Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 51/Blues in the Archway Road"
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{{tab}}The ori­gins of {{w|British {{qq|blues}}|British_blues|British blues}} are far from clear. Their sem­inal genius may have been {{w|Muddy Waters|Muddy_Waters}} who toured Britain in 1958 but it was not until March, 1962, when the har­mon­ica player {{w|Cyril Davies|Cyril_Davies}} and the guitar­ist {{w|Alexis Korner|Alexis_Korner}} opened the first of the clubs—next door to the {{w|ABC Teashop|Aerated_Bread_Company|Aerated Bread Company}} off {{w|Ealing Broad­way|Ealing|Ealing}}—that the {{qq|boom}} really had its be­gin­nings. Korner and Davies played mainly {{popup|pre-war|The United States formally joined World War II in December 1941.}} blues of the negro night clubs of urban Amer­ica. Once they had their own stage the {{qq|boom}} gathered in {{w|Cent­ral London|Central_London|Central London}}, at­tract­ing a young audi­ence in re­ac­tion against a par­tic­u­larly en­feebled pop music—this was the hey{{h}}day of {{w|Cliff Rich­ard|Cliff_Richard}}. The Band—known as {{w|Alexis Korner{{s}} Blues In­cor­por­ated|Alex_Korner's_Blues_Incorporated}}—had the now fa­mil­iar line{{h}}up of har­mon­ica, gui­tars and drums and if it was un­ex­it­ing com­pared with its {{w|Chicago|Chicago_blues|Chicago blues}} par­ent it had, at least, a rhythmic earthi­ness and an emo­tional di­rect­ness which had been com­pletely ab­sent from pop music since the de­mise of {{w|rock ’n’ roll|Rock_and_roll|Rock and roll}} in the late ’50s. | {{tab}}The ori­gins of {{w|British {{qq|blues}}|British_blues|British blues}} are far from clear. Their sem­inal genius may have been {{w|Muddy Waters|Muddy_Waters}} who toured Britain in 1958 but it was not until March, 1962, when the har­mon­ica player {{w|Cyril Davies|Cyril_Davies}} and the guitar­ist {{w|Alexis Korner|Alexis_Korner}} opened the first of the clubs—next door to the {{w|ABC Teashop|Aerated_Bread_Company|Aerated Bread Company}} off {{w|Ealing Broad­way|Ealing|Ealing}}—that the {{qq|boom}} really had its be­gin­nings. Korner and Davies played mainly {{popup|pre-war|The United States formally joined World War II in December 1941.}} blues of the negro night clubs of urban Amer­ica. Once they had their own stage the {{qq|boom}} gathered in {{w|Cent­ral London|Central_London|Central London}}, at­tract­ing a young audi­ence in re­ac­tion against a par­tic­u­larly en­feebled pop music—this was the hey{{h}}day of {{w|Cliff Rich­ard|Cliff_Richard}}. The Band—known as {{w|Alexis Korner{{s}} Blues In­cor­por­ated|Alex_Korner's_Blues_Incorporated}}—had the now fa­mil­iar line{{h}}up of har­mon­ica, gui­tars and drums and if it was un­ex­it­ing com­pared with its {{w|Chicago|Chicago_blues|Chicago blues}} par­ent it had, at least, a rhythmic earthi­ness and an emo­tional di­rect­ness which had been com­pletely ab­sent from pop music since the de­mise of {{w|rock ’n’ roll|Rock_and_roll|Rock and roll}} in the late ’50s. | ||
− | {{tab}}By the end of 1962 the {{w|Beatles|The_Beatles|The Beatles}} had had their first small hit, ''{{w|Love Me Do|Love_Me_Do}}'', fea­tur­ing the ma­gical com­bin­a­tion of har­mon­ica, gui­tars and drums, and the {{w|Roll­ing Stones|The_Rolling_Stones|The Rolling Stones}} were mak­ing their early pub­lic ap­pear­ances at Ealing and else­where. In Janu­ary, 1963 the Stones ap­peared for the first time at the ''{{w|Marquee|Marquee_Club|Marquee Club}}''. The {{w|bill|Billing_(performing_arts)|Billing}} was topped by {{p|130}}{{l|Brian Knight|https://www.theguardian.com/news/2001/dec/06/guardianobituaries|British guitarist, 1939–2001
link: obituary in The Guardian}}{{s}} Blues{{h}}by{{h}}six and the Stones earned £2 each as the fill{{h}}in group. By March the Stones had moved on—to the fringe of pop suc­cess—and their place was taken by another group from Ealing, the Mann-Hugg Blues Brothers, later to be re{{h}}named {{w|Manfred Mann|Manfred_Mann}}. By the time the Stones had their first small hit, ''{{w|Come On|Come_On_(Chuck_Berry_song)}}'', in the summer of 1963 (only enough to earn them 83rd pos­i­tion in the 1963 ''{{w|New Mu­sical Ex­press|NME|NME}}'' {{w|Points Table|Record_chart|Record chart}}, equal with {{w|Sammy Davis|Sammy_Davis_Jr.|Sammy Davis Jr.}}, {{w|Frank Sinatra|Frank_Sinatra}}, {{w|Ken Dodd|Ken_Dodd}} and Chuck Berry) r {{a}}n{{a}} b was freely tipped as the next pop craze. | + | {{tab}}By the end of 1962 the {{w|Beatles|The_Beatles|The Beatles}} had had their first small hit, ''{{w|Love Me Do|Love_Me_Do}}'', fea­tur­ing the ma­gical com­bin­a­tion of har­mon­ica, gui­tars and drums, and the {{w|Roll­ing Stones|The_Rolling_Stones|The Rolling Stones}} were mak­ing their early pub­lic ap­pear­ances at Ealing and else­where. In Janu­ary, 1963 the Stones ap­peared for the first time at the ''{{w|Marquee|Marquee_Club|Marquee Club}}''. The {{w|bill|Billing_(performing_arts)|Billing}} was topped by {{p|130}}{{l|Brian Knight|https://www.theguardian.com/news/2001/dec/06/guardianobituaries|British guitarist, 1939–2001
link: obituary in The Guardian}}{{s}} Blues{{h}}by{{h}}six and the Stones earned £2 each as the fill{{h}}in group. By March the Stones had moved on—to the fringe of pop suc­cess—and their place was taken by another group from Ealing, the Mann-Hugg Blues Brothers, later to be re{{h}}named {{w|Manfred Mann|Manfred_Mann}}. By the time the Stones had their first small hit, ''{{w|Come On|Come_On_(Chuck_Berry_song)}}'', in the summer of 1963 (only enough to earn them 83rd pos­i­tion in the 1963 ''{{w|New Mu­sical Ex­press|NME|NME}}'' {{w|Points Table|Record_chart|Record chart}}, equal with {{w|Sammy Davis|Sammy_Davis_Jr.|Sammy Davis Jr.}}, {{w|Frank Sinatra|Frank_Sinatra}}, {{w|Ken Dodd|Ken_Dodd}} and Chuck Berry) r {{a}}n{{a}} b was freely tipped as the next pop craze.<br /> |
{{tab}}It seems to have hap­pened for much the same reason as rock ’n’ roll ten years earlier: a teen­age re­ac­tion to the sickly gut­less­ness of ortho­dox pop. Its suc­cess has led to ex­traordin­ary re­sults. The Cliff Rich­ard pop image of tidy, boy{{h}}next{{h}}door {{w|Chris­tian­ity|Religion_in_the_United_Kingdom#Christianity|Religion in the United Kingdom: Christianity}}, has been re­placed by a styl­ised image of rough{{h}}living—beards, long hair, defi­ant non­chal­ance and an in­co­her­ent, un­ar­tic­u­lated curse against con­form­ity. The new image may be as un­real as the old but it is a great deal more toler­able. It is a cliché to ob­serve that pop music is a ma­jor field for the ex­ploit­a­tion and ma­nip­u­la­tion of young people, gener­at­ing re­spect for false values and poor stand­ards, ex­ploit­ing dis­satis­fac­tion to turn young people in on them­selves rather than out on so­ci­ety, serving the func­tion ascribed by {{w|Marx|Karl_Marx|Karl Marx}} to re­li­gion, that of an {{qq|opi­ate of the people}}. It would be un­real­istic to claim that r ’n’ b has altered this deeply en­grained pop{{h}}cul­tural pat­tern but it may have dented it. Since the suc­cess of the Beatles—re­corded not be­cause they might be made into stars but be­cause they ''already were'' local stars—teen­agers have shown a gradu­ally in­creas­ing in­de­pend­ence of the will of re­cord com­pan­ies. {{w|Mersey­beat|Beat_music|Beat music}} and r ’n’ b—or at any rate the {{w|local vari­ant|British_rhythm_and_blues|British rhythm and blues}} on the Amer­ican theme—were cre­ated by teen­agers for them­selves and al­though the com­pan­ies have ex­ploited this music, they have had their urual role, that of ''cre­ating'' stars, stolen from them by teen­agers. This has been a tend­ency rather than a de­cis­ive trend but it may rep­res­ent the first steps of teen­agers to free them­selves of the para­sites who live off them and their en­thu­si­asms. It is not just that the qual­ity of the music is bet­ter, al­though I be­lieve it is (com­pare the Beatle{{s|r}} ''{{w|I{{m}} a Loser|I'm_a_Loser}}'' or Manfred Mann{{s}} ''{{w|I{{m}} Your King­pin|The_Five_Faces_of_Manfred_Mann|The Five Faces of Manfred Mann}}'' with {{w|Adam Faith|Adam_Faith}}{{s}} {{w|''What Do You Want''?|What_Do_You_Want?_(Adam_Faith_song)|What Do You Want?}} or Cliff Rich­ard{{s}} ''{{w|The Young Ones|The_Young_Ones_(song)}}'') but that the re­la­tion­ships be­tween stars and audi­ences have changed. The new stars are ''of'' their pub­lic, neither pat­ron­ising nor stu­pid. They are ir­rev­er­ent, they smoke, they drink, they be­have with a nat­ur­al­ness which would have earned them noth­ing but abuse ten years ago and they are ar­tic­u­late spokes­men for the teen­age thing as well as for their music. The new stars are not held in awe ex­cept by the very young. The club{{h}}goer knows that re­cords are poor im­it­a­tions of club per­form­ances, that re­cord suc­cess leads to noth­ing so much as the di­lu­tion of a group{{s}} {{qq|sound}} in an en­deav­our to court gen­eral pop­ular­ity. It is, in short, doubt­ful whether the com­pan­ies have ever held so little sway over the {{w|avant garde|Avant-garde|Avant-garde}} {{qq|popnik}}. Most young people listen to noth­ing but pop music and within this con­text the in­fu­sion of some blues{{h}}form into pop music is ex­tremely wel­come. Even in the hands of white sing­ers it has in­tro­duced into a sadly ail­ing pop cul­ture some ele­ments of an in­fin­itely richer ''folk'' cul­ture {{p|131}}and some ele­ments of a less cor­rupted ''pop'' cul­ture—the music of Bo Diddley, Chuck Berry and James Brown still ex­presses some­thing of the agony of negro life as well as the enorm­ous sur­ging vi­tal­ity and new op­tim­ism of the {{w|Northern|Northern_United_States|Northern United States}} {{w|ghet­toes|American_ghettos|American ghettos}}. British blues is primar­ily a {{w|dance music|Dance_music|Dance music}} and if it is im­pure it has, at least, an en­thu­si­asm which is pos­it­ively damning to in­hib­i­tion. In the clubs there is a new vigour. | {{tab}}It seems to have hap­pened for much the same reason as rock ’n’ roll ten years earlier: a teen­age re­ac­tion to the sickly gut­less­ness of ortho­dox pop. Its suc­cess has led to ex­traordin­ary re­sults. The Cliff Rich­ard pop image of tidy, boy{{h}}next{{h}}door {{w|Chris­tian­ity|Religion_in_the_United_Kingdom#Christianity|Religion in the United Kingdom: Christianity}}, has been re­placed by a styl­ised image of rough{{h}}living—beards, long hair, defi­ant non­chal­ance and an in­co­her­ent, un­ar­tic­u­lated curse against con­form­ity. The new image may be as un­real as the old but it is a great deal more toler­able. It is a cliché to ob­serve that pop music is a ma­jor field for the ex­ploit­a­tion and ma­nip­u­la­tion of young people, gener­at­ing re­spect for false values and poor stand­ards, ex­ploit­ing dis­satis­fac­tion to turn young people in on them­selves rather than out on so­ci­ety, serving the func­tion ascribed by {{w|Marx|Karl_Marx|Karl Marx}} to re­li­gion, that of an {{qq|opi­ate of the people}}. It would be un­real­istic to claim that r ’n’ b has altered this deeply en­grained pop{{h}}cul­tural pat­tern but it may have dented it. Since the suc­cess of the Beatles—re­corded not be­cause they might be made into stars but be­cause they ''already were'' local stars—teen­agers have shown a gradu­ally in­creas­ing in­de­pend­ence of the will of re­cord com­pan­ies. {{w|Mersey­beat|Beat_music|Beat music}} and r ’n’ b—or at any rate the {{w|local vari­ant|British_rhythm_and_blues|British rhythm and blues}} on the Amer­ican theme—were cre­ated by teen­agers for them­selves and al­though the com­pan­ies have ex­ploited this music, they have had their urual role, that of ''cre­ating'' stars, stolen from them by teen­agers. This has been a tend­ency rather than a de­cis­ive trend but it may rep­res­ent the first steps of teen­agers to free them­selves of the para­sites who live off them and their en­thu­si­asms. It is not just that the qual­ity of the music is bet­ter, al­though I be­lieve it is (com­pare the Beatle{{s|r}} ''{{w|I{{m}} a Loser|I'm_a_Loser}}'' or Manfred Mann{{s}} ''{{w|I{{m}} Your King­pin|The_Five_Faces_of_Manfred_Mann|The Five Faces of Manfred Mann}}'' with {{w|Adam Faith|Adam_Faith}}{{s}} {{w|''What Do You Want''?|What_Do_You_Want?_(Adam_Faith_song)|What Do You Want?}} or Cliff Rich­ard{{s}} ''{{w|The Young Ones|The_Young_Ones_(song)}}'') but that the re­la­tion­ships be­tween stars and audi­ences have changed. The new stars are ''of'' their pub­lic, neither pat­ron­ising nor stu­pid. They are ir­rev­er­ent, they smoke, they drink, they be­have with a nat­ur­al­ness which would have earned them noth­ing but abuse ten years ago and they are ar­tic­u­late spokes­men for the teen­age thing as well as for their music. The new stars are not held in awe ex­cept by the very young. The club{{h}}goer knows that re­cords are poor im­it­a­tions of club per­form­ances, that re­cord suc­cess leads to noth­ing so much as the di­lu­tion of a group{{s}} {{qq|sound}} in an en­deav­our to court gen­eral pop­ular­ity. It is, in short, doubt­ful whether the com­pan­ies have ever held so little sway over the {{w|avant garde|Avant-garde|Avant-garde}} {{qq|popnik}}. Most young people listen to noth­ing but pop music and within this con­text the in­fu­sion of some blues{{h}}form into pop music is ex­tremely wel­come. Even in the hands of white sing­ers it has in­tro­duced into a sadly ail­ing pop cul­ture some ele­ments of an in­fin­itely richer ''folk'' cul­ture {{p|131}}and some ele­ments of a less cor­rupted ''pop'' cul­ture—the music of Bo Diddley, Chuck Berry and James Brown still ex­presses some­thing of the agony of negro life as well as the enorm­ous sur­ging vi­tal­ity and new op­tim­ism of the {{w|Northern|Northern_United_States|Northern United States}} {{w|ghet­toes|American_ghettos|American ghettos}}. British blues is primar­ily a {{w|dance music|Dance_music|Dance music}} and if it is im­pure it has, at least, an en­thu­si­asm which is pos­it­ively damning to in­hib­i­tion. In the clubs there is a new vigour. |
Revision as of 15:49, 30 September 2021
Blues in the
Archway Road
The origins of British “blues” are far from clear. Their seminal genius may have been Muddy Waters who toured Britain in 1958 but it was not until March, 1962, when the harmonica player Cyril Davies and the guitarist Alexis Korner opened the first of the clubs—next door to the ABC Teashop off Ealing Broadway—that the “boom” really had its beginnings. Korner and Davies played mainly pre-war blues of the negro night clubs of urban America. Once they had their own stage the “boom” gathered in Central London, attracting a young audience in reaction against a particularly enfeebled pop music—this was the hey-
It seems to have happened for much the same reason as rock ’n’ roll ten years earlier: a teenage reaction to the sickly gutlessness of orthodox pop. Its success has led to extraordinary results. The Cliff Richard pop image of tidy, boy-
Kenneth Rexroth once argued that jazz is a revolutionary music only insofar as it is conducive to eroticism in dancing. The same might apply to British r ’n’ b. Today’s audiences are active and the groups, who still play for the critical club audiences rather than the easily pleased pop “concert” audiences, must make people want to dance. The modern dances are not set pattern dances. The Shake, the Dog, the Jerk are dances for crowded rooms, improvised round a basic pattern, and the groups must be able to improvise to provide variety. In the clubs, for example, Manfred Mann have played numbers like Cannonball Adderley’s Sack O’ Woe and their original—naturally enough never recorded—Packet of Three, which involved violent climaxes and sudden cliff-
If the new music is different, so are the new stars. Many of them are strange pop idols. Keith Relf, leader of the Yardbirds, was a Beat before he made a living by singing and so was Rod the Mod Stewart, possibly the best vocalist to emerge from the “boom”. (Rod Stewart was also an International Amateur footballer.) Many groups look Beat; tired, worn and weary with the bum’s slouching walk. Indeed the mythology of the r ’n’ b clubs is the mythology of the angry, dishevelled reject of orthodoxy, the protesting bum. The Pretty Things, the most beat-
Other singers too have strange pasts. John Mayall, leader of one of the most vigorous groups, the Bluesbreakers, lived in a tree top house. Manfred Mann (singular) was classically trained at Juilliard in the USA and is, even now, more than a little odd by pop standards. The whole Mann group took one man’s name but insist that they have no leader, that leadership is redundant and responsibility shared and equal. It may have something to do with the fact that their vocalist Paul Jones was once a member of the Oxford Committee of 100 and is, apparently, still a Tribune contributor. The Animals, probably the best pop-
Most of the r ’n’ b groups who have had hits have done so with numbers which were not r ’n’ b numbers. The Stones made a brave attempt with the slow blues, Little Red Rooster, but most of their hits were white pop in origin—Not Fade Away, a Buddy Holly number, It’s All Over Now, originally recorded by the C & C Boys in America, a country-
Over the last eighteen months there has been a steady stream of real bluesmen to this country, among them Big Joe Williams, Sleepy John Estes, Lightning Hopkins, John Lee Hooker and the unquestioned genius of instrumental blues, the harmonicist Little Walter Jacobs. While it remains sadly true that local white singers are preferred to the “originals”, it is almost entirely due to the propaganda efforts of the white musicians that we have been able to see the genuine article at all. People like Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones have been admirably unselfish in their fulsome praise of singers like Muddy Waters, James Brown and Howling Wolf, an unselfishness which clearly places them apart from most English revivalist jazz band leaders.
It is tempting to end this account by arguing strongly that white singers and musicians should leave negro “folk” music alone. The British singers argue, correctly I think, that no music is sacrosanct, that if they wish to play what they like and publicly champion, that is their affair. So it is. It is also the critic’s right to assess their music, rather than their social significance, in terms of the negro tradition and find it wanting. When Rod Stewart made the memorable statement that it is as easy to have the blues in the Archway Road as on a Deep South railroad he was, in a way, right. You can have the blues in the Archway Road—the blues is, in one sense, the immemorial music of sadness. But it is more than a sadness in the heart, more than the ache of hunger, more than the misery of the hobo. It is the vocal expression of a people, just as all real folk music is. Rod Stewart is only half right. It may be as easy to have the blues in the Archway Road. It just is not as easy to sing them.