Blues in the Lower Chattahoochee Valley
Steve Bransford, Emory University
Essay Sections:
Topics and Terms:
This section provides information about the
festivals,
musical customs, and
radio and
records of the Lower Chattahoochee Valley. It also includes links
to important resources on music in this area.
Chattahoochee Folk Festival
Held in Columbus, GA between 1979 and 1984. Organized by Fred Fussell.
Georgia Grassroots Festival
Held in Columbus 1976-1977. Organized by George Mitchell. Tracks
by Lower Chattahoochee artists:"Jews Harp Jump" by James 'Tip' Neal
and "The Dog" by Golden Bailey.
Fort Valley State College Folk Festival
Fort Valley State College in Perry County held a Ham and Egg show
beginning in 1915. By 1937 an arts festival had begun, and, in 1940,
a folk music
festival was launched. As Bruce Bastin notes, the magnitude of this
event is hard to appreciate: there has never been a comparable example
of a black
folk music festival run entirely by blacks. W.C. Handy attended the
festival in 1944, praising the musicians for
"making a new form of music in their own tradition without the
influence of radio or records" (Source: Bruce Bastin's Red River
Blues,
page 74). Gradually, the coordinators allowed for more modern secular
numbers to filter into festivals, including songs by Lightning Hopkins
and Little
Walter, but, in the early fifties, Fort Valley students began to
ridicule the folk musicians, so much so that some of the musicians
refused to attend. The
festival was shut down in 1954. (Note: This festival was held in
Perry County, slightly outside the Lower Chattahoochee Valley, but
it's likely that some
Lower Chattahoochee musicians performed at it. Even if no Lower Chattahoochee
musicians performed at it, the Fort Valley Festival is still incredibly
important because it was the first festival in the South to feature
blues music and was organized entirely by African Americans.)
National Downhome Blues Festival
Held at the Moonshadow in Atlanta, Georgia 1984; Festival Coordinator: George
Mitchell; Associate Coordinator: David Evans.
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The Southlands Records LP of this festival contains some tracks
from the following Lower Chattachoochee blues artists:
Albert Macon and Robert Thomas
She Wanna Do The Boogie Woogie
My Baby Don't Wear No Drawers
Precious Bryant
Baby, Please Come Home to Me
Ain't That Loving You, Baby?
Black Rat Swing
You Don't Have To Go
Long Distance Call
Precious Bryant Staggering Blues
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Buck Dancing
"The term 'buck' is traceable to the West Indies, where Africans
used the words '
po bockarau', or 'buccaneer,' to refer to rowdy sailors.
Eventually the term came to describe Irish immigrant sailors whose jig
dance was known as 'the buck.'" (Source:
www.dance-teacher.com)
Buck dancing was popularized in America by minstrel performers in the nineteenth century.
"The old-style African-American buck dance consists essentially of a stamp and
slip of the weight-bearing foot backward, often with an incidental
toe bounce, with the body leaning forward." (from
The International
Encyclopedia of Dance)
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Interview with George Mitchell (1:04 min.)
George Mitchell discusses the buck dancing tradition
of the Lower Chattahoochee Valley.
(Clip courtesy of George Mitchell and Fat
Possum Records) |
Other resources related to buck dancing traditions:
Audio:
Buck Dance (0:56 min.)
By J.W. and James Jones.
Recorded in Waverly Hall, GA in 1969
(Clip courtesy of George Mitchell
and
Fat Possum
Records)
Fife and Drum Music
"...as early as the seventeenth century blacks may have 'picked up' the
skills of fife and drum playing from the militia units in New England
and the Middle Colonies...During the eighteenth century there are numerous
reports of black fifers and drummers." (from David Evans'
"Black Fife and Drum Music in Mississippi")
"Thomas Jefferson's slaves formed a fife-and-drum team as their contribution
to the War of Independence...Indeed, blacks had often been assigned to
play military music in early America; one document tells of a black fife-and-drum
corps playing for a Confederate regiment." (from Alan Lomax's The
Land Where the Blues Began)
Audio:
"Every Time I Go to Town You Better
Stop Kicking my Dog Around" (3:15 min.)
By the Georgia Fife and Drum Band
Recorded in Waverly Hall, GA in 1969
(Clip courtesy of George Mitchell and
Fat
Possum Records)
In Red River Blues,
Bruce Bastin provides some excellent information about the Georgia
Fife and Drum Group: "Perhaps Mitchell's most
interesting discovery was the presence of a fife-and-drum tradition
in the country
between
Waverly Hall and Talbotton, northeast of Columbus. Until recently
it was assumed that the tradition of fife-and-drum music was
uniquely that of north Mississippi around Senatobia...The similarities
of
the
music
of the Senatobia and Waverly Hall groups hints that the music
was probably more widespread than appreciated....The Georgia
fife-and-drum
group
was essentially a family band comprising J.W. Jones on bamboo
cane fife and
his brother James on kettle drum, with the bass drum played by
either a younger brother, Willie C. Jones, or a cousin, Floyd
Bussey."
Not surprisingly, records and radio stations influenced blues musicians
in the largely rural Lower Chattahoochee region.
Audio:
"Precious Bryant Discusses Listening
and Learning from Records and
Radio" (0:52 min.)
Bryant talks about her family's
Grafonola
record player and radio. She also mentions local Columbus DJ's Daddy Cool,
Thin Man, Satellite Papa, and Hound Dog.
(Clip courtesy of Cathy and Jake Fussell)
Bruce Bastin notes the wide influence of records in Nothing But the
Blues: "The traditional folk pattern of passing on music to
a younger set was to be enhanced by pure fortuity of circumstance, traditional
folk music could be recorded and their records heard by thousands of others,
miles away from the home of the recording artist. This enabled a rapid
dissemination of music that otherwise could have come only from the slow
passage of itinerant artists or the even slower projection of the music
from generation to generation."
WCLS and WRBL out of Columbus, Georgia were two prominent blues radio
stations from the 1950s through the 1970s that broadcast through the
Lower Chatahoochee
region. Today, WOKS AM
is the only radio station in Columbus with a daily blues programming.
Additional Influences:
Stylistically, many artists in the lower Chattahoochee
were and influenced by the
Piedmont Blues, a musical
style played a few hundred miles northeast of the lower Chattahoochee
region.
Essay Sections:
Published: 16 March 2004
© 2004 Steve Bransford and
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