Sam playing with a percussionist and another guitarist; all three sing (in Fanti, one of the many languages of the region). Like Coleman, Sam surges ahead of the beat—or where we feel the beat should be—with a series of complex, tumbling runs. But this propulsion is where the resemblance ends. There’s this clicking, you see (the record label calls it “castanets,” but it could be anything) that’s lagging behind the guitar, pulling the beat back. And then the vocals. Call and response, the call ahead of the beat and response behind it. And that’s it— there’s no normative part to the music, no on-the-beat accompaniment like Coleman had to play against. In fact, there really is no beat as Michael Coleman would’ve understood it; it’s implied, not stated; something to dance around. There’s a backspun sort of drive, sure, but more swerve than we know how to handle. The result, to our ears, sounds lazy, ragged, almost chaotic. In fact, it’s anything but, as lending a careful ear to the deliberate, precise percussion demonstrates.
By the mid-eighteenth century these very different forms of music had begun to send tendrils out to each other, making American music as we know it a done deal. The runaway-slave notices found in the colonial newspapers of the time are rife with items like the one from the South Carolina Gazette in 1741, seeking a “middle-sized Negro Fellow named Sam” who “can play upon the violin,” or the 1743 one from the Boston Evening Post seeking a certain Cambridge, who “plays well upon a flute, and not so well on a violin.” If any detailed description of the music these men were making has survived, I have not seen it. But we can be pretty damn sure the person advertising for “any white person that can play on the violin, or a Negro” in the September 17, 1737, South Carolina Gazette wasn’t looking for someone to play the likes of “Yaw Donkor.”
In his seminal Country: The Twisted Roots of Rock ‘n’ Roll, Nick Tosches quotes from the diary of Nicholas Cresswell, an Englishman who attended a Virginia barbecue in July of 1774: “A great number of young people met together with a Fiddle and Banjo [which he elsewhere described as “a Gourd . . . with only four strings”] played by two Negroes, with Plenty of Toddy, which both Men and Women seem to be very fond of. I believe they have danced and drunk till there are few sober people amongst them.” Whatever they were playing in the slave quarters, it’s a pretty safe bet that when they were working for the young white folks, this anonymous little string band was playing, among other things, a selection of the (hot) Celtic-derived jigs, reels, and hornpipes that were all the rage. I sure would like to hear what that banjo player was up to.
These two men, and thousands of other men and women just as anonymous, black and white, free and enslaved, built American music. Collectively, away from the eye of history, they welded African and Celtic elements (with, to be sure, a goodly portion of English hymns and ballads) together into a musical language resilient enough to pass the test that all national musics must pass if they are to survive. It encountered, and continues to encounter, other musical traditions, digested what was digestible in them, spat out the rest, and moved on with its central characteristics unchanged.
I have divided the story of this new music into three unequal parts; as we move closer to the present, the amount of available evidence increases, and there is more to say. Part I deals with the minstrel era, when our raw fusion was first recognized as something new, and something characteristically American. Part II deals with the ragtime era, when the music absorbed the influences of European formal music. The last part covers the birth of jazz, when this fusion was reexposed to African music in the form of the blues. A coda mentions hillbilly music, or the rebirth of minstrelsy; and the text is followed by a bibliographical note and a discographical one.
Daniel Decatur Emmett, when he wasn’t working.
COLLECTION OF THE AUTHOR